Testseek.com have collected 59 expert reviews of the A-Data M.2 XPG Gammix S50 Lite Series NVMe PCIe and the average rating is 77%. Scroll down and see all reviews for A-Data M.2 XPG Gammix S50 Lite Series NVMe PCIe.
November 2020
(77%)
59 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(100%)
9 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
77010059
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Published: 2020-10-26, Author: Sean , review by: tomshardware.com
Adata's XPG Gammix S50 Lite puts up a tough fight against many of the most powerful SSDs on the market, especially when it comes to loading your favorite games. Overall, the drive is quite affordable given its specifications and capabilities...
Published: 2020-10-22, Author: David , review by: overclockers.com
Abstract: Since the launch of generation 4 NVMe solid-state drives, the market has been limited with only one controller option, the Phison E16. While the numbers were impressive, having only one controller meant that the buying options were quite limited. More tha...
The ADATA XPG GAMMIX S50 Lite is our very first look at the Silicon Motion SM2267 controller and how the budget PCIe Gen4 market is coming together. It is really exciting to see affordable native PCIe Gen4 controllers finally making it to market. The XPG...
Published: 2020-11-25, Author: Jon , review by: tweaktown.com
ADATA's 2TB XPG Gammix S50 Lite gives us our first insight into what Gen4 silicon from Silicon Motion is all about. Overall, it is looking pretty good, especially as it relates to gaming, which has always been a category where SMI-powered NVMe SSDs have e...
Abstract: The XPG Gammix S50 Lite didn't benchmark the fastest of the 4th-gen PCIe M.2 NVMe SSDs we've reviewed, but it proved nearly as quick as the best of them with real-world transfers. It's also considerably cheaper than previous PCIe 4 drives, which hopefully...
Published: 2021-01-01, Author: Andrew , review by: techteamgb.co.uk
Abstract: ADATA's new PCIe Gen 4 drive, the S50 Lite, has me confused out my mind. It's a 1 or 2TB drive, with a silicon motion gen 4 controller, DDR4 and SLC caches, costs a tad more than a Sabrent Rocket 4 – but barely beats a good gen 3 drive in performance. Yea...
Adata's XPG Gammix S50 Lite puts up a tough fight against many of the most powerful SSDs on the market, especially when it comes to loading your favorite games. Overall, the drive is quite affordable given its specifications and capabilities...
Published: 2020-11-17, Author: Jon , review by: pcworld.co.nz
Abstract: The XPG Gammix S50 Lite didn't benchmark the fastest of the 4th-gen PCIe M.2 NVMe SSDs we've reviewed, but it proved nearly as quick as the best of them with real-world transfers. It's also considerably cheaper than previous PCIe 4 drives, which hopefully...
Abstract: Under the hoods of the newest, skinniest laptops (and in the hollows of the latest desktop-PC motherboards), solid-state storage has undergone a transformation. Even if you're a close observer of all things tech, it's understandable if you didn't even rea...