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Gaming storage: what your games actually need

NVMe, SATA or hard drive? Here's where fast storage genuinely changes load times, what DirectStorage and consoles require, and how to size and tier a growing game library.

10 min read · Updated June 2026PC & consoleDirectStorage-ready

Modern games are huge, and they load faster off solid-state storage — but the storage that actually changes your experience is not always the most expensive one. Here is what games genuinely need, where fast NVMe pays off, and how to stop a 200 GB install from eating your boot drive.

Does storage speed actually change load times?

Moving from a hard drive to any SSD is the single biggest, most obvious upgrade: level loads and texture streaming go from many seconds to a few. Moving from a SATA SSD to a fast NVMe drive is a far smaller, often imperceptible step in most current games — the engine, the CPU and decompression usually become the bottleneck long before the drive does. The exception is the new wave of titles built around DirectStorage, which streams compressed assets straight to the GPU and can finally make NVMe bandwidth matter.

It helps to be honest about where the seconds actually go. A game's load is rarely a pure file copy; it's reading assets, decompressing them, building data structures and uploading textures to the GPU. Storage speed only governs the first part. That's why benchmarks routinely show a fast NVMe drive and a budget SATA SSD finishing the same level load within a second of each other, while both crush a hard drive. Spend your money where the difference is visible — getting off mechanical storage entirely — not on chasing the last gigabyte-per-second of sequential speed your games can't yet use.

NVMe vs SATA vs HDD for a game library

Storage tiers for PC gaming
TierReal benefit for gamesBest role
HDDCheapest per TB; fine for storageCold library of games you rarely launch
SATA SSDFast loads, silent, cheap solid-stateBulk install drive for most of your library
NVMe Gen 4Marginal vs SATA today; ready for DirectStorageBoot drive + current-favourites
NVMe Gen 5No gaming gain over Gen 4 yet; runs hotSkip for gaming unless you also do pro work

The practical takeaway: a quality Gen 4 NVMe drive is the value sweet spot for a gaming boot drive, and a roomy SATA SSD is the smart, cheaper home for the rest of your library. Paying the Gen 5 premium buys you almost nothing in games today — see NVMe vs SATA for the detail.

What DirectStorage changes

DirectStorage lets games pull assets from an NVMe SSD and decompress them on the GPU, bypassing the old CPU bottleneck. In titles that use it, an NVMe drive can deliver near-instant level loads and seamless streaming that a SATA SSD can't quite match. It requires an NVMe drive (SATA and HDD don't qualify for the GPU-decompression path) and a supported GPU. It is not yet universal, so don't over-buy — but if you're choosing a new boot drive, NVMe future-proofs you for the games being built this way.

Console storage: PS5, Xbox and Switch

Consoles are stricter than PCs about what counts. The PlayStation 5 takes a standard M.2 NVMe Gen 4 drive in its internal expansion slot, but Sony specifies a sustained-speed floor and a heatsink — a slow or bare drive may be rejected or throttle. The Xbox Series X|S uses a proprietary expansion card (PS5-style generic M.2 drives only attach over USB for older-gen games, not next-gen titles). The Nintendo Switch expands via microSD — a V30/UHS-I card is the right buy, since the system can't exploit faster cards.

Match the drive to the console's spec sheet

For PS5 internal storage, confirm the M.2 drive meets Sony's sustained read floor and fits with a heatsink within the slot's dimensions. For Xbox Series consoles, only the official expansion card (or a compatible licensed one) runs next-gen games at full speed. Don't assume any fast NVMe drive will do.

Capacity planning for a big library

Triple-A installs routinely run 80–150 GB and a few exceed 200 GB. A 1 TB drive holds only a handful of those at once; a serious library wants 2 TB or more. Plan for headroom: SSDs slow down and wear faster when packed near full, so aim to keep roughly 15–20% free. Our capacity calculator turns your game count into a target size in seconds.

Does a hard drive still have a place in a gaming PC?

Yes — just not for the games you're actively playing. Loading a modern open-world title from a mechanical drive means long initial loads and occasional texture pop-in as the world streams in, which is exactly the experience an SSD eliminates. But for a deep back-catalog you dip into occasionally, a roomy HDD is by far the cheapest way to keep dozens of installed games on hand. The workflow is simple: park them on the HDD, and when you fancy a replay, move the install to your SSD first. You trade a one-time copy for the lowest cost per terabyte on the whole machine.

RAM and storage are not interchangeable

One common confusion worth clearing up: adding a faster SSD won't fix stutter caused by too little system memory. If a game is swapping to disk because you're short on RAM, even the fastest NVMe drive only softens the symptom. For modern gaming, 16 GB of RAM is a sensible floor and 32 GB is comfortable; storage speed and capacity are a separate axis. Get both right and the system feels effortless.

Tiering: put each game where it belongs

You don't need everything on the fastest drive. A sensible layout: the OS and your three or four current games on the NVMe boot drive, the broader active library on a large SATA SSD, and finished or rarely-touched titles parked on an HDD — ready to move back when you return to them. Most launchers let you pick the install drive per game, so tiering costs nothing but a little organisation and saves a lot of money. Compare drives by real value in our $/TB rankings, and use the compare tool to weigh two SSDs against each other.

Recommended picks · live $/TB

NVMe drives by value

Gen 4 NVMe is the value sweet spot for a gaming boot drive and DirectStorage titles.

Full $/TB rankings →
NVMeNewM.2
X5 Data Pro 1TB 2.5" SATA III SSD (NOT NVMe/M.2) – Budget Internal Solid State Drive for Laptop & Desktop – Basic Performance Storage
Capacity1 TB
InterfaceNVMe
Warranty1 year
Cost / GB$0.08
$85
$84.99per TB
NVMeUsedM.2
SN530 2TB NVMe Internal SSD, M.2 2280, PCIe, Black Plastic, 3.15 x 0.87 x 0.09 Inches, High Performance Storage for Desktop Computing Gen3
Capacity2 TB
InterfaceNVMe
Warranty1 year
Cost / GB$0.09
$179
$89.5per TB
NVMeUsedM.2
Crucial P510 PCIe Gen5 NVMe 2TB SSD, Up to 10,000MB/s, TLC NAND, Laptop & Desktop (PC) Compatible, for Gamers & Creatives, Solid State Drive – CT2000P510SSD8-01
Capacity2 TB
InterfaceNVMe
Warranty5 years
Cost / GB$0.1
$206
$103per TB
HybridUsedInternal
Seagate (ST2000LX001) FireCuda 2TB Solid State Hybrid Drive Performance SSHD – 2.5 Inch SATA 6Gb/s Flash Accelerated for Gaming PC Laptop
Capacity2 TB
InterfaceHybrid
Warranty5 years
Cost / GB$0.07
$145
$72.64per TB
SSDUsedInternal
M600 1TB SATA 6Gb/s 2.5" SSD - MTFDDAK1T0MBF-1AN12ABYY
Capacity1 TB
InterfaceSSD
Warranty
Cost / GB$0.07
$74
$74per TB
SSDNewInternal
SP Silicon Power 4TB SSD 3D NAND A55 SLC Cache Performance Boost SATA III 2.5'' 7mm (0.28'') Internal Solid State Drive (SP004TBSS3A55S25)
Capacity4 TB
InterfaceSSD
Warranty
Cost / GB$0.08
$330
$82.49per TB
Before you buy

Gaming storage — questions answered

Is NVMe really faster than SATA for gaming?+
On paper, hugely; in most current games, barely. The big leap is from a hard drive to any SSD. SATA to NVMe is usually imperceptible because the CPU, engine and decompression bottleneck before the drive does. The exception is DirectStorage titles, which stream compressed assets to the GPU and can finally exploit NVMe bandwidth. A quality Gen 4 NVMe drive is the smart, future-proof boot pick.
Can I add any M.2 SSD to my PS5 or Xbox?+
Not quite. The PS5 internal slot takes a standard M.2 NVMe Gen 4 drive, but Sony specifies a sustained-speed floor and requires a heatsink within the slot's dimensions. The Xbox Series X|S uses a proprietary expansion card; generic M.2 drives only attach over USB for older-gen games. The Switch expands via microSD, where a V30/UHS-I card is the right buy.
How much storage do I need for a game library?+
Triple-A installs run 80–150 GB and some exceed 200 GB, so a 1 TB drive holds only a handful at once. A serious library wants 2 TB or more, and you should keep roughly 15–20% free for performance. Use our capacity calculator to turn your game count into a target size.

Size your library, then find value

Work out how much you need, then compare NVMe and SATA SSDs by real cost per terabyte.

Open the capacity calculator →