Thursday, November 23rd 2023

Patriot Introduces the VP4000 Mini M.2 2230 SSD

Patriot Memory, a leading manufacturer of high-performance enthusiast memory modules, SSDs, flash storage and gaming peripherals, has announced the upcoming release of their newest internal solid state drive: the VP4000 Mini M.2 2230 PCIe Gen 4 x4 SSD.

The VP4000 Mini marks the first-ever M.2 2230 SSD set to be released by Patriot Memory's gaming division, Viper Gaming. The VP4000 Mini features strong sequential read speeds of up to 5,000 MB/s, sequential write speeds of up to 3,500 MB/s and a special edition ultra-thin heatspreader. With high storage capabilities of up to 2 TB and a compact body design, the VP4000 Mini will be fully compatible with handheld gaming consoles, such as the ROG Ally and Steam Deck. The VP4000 Mini is also compatible with other slim PCs, laptops and tablets, including the Microsoft Surface, making for a versatile storage solution built for gamers, tech enthusiasts and content creators alike.
"Constant innovation within the gaming world is our most important goal with Viper Gaming," said Les Henry, VP of N. America and S. America Sales. "We're excited to continue expanding our reach into the world of handheld consoles in 2024."

The VP4000 Mini is slated for an official worldwide release in 2024.
Source: Patriot Memory
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7 Comments on Patriot Introduces the VP4000 Mini M.2 2230 SSD

#1
Space Lynx
Astronaut
good, bring competitive pricing please. my steam deck will thank you.
Posted on Reply
#2
Chaitanya
Space Lynxgood, bring competitive pricing please. my steam deck will thank you.
Corsair and KingWin seem quite reasonable. I am planning to get one of these for use in camera with CF-X adapter.
Posted on Reply
#5
lexluthermiester
Prima.Verabut with no RAM onboard....
DRAMless isn't the problem it used to be. A lot of progress has been made. And then there's the form-factor. Kinda spoiled for choice with such a compact/small size required.
Posted on Reply
#6
Prima.Vera
lexluthermiesterDRAMless isn't the problem it used to be. A lot of progress has been made. And then there's the form-factor. Kinda spoiled for choice with such a compact/small size required.
I had one in my laptop, if I was trying to copy something from USB it would just become as slow as an HDD....
Posted on Reply
#7
lexluthermiester
Prima.VeraI had one in my laptop, if I was trying to copy something from USB it would just become as slow as an HDD....
Maybe, but good luck getting a HDD into a SteamDeck, ROG Ally or anything similar. To be fair though, in the last two years DRAMless performance has become quite good.
Posted on Reply
Nov 21st, 2024 10:58 EST change timezone

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