Positively average across the board in most metrics, it's let down by pricing and overshadowed by competitors.

Average performance in most tasks

Impressive endurance rating

Alternatives for similar money

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Everything changed when the fire nation attacked… Honestly, that's what it feels like writing this review. Teamgroup's MP44Q PCIe 4.0 SSD has finally landed with me for testing, and it's a curious little QLC number that, once upon a time, would have offered itself up as a nice, affordable, tantalizing opportunity for any would-be budget gamer's rig.

The problem is that it's 2026, this sorta QLC feels a bit old fashioned, and SSD prices are through the roof.

It's especially tough as we've seen even superb budget drives such as the WD Blue SN5100 totally hampered by an extraordinarily high price tag. And that's a problem, a real big one, especially for Teamgroup. Side-by-side these drives, although targeted at the same audience, and with similarly high price tags (at time of writing the MP44Q is $305 and the SN5100 is $317 ), perform wildly differently.

The MP44Q is a sleek little budget PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD. It's a single-sided M.2 2280 design giving it broad compatibility with all of your consoles, laptops, and PCs, and comes complete in 1-4 TB capacities with no heatsink variant available.

As for that core hardware, you get a Maxiotech MAP1602A controller (a slightly older model, and the same one found inside of the Lexar NM790 ), and die packages built out of YMTC's 232-layer 3D QLC NAND flash (you "might" find similar density YMTC TLC in Biwin's Black Opal NV7400 , or Micron flash who knows…).

There's no dedicated DRAM cache here, mostly to keep costs down, but you do get a healthy dose of 40 MB of system memory allocated via HMB, and a big chunk of pseudo SLC, and that's kind of it.