A serendipitous Redditor has stumbled upon a treasure worth gold in these trying times: twenty of some of the best SSDs, worth $5,100, for the price of just two. Yes, while the rest of us mere mortals are stuck coping with the drought-ridden production lines of NAND flash and DRAM, this lucky buyer received a blessing that is nothing short of a Christmas miracle — or an Amazon packaging error.
As posted on the r/pcmasterrace subreddit, u/1trollzor1 ordered two 2 TB Samsung 9100 Pro SSDs from Amazon but ended up receiving two entire boxes full of twenty drives. According to the OP, Amazon customer support even told them to keep the package, leading to blissful confusion for u/1trollzor1, who wondered whether to flip them for profit or start an insane NAS project.
For context, one of these Samsung 9100 Pro 2 TB drives costs $254.99 on Amazon right now, so twenty of them would cost around $5,100. The person originally ordered only two, which means they paid a little over $500 for SSDs worth ten times as much. How such a mix-up happened in the first place, well, the OP didn't expound upon that.
Funnily enough, this isn't even the first time something like this has happened. Of course, there are plenty of unfortunate deliveries, but some good eggs also make it through. We covered a similar story a few months ago, where another Redditor ordered a single Samsung 990 Evo Plus SSD but instead got a box full of them worth almost $1,000. Though these 9100 Pros certainly carry more swag (and more quantity).
Not to mention, these are Samsung's top-of-the-line PCIe 5.0 drives with sequential read and write speeds of up to 14,800 MB/s and 13,400 MB/s, respectively. If it weren't for a few other options on our best SSDs roundup, Samsung's 9100 Pro would be the top choice for a flagship build today, and it's still a great SSD regardless of the leaderboards.
As for the deal itself, there's an inkling of suspicion given the OP's "1trollzor1" username — referring to the infamous trollface meme — which could hint at the underlying reality of this situation. There were no obvious clues in the comments pointing toward fabrication. And because packaging errors like these are common, we're going to give this one the benefit of the doubt. The people need a win like this.
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