
ADATA SE880 500GB
Score: 88/100
Fikwot 1TB SSD
Score: 85/100Rankings

The ADATA SE880 500 GB delivers flagship-class 2 GB/s speeds in a lightweight magnesium-alloy package, offering broad compatibility but lacking encryption and ruggedness.

The Fikwot FP80 1TB offers flagship-class 2000 MB/s speeds, a sturdy aluminum case, and a generous 5-year warranty, making it ideal for creators and gamers with compatible hosts.
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
500 GB | 1,000 GBbest | |
2,000 MB/sbest | 2,000 MB/sbest | |
2,000 MB/sbest | — | |
| ↓ lower better | 31 gbest | 130.4 g |
60 monthsbest | 60 monthsbest |
Click an attribute name to sort · Green = best, red = worst (relative to this comparison)
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
Capacity(1) | ||
Storage Capacity (GB) | 500 GB | 1000 GB |
Build & Design(2) | ||
Weight (g) | 31 g | 130.4 g |
Form Factor | External SSD | External Portable SSD |
Power & Connectivity(1) | ||
Included Cable Type | USB‑C to USB‑C, USB‑C to USB‑A | USB‑A to USB‑C, USB‑C to USB‑C |
Compatibility(1) | ||
Operating System Compatibility | Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, Xbox, PlayStation, iPad, iPhone | Windows, macOS, Linux |


Products in the top-left offer the best value (high score, low price).

Professional reviewers praise the blistering 2,000 MB/s burst speeds and compact chassis, while noting the drop in sustained write performance and the need for a Gen2x2 host.
Everyday users love the lightning-quick transfers and pocket-size design, but complain about speed drops on large files and the absence of encryption.

Professional reviewers praise the FP80 for delivering flagship-class speeds at a competitive price, noting its solid build and long warranty, while warning that full performance requires a USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 port.
Users love the blazing transfer speeds and rugged pocket-size design, but complain about slower performance on the USB-A cable and the lack of encryption.
“Extremely fast read/write speeds up to 2,000 MB/s”

“Ultra-compact and lightweight (31 g)”

“No hardware encryption - felt insecure for sensitive files”


