"does it mean my SSD will die afterwards?"
Yes, nothing lasts forever.
Well, it might die before.
The important thing about TBW is that its the manufacturer's
expectation of when your SSD will die.
My 6 year old Crucial M550 1TB: 17TB writes, 99% remaining life. I doubt I would even see it drop to 98% before I finally go full NVMe on my next major upgrade.
I have never seen a failed SSD for any reason yet for the past 7 years, either at home or at my work as a site sysadmin, on the other hand I need at least 30 fingers to count failed HDDs I saw personally in this period.
Even the much maligned 840 Evo is still kicking fine after I gave away the 240GB one to a coworker for his home PC.
That's an MLC drive (2-bits per cell). The current trend is to offer more fragile TLC (3-bits per cell) or even QLC (4-bits per cell) drives (cheaper to make, but more fragile / lower TBW ratings). There was a big story a few years ago about how MLC drives basically last forever, so moving to TLC should be safe.
It should be noted that WiFi ax is something like 10-bits per message (aka: 1024-QAM). SSDs are still a new medium of storage: everyone's wondering how far we can push it before it is no longer practical to use. Of course, when WiFi messes up, they just resend the message (also, TCP resends messages when things are messed up). You can't do that with storage, so storage needs to be treated more carefully.
QLC seems like the safe limit for current technology, maybe a little bit beyond the safe limit. I personally will prefer TLC until we have more tests on QLC drives.