
Enlarge / The fastest storage you'll never see: NVMe drives generally get hidden beneath an aluminum heat sink. In our test rig, that heat sink is also underneath its RTX 2070 Super GPU. (credit: Jim Salter)
Samsung's newest generation of midgrade consumer NVMe storage is out today—the new drive is simply dubbed the "Samsung 980," without any suffix. The reviewer guide Samsung provided us compares the new drive to last generation's 970 EVO—we didn't have a 970 EVO on hand, but we did have a 970 EVO Plus and a 970 Pro, so those are the prior-generation drives we'll compare the new 980 to today.
A TLC drive by any other name

Samsung 980 SSD
Designation | bits per cell | Discrete voltage levels |
SLC | 1 bit | 2 |
MLC | 2 bits | 4 |
TLC | 3 bits | 8 |
QLC | 4 bits | 16 |
Samsung calls the 980 a "three bit MLC" SSD, which is a lot like referring to a red car as "pink." To justify this, the company leans on the fact that "M" stands for "Multi"—so in plain English, "three bit MLC" could make sense, despite being utter nonsense in the established terminology of SSDs. From here on out, we're going to call it what it is: TLC.
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