This Corsair SSD for PS5 Is at Its Lowest Price Ever — SSD Discounts

We love our PlayStation 5s as much as you do, but even the best consoles need extra storage—and this Corsair MP600 HeatSink SSD is the best for upgrading the storage on your PlayStation 5. Moreover, it’s a valuable bit of tech that often sells out due to swaths of storage-hungry gamers, so this $100 off sale—its lowest price ever—is exciting.

Corsair MP600 Pro LPX M.2 NVMe PCIe x4 Gen4 SSD

MP600 Pro LPX M.2 NVMe PCIe x4 Gen4 SSD

Corsair MP600 Pro LPX M.2 NVMe PCIe x4 Gen4 SSD

Now 54% Off

The Corsair MP600 Pro LPX SSD is optimized for use with the PS5, so it’s about as fast, seamless, and durable as the storage already integrated into your console. If you play a lot of downloadable games, you’re likely familiar with the dreaded “console storage is full” notification—which isn’t hard to trigger since the PS5 only comes with about 700 gigabytes of usable storage space.

The one-terabyte Corsair SSD is on sale for just $85 today—that’s less than a Benjamin to more than double your PS5 storage. We recommend buying 1TB, but if you’re on a budget, the 500GB option is also on sale for $58—a 47% drop.

 

preview for Men's Health US Section - All Sections & Videos

Bigger sizes are discounted steeper than we’ve ever seen, too. The 2TB SSD is 20% off, ringing up at $160 for all the storage the average gamer needs. If you spend your weekends downloading new titles and adding to your massive game save files, you’ll likely never have to think about storage again with the 4TB SSD, discounted to $475 on Amazon.

Headshot of Zoë Hannah

Deputy Editor

Zoë Hannah is the Deputy Editor of Commerce at Popular Mechanics, Runner’s World, and Bicycling. She has more than five years of experience as a journalist covering travel, video games, mental health, and product reviews. When she isn’t editing or writing, you can find her hiking wooded trails, reading a fantasy book, or stretching out on her yoga mat. You can find her work right here, on her website, and on outlets like WIRED, Tom’s Guide, Insider, Entrepreneur, and more.

This article was originally posted here.

Comments are closed.