NVMe SSD are a waste of money unless you are working with lots of large videos, images or databases.
As a normal users you are hardly able to take advantage out of the high transfer rates offered by them. Plus if you're reding from or saving to another medium the advantage is zero unless it's another NVMe.
For the price of a 250GB NVMe you typically get double the size of a good SATA SSD.
Yep, fully agree.
I was logging read/writes for a week on Corsair MP510 960GB, everyday computing plus some gaming (DCS, ACC). Never went above 363 MB/s for reads and 130 MB/s for writes.
Large project in Revit brought it up to 380 MB/s and 188 MB/s. Adobe Premiere went to 302 MB/s before hitting the CPU bottleneck (i7-8700K)
So, unless you have some dual CPU beast of a workstation, you'll hardly ever enjoy full NVMe read/write/latency capability. Sure looks pretty on benchmark though.
That extra $$ is better spent on larger SATA SSD.