Except in this case (
BF V: 24.8s Swordfish vs 24.3s MX500 /
Far Cry 5: 17.3s Swordfish vs 16.2s 850 EVO /
SotTR: 20.7s Swordfish vs 20.5s 850 EVO /
Win10 Boot: 18.1s Swordfish vs 17.8s MX500, etc) ends up more like building a shiny new 2020 sports car only to have it still lose to two 2 & 6 year old VW Beetle's when testing on real-life roads that involve more than just straight line drag-strip peaks...
Personally I picked up a 2TB MX500 the other day for ÂŁ160. Absolute zero regrets vs "losing out" on ÂŁ250-ÂŁ460 NVMe's of same capacity (or ÂŁ170 for half the capacity). And every single SSD review including TPU's, I now completely skip all pages of synthetics and jump straight to Page 8 where the real-world stuff starts. I'll give you and TPU as a whole a big +1 for doing real world stuff though. A lot of
reviews infomercials on other sites do little more than copy / paste CrystalDiskMark, IOMeter, etc, which is like testing 8 vs 4 core CPU's by declaring
"a 3700x will get exactly double the fps of a 3300X" on the back of Cinebench scores - and then not actually testing any games that end up
looking like this...
So I do actually love these TPU SSD reviews for avoiding that nonsense.