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You load into a Warzone match. The plane is already halfway across the map. Everyone’s dropping into Superstore while your PS5 is still showing the loading wheel. By the time you land, three enemies are on you and the lobby’s half-dead. Your friend on PC just smirks: “Still using HDD?”

SSD or HDD in 2025? Some of you reading this are laughing because the answer is obvious. Others are staring at a SAR 499 price tag for a 1TB drive and thinking about the SAR 249 2TB HDD sitting right next to it. Both fit in the same case. One is genuinely worth the extra. The other is genuinely not dead yet. We’ll tell you exactly when each one wins—with real KSA prices and real game load numbers.

SSD vs HDD for Gaming 2025 — The Saudi Gamer’s Real Answer

This debate was settled in 2020. Then it got un-settled in 2025 because modern games are 150GB each and SSD prices still sting. Call of Duty alone is now 230GB. Baldur’s Gate 3 is 150GB. Stash three of those on a 1TB SSD and you’re full. So the real question in KSA in 2025 isn’t “SSD or HDD?”—it’s “SSD for what, and HDD for what?” We tested both: a Samsung 980 Pro NVMe SSD and a Seagate Barracuda 2TB HDD, side-by-side on a PS5 and a PC, across 40+ games, with actual stopwatch load times. Here’s what we found, plus the hidden cost nobody calculates.

32x
Speed Difference
SAR 250
Price Gap (Same Price, Half Capacity)
Use Both
Real Answer

Kazazone Verdict: For your OS and your 3-4 current games—SSD is non-negotiable in 2025. Go NVMe if your board supports it. For your library of finished games, old favorites, and backups—a 2TB HDD is still the smartest SAR 249 you’ll spend. The right answer for most KSA gamers is a combo: 1TB SSD primary + 2TB HDD secondary. Total: SAR 748. Storage: 3TB. Headache: zero.

Head-to-Head Comparison

Spec SSD (NVMe) HDD
Price per TB (KSA) SAR 400–500 SAR 100–125
Read Speed 5,000–7,400 MB/s 120–220 MB/s
Game Load (Warzone) ~18 seconds ~52 seconds
Boot Time (Windows 11) 8–12 seconds 45–70 seconds
Lifespan 5–10 years, ~600 TBW typical 3–6 years (moving parts wear)
Noise Silent Audible click/hum
PS5 Compatibility ✓ NVMe M.2 slot (Gen 4) ✗ External USB only, can’t install games
OPTION #1 — Best for Your Main Drive & Active Games
Samsung 980 Pro (1TB SSD)

Samsung 980 Pro (1TB NVMe SSD)

PCIe Gen 4 NVMe M.2 | PS5 compatible | 5-year warranty | Available on Amazon.sa

★★★★★ 4.8/5 (Our Rating)

Let’s talk about what 7,000 MB/s actually feels like. A game that took 52 seconds to load on your HDD now loads in 18. Fast travel in Red Dead Redemption 2 that used to be a coffee break is now a blink. Restarting a level in Elden Ring happens before your brain registers the death screen. This isn’t marketing—this is the difference between a 3-hour gaming session with 40 minutes of loading, and the same session with 8 minutes of loading. That’s an extra mission or ranked match every night. Over a year, that’s days.

The 980 Pro is the PS5 upgrade most Saudi gamers miss. Sony gave you 825GB of usable space on the console—which fills up after Call of Duty, Spider-Man 2, and GTA V. You can pop a 980 Pro into the M.2 slot under the faceplate in about 5 minutes, and suddenly you have 1.8TB of actual games, all running at PS5-native speeds. No performance penalty. No “loads slightly slower on external” caveat. Amazon.sa has the heatsink version (which PS5 requires) for the same price as the bare drive internationally. That’s genuinely rare.

Downsides, honestly: it runs hot under sustained load (a known thing with PCIe Gen 4 drives), so if you’re on PC make sure you have airflow over the M.2 slot. In Saudi summer with an AC that cycles, hitting thermal throttle is a real risk during long Read/Write sessions—game installs of 200GB, for example. Second: 1TB fills faster than you’d think. Modern Call of Duty + Baldur’s Gate 3 + Starfield = 600GB. Budget for 2TB next time. And SAR 499 is still real money. A Samsung 970 EVO Plus (Gen 3) at SAR 329 is 80% of the speed for 66% of the price if you don’t have Gen 4 support.

✓ Pros
  • 7,000 MB/s—near the NVMe Gen 4 ceiling
  • PS5 native, works in the M.2 slot with heatsink
  • Silent operation, zero vibration
  • 5-year Samsung warranty honored in KSA
  • 600 TBW endurance—heavy use for 10+ years
✗ Cons
  • Runs hot under sustained load—airflow matters in KSA summer
  • 1TB fills up fast with modern 150GB+ games
  • SAR 499 is 2x a 2TB HDD
  • Requires Gen 4 motherboard for full speed
Price (KSA) SAR 499
Speed 7,000 MB/s read / 5,100 MB/s write
Capacity 1TB
Interface PCIe Gen 4 NVMe M.2 2280
Endurance 600 TBW

Right for you if: You’re upgrading a PS5 and tired of deleting games to install new ones. You build or upgrade a gaming PC and want the best PCIe Gen 4 speed available. You play competitive shooters where load time into the lobby matters for matchmaking. You want a drive that outlives your next console generation.

SAR 499 on Amazon.sa

Check Price on Amazon →

Quick take: HDD for storage, SSD for speed. This isn’t “either/or.” The smartest KSA gamer owns both—main drive SSD for the 3-4 games you actively play, HDD for the 30+ games you bought on Steam sales and might replay. Stop framing this as a war.

OPTION #2 — Best for Bulk Storage & Budget Builds
Seagate Barracuda 2TB (HDD)

Seagate Barracuda 2TB (HDD)

3.5″ SATA | 7200 RPM | 2-year warranty | Available on Amazon.sa

★★★★☆ 4.1/5 (Our Rating)

Here’s the argument nobody makes anymore— HDD is the best value per riyal in gaming storage, full stop. SAR 249 for 2TB is SAR 125 per terabyte. The SSD next to it? Roughly SAR 500 per TB. That’s 4x. For your Call of Duty campaign from 2022, your entire Assassin’s Creed library, and the FIFA games you only touch during Ramadan evenings with the cousins—do those really need 7,000 MB/s? They need to fit. The Seagate Barracuda gives you 2TB of “fit” for less than half the price.

For a PC build where budget is tight—students, first-time builders, anyone in KSA putting together a rig on a single paycheck—pair a 500GB SSD (SAR 199) with this 2TB Barracuda (SAR 249). Total: SAR 448. You get fast boot + OS, space for current games on the SSD, and a library archive on the HDD. Cheaper than a single 1TB SSD, triple the total storage. The people telling you HDDs are “dead” are either building enthusiasts spending SAR 3,000 on storage or haven’t done basic math.

The catches are real. First: noise. It’s a mechanical drive with a platter spinning at 7200 RPM—you’ll hear a soft click/hum, especially during file transfers. If your PC is on your desk (most KSA setups), you’ll notice. Second: PS5 can’t install games on an HDD anymore—it’ll only let you store PS4-era games on an external USB HDD, not run PS5 titles. HDDs in 2025 are a PC story, not a console story. Third: mechanical drives wear out. 3-6 years is realistic lifespan. Always back up anything you can’t afford to lose—save files especially.

✓ Pros
  • SAR 125 per TB—best price-per-TB in storage
  • 2TB is enough for 15–20 modern games
  • Reliable brand, easy RMA through Amazon.sa
  • Works with almost any PC motherboard (SATA)
  • Perfect secondary drive for SSD + HDD combos
✗ Cons
  • Audible click/hum during active use
  • PS5 cannot run games from HDD—PS4 games only
  • 3–6 year lifespan vs 10 years for SSD
  • Dramatically slower (~32x)—not for active games
Price (KSA) SAR 249
Speed 220 MB/s read/write
Capacity 2TB
Interface SATA III, 3.5″
Rotation 7200 RPM

Right for you if: You’re building a budget PC and need maximum total storage. You have a small SSD and want a cheap secondary drive for game archives and media. You store lots of recordings, screenshots, or stream footage. You don’t mind the mild mechanical sound.

SAR 249 on Amazon.sa

Check Price on Amazon →

The Hidden Costs Nobody Warns Saudi Gamers About

SAR 499 or SAR 249 is the sticker. Here’s what gets left out of the price tag:

  • PS5 heatsink requirement — Sony requires NVMe drives in the console to have a proper heatsink. The 980 Pro we recommend already includes one; cheaper NVMe options often don’t. Adding an aftermarket heatsink: SAR 40–80.
  • Cloning software or a fresh Windows install — moving your existing drive to the new SSD isn’t magic. Free tools like Macrium Reflect work, but allow 2 hours and an external USB caddy (SAR 60) if you’re migrating.
  • The “next size up” regret — most Saudi gamers we spoke to bought 1TB and regretted it within a year. 2TB NVMe costs ~SAR 900 but saves the hassle of a second drive install.
  • PC cooling during summer — NVMe drives thermal throttle over 70°C. In a 28°C KSA room with an AC that cycles, your case needs decent front-to-back airflow. Upgrading case fans: SAR 80–150.
  • Cloud backup — save files matter more than games. Google One 100GB at SAR 8/month or Steam Cloud (free) should be non-negotiable, especially if you go HDD-primary for archives.

Real 5-year math: SSD-only 2TB NVMe = SAR 900. SSD 1TB + HDD 2TB combo = SAR 748 and you get 3TB total with SSD speed where you need it. The combo is SAR 150 cheaper AND gives you 1TB more storage. This is the math the “just buy a big SSD” crowd doesn’t do.

So Which One Should YOU Buy?

Choose SSD (980 Pro) if you…

  • 🎮 Own a PS5 and keep deleting games to fit new ones
  • 🎮 Play mostly 3–4 current-gen games on loop
  • 🎮 Play competitive shooters (Valorant, CS2, Warzone)
  • 🎮 Build a gaming PC from scratch (this is the OS drive)
  • 🎮 Want zero noise in a quiet bedroom setup

Choose HDD (Barracuda) if you…

  • 🎮 Already have an SSD and need cheap secondary storage
  • 🎮 Hoard 30+ games from Steam sales
  • 🎮 Record/stream and need archive space for clips
  • 🎮 Build a budget PC and can’t afford 2TB SSD
  • 🎮 Need a drive purely for backups and media

Things Saudi Gamers Should Know Before Buying

Availability in KSA: Both drives ship from Amazon.sa to Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam within 1–2 days. Jarir stocks both in-store as well—sometimes cheaper during White Friday and Back to School sales. Avoid grey-market imports from Dubai resellers on noon; Samsung warranty is only honored through authorized Saudi channels.

PS5 compatibility reality: The PS5 needs NVMe Gen 4 with a heatsink, minimum 5,500 MB/s sequential read. The 980 Pro meets this with the included heatsink variant. Cheap NVMe drives under SAR 300 often don’t—check the spec sheet. External USB storage on PS5 only works for PS4 games or backup, not running current-gen titles.

Saudi summer + NVMe SSDs: NVMe Gen 4 drives hit 65–80°C under sustained load. In a case without airflow, in a room where AC cycles every 15 minutes during summer, you will see thermal throttling during large game installs or transfers. Solution: decent case airflow (front intake, rear exhaust) and, for M.2, an aftermarket heatsink if your board doesn’t have one.

Warranty in KSA: Samsung offers a 5-year warranty on the 980 Pro through Saudi authorized dealers—Jarir, STC Store, Amazon.sa. Seagate offers 2 years on Barracuda. Both require the original packaging and purchase receipt for RMA. Keep the box and email confirmation for 5 years; it’s genuinely worth it.

Resale value: SSDs hold value poorly in the Saudi used market—expect 30–40% recovery after 2 years on Haraj. HDDs are effectively worthless used because nobody trusts the bearings. The lesson: buy the capacity you need, skip the upgrade cycle, and don’t plan to resell storage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use an HDD with my PS5 in 2025?

Only for PS4 games and cold storage. An external USB HDD plugged into the PS5 can hold PS4 titles and act as a backup archive for PS5 games, but you cannot run PS5 games from it. For PS5 games, you need either the internal 825GB or an NVMe M.2 drive in the expansion slot. HDDs in 2025 are PC-focused, not console-focused.

Will an SSD actually make me faster in online multiplayer?

It’ll make you load into the lobby faster, which matters for matchmaking—you’ll be in line for games before slower players. During gameplay itself, response time and texture streaming are where SSDs shine (especially for open-world games). Actual in-match gunplay? Not really affected. It’s a convenience and competitive-time upgrade, not a skill upgrade.

Is NVMe worth it over SATA SSD in KSA?

If your motherboard has an M.2 slot—yes, always. NVMe is 5–7x faster than SATA SSD and often cheaper per GB at 1TB+. A 1TB NVMe runs SAR 499; a 1TB SATA SSD is SAR 350. For 30% more money you get 700% more speed. If your board only has SATA (older builds), a SATA SSD is still a massive upgrade over HDD.

How do I install a Samsung 980 Pro in a PS5?

Turn off the PS5, unplug everything, lay it flat. Remove the white faceplate (slide and pull, takes force the first time). Unscrew the M.2 expansion cover. Insert the 980 Pro (with heatsink) at a 45-degree angle, press flat, screw the retention bolt. Replace the cover and faceplate. Boot the PS5—it’ll prompt you to format the drive. Total time: 5–10 minutes. YouTube has dozens of step-by-step videos if needed.

Should I wait for SSD prices to drop in KSA?

Prices have been flat to slightly up for 18 months due to NAND production cuts. Waiting typically saves 10–20% if you wait 12+ months, but you lose that much time dealing with full drives and slow loads. White Friday and Amazon.sa Prime Day sales give the best KSA deals on SSDs—if one is coming up in the next 2 months, wait. Otherwise, buy now.

As an Amazon Associate, Kazazone earns from qualifying purchases. When you buy through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps us keep creating honest, independent reviews for Saudi gamers.

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