PS5 storage has been getting more expensive for a while now, but SanDisk just set a new benchmark for audacity. The SanDisk Optimus GX PRO 850P NVMe SSD officially launched on June 16, 2026, and its 8TB model carries a price tag of $2,959.99. That figure is listed as a launch discount from the full MSRP of $3,699.99, which somehow makes the whole thing feel worse.
To put that in perspective: $2,959.99 is more than the combined cost of three PS5 Pro consoles after Sony's recent price increases. For a storage drive.

Pay less for your games.
Get discounts up to 80% off
What you actually get for the price
Here's the thing: the specs on the 8TB Optimus GX PRO 850P are not dramatically better than drives already on the market. The new drive posts sequential read speeds of 7,200MB/s and write speeds of 6,600MB/s. Compare that to the 8TB WD Black SN850X, which hits read speeds between 5,300MB/s and 6,300MB/s and writes between 7,000MB/s and 7,300MB/s. The performance delta is marginal at best, and the WD Black SN850X was available for around $543.99 back in October 2025 before the current storage price surge pushed it up to roughly $1,309.72.
So you are paying more than double a comparable drive for speed improvements that most PS5 games will never actually stress.
The range is not exclusively 8TB, though. The Optimus GX PRO 850P also comes in 1TB, 2TB, and 4TB capacities, with the 1TB model starting at $379.99. That entry price is still higher than these capacities were selling for before AI data center demand started driving up NAND flash prices across the board, but it is at least a number that does not require a double-take.
The rebrand behind the new name
The Optimus Collection is not entirely new hardware. This launch is also a rebranding of the existing WD Black and WD Blue product lines under the SanDisk umbrella, which Western Digital spun off as a separate brand. The practical implication is straightforward: once existing WD Black and WD Blue stock sells through, those drives are gone. What replaces them is the Optimus, Optimus GX, and Optimus GX PRO lineup, at these new prices.
For PS5 owners already thinking about storage upgrades, that context matters. Games keep getting bigger. If you are prepping for upcoming releases like Saros, check out the Saros file size and pre-load date guide to get a sense of how fast your drive fills up. The same applies to Pragmata, and you can find exact figures in the Pragmata game size and preload date guide.
Storage costs are only going one direction right now
The broader context here is a storage market under real pressure. NAND flash prices have climbed steadily as AI infrastructure buildout consumes supply that would otherwise flow into consumer drives. The RAM and storage crisis affecting PC builders is hitting console players too, just indirectly through the accessory market.
What most players miss is that a 4TB drive covers the vast majority of PS5 library scenarios. Even with a PS Plus Premium subscription pulling in a constant stream of titles, hitting the ceiling on a 4TB M.2 drive takes deliberate effort. The 8TB model is a niche product for a very specific type of collector or content creator, not a practical upgrade for most people.
Prime Day is approaching, and older SSD stock tends to see price drops around major retail events. That is probably the more realistic path to affordable PS5 storage in the near term than waiting on the Optimus GX PRO 850P to come down from its current stratosphere. For a broader look at what is worth playing on PS5 right now, the gaming guides hub has you covered while you wait for storage prices to make sense again.








