- TRIM has been supported for ages, but is entirely besides the point
- Look at the Samsung EVOs, required a Firmware update for performance recovery
- Huge sequential read/write and IOPS, as in PCI-E Drives, has no place in a desktop/gaming grade system. That's enterprise level stuff. The reaosn it was developed is for enterprise applications. For example - High demand database serving. Just because you can, does not mean you should
- Consolidated space? Who really cares? Steam allows you to manage multiple Librays and present them to you, in actual usage, as one - Totally flawlessly.
- I never suggested he bought a PCI-E drive. I just suggested he did not raid SSDs
It's all as relevant now as it was years ago. There is absolutely no benefit to RAID SSDs over a single SSD that warrants doing it. Even without any/few downsides, however minor they are perceived, why even bother?
The OP does not need the read/write speeds beyond what a modern SATA-3 SSD can offer. What video capture will be be performing that writes at 500GB/second? None is the answer. What supporting hardware does he have that will allow him to edit footage that will be bottlenecked by SATA-3 SSD speeds? Ultaimtely PCI-E drives are numbers in bright lights for bragging rights. They are useful in mobile applications, such as laptops, where form factor is king. I doubt anyone outside of the enterprise environment can justify such ridiculous numbers.
The same end advice applies from this end. Get a single large SSD and be done with it.