Sonotsugipaa
I haven't played Starfield so I can't say for sure, but I think people hate that the world is divided into instances rather than being seamless and associate loading screens with that critique... probably.
Nice to see that they're efficient loading screens, though!
Huh, apparently sprite-based games have the heaviest mods to load...
Fair, I like to live on the edge with my PC
I know the drawbacks, if I lose anything that I put on RAID0 it's a minor inconvenience at best - in fact, the two hard drives on RAID0 I mentioned are quite old and I'm not sure how long I can expect them to last (not that I use them often).
Understandable downvote count
"Sea-lioning" is a way of arguing in bad faith; specifically, asking for evidence or feigning ignorance every time the opposing party makes a claim, regardless of how trivial said claim is.
Nobody knows what BonkTheBonkTheAnnoyed thinks sea-lioning has to do with anything though.
deleted by creator
I'd rather take two SATAs, I have a cheap docking station with two SATA slots (currently housing hard disks) and putting them together on a RAID0 almost doubles a single one's performance.
I could buy a docking station with two NVMe slots, it would be wise too, but then again, two NVMe SSDs would be faster than one, and again, it may or may not be worth the slight (potential) increase in price and decrease in reliability - especially considering the diminishing returns.
I can confirm that fully moving Windows from a HDD to an SSD makes all the difference in the world; for some reason, W10 and especially W11 are astoundingly slow on hard disks.
I have a W11 VM, and if I run it on a SATA SSD it boots up in ~30s; HDD, the same image on a HDD takes approximately 5 minutes to get to the login screen, then no less than 2 minutes to run applications.
Even considering that I disabled paging files.
I know DirectStorage helps with read performance, I can't use it because Linux, and I'm not intrested in running benchmarks for the heck of it - I would rather like to know how much storage speed affects loading times in your (or anyone's) experience, in practical scenarios, with all the CPU-bound, GPU-bound, memory-bound and network-bound loads affecting your (or anyone's) average gaming session.
I'm not necessarily talking about SATA or NVMe SSDs specifically, not even SSDs specifically; I think you could theoretically surpass an NVMe SSD's speed with large enough RAID0 setups of hard drives, if you ignore seek times and some other factors.
... if you're asking what SSDs I have, unfortunately they're all SATA :c
It's technically not, but it's what redlib can do.
Personally, I simply decided to contribute as little as possible to Reddit, and I only go there for a single niche subreddit that I don't see making it into the fediverse anytime soon (they already tried on Lemmy); I pray that scraped old.reddit.com requests have a negligible impact on engagement metrics.