I had never heard of SSTC before but those numbers are just insane. I'm guessing that a lot of it has to do with the fact that the Tiger Shark is PCIe5 but even so, there's no way that it would be worth $300USD to 99.9% of people. My system drive is a 500GB WD Black SN770 PCIe4 NVMe (it beat the SN850 in the 75GB read and write tests, wow!). The NVMe drives that I use to hold games are a WD Blue SN570 PCIe3 1TB and a couple of TeamGroup MP33 PCIe3 2TB. On an MP33, Starfield and Hogwarts: Legacy both load in 5-6 seconds. Sure, the Tiger Shark is way faster but we're kinda splitting hairs at this point. Somewhere in your system there will be a bottleneck that negates most of the advantage from having an uber-fast NVMe. Hell, even if you're getting
triple the speed (which won't happen but let's say that it does for the sake of argument), who's going to care about a game taking two seconds to load instead of six? If waiting six seconds for a game to load instead of two is a huge deal to someone, then they clearly have one or more problems that cannot be solved with PC hardware.