Conclusion

The Western Digital WD Black SN850 has clearly established itself as a premium consumer SSD. It trades the lead with the Samsung 980 PRO on many tests but beats Samsung more often than not, making the WD Black SN850 the fastest PCIe 4.0 SSD we have tested so far.

Western Digital was slow to get into the NVMe game and at times it has seemed like they weren't trying very hard to go after the high end. But they're definitely serious contenders now. The high-end consumer SSD market is no longer just Samsung and the runners-up.

Overall the SN850 does have a few performance quirks, but no serious weaknesses to worry about. The SN850 has a bigger and faster SLC cache than most of the competition and generally seems better-optimized for client workloads than the 980 PRO.

The SN850 also tends to have a bit better power efficiency than the 980 PRO, though the SN850 can definitely end up drawing a lot of power to deliver such high performance. Western Digital has sacrificed some of the efficiency from their previous-generation drives, so the heatsink option makes more sense than it did for the SN750. But the heatsink should be no means be viewed as mandatory. Only the most intense niche workloads will be able to keep the SN850 busy long enough for thermal throttling to become a serious limitation.

Samsung and Western Digital are also facing stiff competition from numerous brands that are using the Phison E18 SSD controller. We don't have full benchmark results from any of those yet, but preliminary results indicate that while there may be no clear winner for the absolute fastest consumer SSD, the Western Digital SN850 is holding on to most of its individual benchmark wins. Later this year we're expecting another wave of Phison E18 drives to arrive using 176L 3D TLC NAND, which may shift the balance.

Some enthusiasts have bemoaned the switch away from MLC NAND (2 bits per cell) for high-end drives. But the WD Black SN850 shows that high-end TLC (3 bits per cell) drives now match or surpass the performance of the Samsung 970 PRO on almost every single metric, even the corner cases where the TLC+SLC caching strategy traditionally runs into trouble. The only remaining test where that last high-end MLC drive still has a significant advantage is sustained sequential write speed after any SLC cache has been filled. For the very narrow range of workloads where that might matter more than the significantly higher peak performance modern consumer TLC drives offer, there are plenty of enterprise TLC drives that don't use SLC caching at all.

MLC is now dead, and there's no compelling reason to bring it back (except for niche applications).

 
Premium NVMe SSD Price Comparison
March 18, 2021
  500 GB 1 TB 2 TB 4 TB
WD Black SN850
(without heatsink)
$119.99 (24¢/GB) $199.74 (20¢/GB) $379.99 (19¢/GB)  
ADATA XPG Gammix S70   $199.99 (20¢/GB) $399.99 (20¢/GB)  
Corsair MP600 PRO
(Phison E18)
  $224.99 (22¢/GB) $434.99 (22¢/GB)  
Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus
(Phison E18)
  $199.99 (20¢/GB) $399.98 (20¢/GB) $799.99 (20¢/GB)
Samsung 980 PRO $119.99 (24¢/GB) $196.74 (20¢/GB) $379.99 (19¢/GB)  
Inland Performance
(Phison E16)
$94.99
(19¢/GB)
$178.99 (18¢/GB) $329.99 (16¢/GB)  
Sabrent Rocket 4.0
(Phison E16)
$89.99
(18¢/GB)
$149.98 (15¢/GB) $299.98 (15¢/GB)  
PCIe 3.0:        
SK hynix Gold P31 $74.99
(15¢/GB)
$134.99 (13¢/GB)    
WD Black SN750 $62.99
(13¢/GB)
$138.08 (14¢/GB) $299.99 (15¢/GB)  
Samsung 970 EVO Plus $79.99
(16¢/GB)
$164.99 (16¢/GB) $319.99 (16¢/GB)  

The top-tier PCIe 4.0 SSDs are all priced very similarly right now, accurately reflecting that they all provide about the same real-world performance. Western Digital's current pricing for the WD Black SN850 is definitely competitive in this context. For a lot of consumers shopping in this segment, the decision may come down to heatsink options and aesthetics. The older, somewhat slower and less efficient generation of PCIe 4.0 SSDs based on the Phison E16 controller includes some much more affordable drives that are only a bit more expensive than the top PCIe 3.0 SSDs.

For most use cases a PCIe 4.0 SSD is still definitely overkill as it won't offer meaningfully better real-world performance than a good PCIe 3.0 SSD. PCIe 4.0 SSDs are still largely lacking their killer app, and saving something like $65 on a 1TB drive to drop down to PCIe 3.0 definitely has an impact on the rest of a system build's budget. But for consumers that are convinced they have good reason to upgrade to PCIe 4.0 storage, the WD Black SN850 is worthy choice. It offers the satisfaction and bragging rights of one of the fastest drives available, and will not be significantly outclassed until PCIe 5.0 arrives.

Mixed IO Performance and Idle Power Management
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  • lmcd - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    *a faster, but not substantially faster, SSD that consumes nearly 2x the power.
  • ozzuneoj86 - Friday, March 19, 2021 - link

    Absolutely agree for laptops.

    For desktops, I think I'd need to see a review that measured thermals, overall system temperature and cooling noise as well as performance. Sure more performance is technically better, but if it is only noticeable in synthetic benchmarks (for now), adding several more watts of heat output to the area between your CPU and GPU isn't the best thing. Also, not having to worry as much about your SSD if ambient temps get a bit toasty is nice too.

    For the record, if prices were close I would still opt for more speed unless it was a really huge thermal\power penalty. At this point though, the $65-$90 (depending on sales) price difference is quite large. There's some wisdom in waiting for applications to start utilizing ultra high speed NVMe storage before investing extra money in it.

    Kind of like buying 64GB of RAM for future proofing. By the time you need it, RAM is faster and cheaper per GB.
  • artifex - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    I'm hoping they'll make denser 3.0x4 offerings for the laptop space, especially if they can keep a lower power profile and decent thermals. I won't care about 4x4 until I'm upgrading to AM5 on my desktop, probably.
  • Kamen Rider Blade - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    All this review does is make me want Optane even more.

    That sheer utter consistency is what I'm looking for.

    And that sweet low latency.
  • Tomatotech - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    Sadly Optane is dying. Micron has just abandoned 3D Xpoint, and Intel completely messed up their dual drives and most of the Optane range is MIA.

    This WD 850 gives you almost as much performance as Optane in the office or at home, at at a fraction of the price. There are other server orientated SSDs that are also becoming almost as good as Optane in the server space, again at far cheaper prices. It’s sad, I had high hopes for Optane but it seems Intel couldn’t scale it out.
  • ksec - Friday, March 19, 2021 - link

    And this Optane 905 isn't even that "great" so to speak. ( Even though it is very expensive, think of it as low cost Optane ) I want to see how Optane PX5800 perform.

    With that said, I am very suspired at the latency WD has managed to achieve. Even for Professional and enthusiast, it will be more than enough for 90+% of use case.
  • Spunjji - Friday, March 19, 2021 - link

    For what purpose?
  • arashi - Sunday, March 21, 2021 - link

    Epeen.
  • FatFlatulentGit - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    No Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus in the benches? I'm baffled that it's not there seeing as how it's probably the most likely competitor for this drive.
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, March 18, 2021 - link

    As I mentioned in the article, my first Phison E18 drive arrived yesterday and I don't have complete results yet. But the first batch of results is in Bench: https://www.anandtech.com/bench/product/2732?vs=27...

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