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when windows installs it will make small boot and security partitions
But yea good point I have not partitioned a c: nvme no matter what size lol
as for gaming.....having the OS and the games on the same driver regardless of partitions causes a slow down in over all read or write times on said drive.....I/O requests to keep the OS up and running will always be in the back round
its does not matter what others say....they still wont admit they are running x86 CPU's that can execute 64 bit coding
sata raid speeds are limited by the raid controller, not just the drives
the cpus have 64bit processing, they support the extended 32bit instructions
when preforming 32bit instructions and memory stores, the first 32bits are all zeros
32bit cpus have a max of 4g ram, how can x32 cpu/hardware access more ram?
i would agree with this
unless you have some reason to need it
there really is no reason to to do it
most games dont mind being on a hdd, for the games you want fast load times put them in a ssd or the boot drive