Its always fun to agree on the facts at hand, but have differing opinions.
I feel like Microsoft has made a mistake, and prefer the PS5's way of doing things. But as long as we both agree on the baseline facts, I don't think there's any harm in having disagreeing opinions on the matter.
Sorry, I may have misunderstood your post that I quoted, as I was agreeing with your opinion.
"I expect issues with PS5 owners who don't understand PCIe 3.0 vs PCIe 4.0, and other such details. M.2 drives will all fit in the connector, but only some of them will be fast enough to work. "
This is my thought as well. With the SSD being a
core component of the over all system arch for asset streaming (opposed to earlier generations where the HDD was just for cold storage or to load from instead of an optical disc) it will be imperative to have a correctly specced NVME drive to get the intended performance/compatibility. Again, I'm talking about the mass market console consumers here, not the enthusiasts such as us. An example, walk into WalMart's video game section and randomly ask customers if they
even know what an NVME drive is in the first place. I would guess a large portion do not, much less have a clue what pcie gen 3/gen 4 is, or even know where to start as far as choosing/purchasing the correct one. Then, ask them to purchase for you a particular MS or Sony branded peripheral for a given system. I would guess that before they leave the store that most could probably pull that off. This was my thinking as to why I felt MS chose correctly. They have to target the majority of their buyers.
Now with that said, as an enthusiast
I DO like that Sony gives that option for sure, I am with you from that perspective. It's just that we are a small minority of the overall market. It feels like Sony may be opening a can of worms. I think they could still offer a "Sony Brand" plug n play SSD similar to Xbox, while still giving the same option to upgrade yourself. That way the people without a clue can still upgrade their system easily and to spec, no thinking involved.