Typically any server nvme SSD with mlc or enterprise tlc. 960gb / 1.92tb / 3.84tb. 800gb or 1.6tb if really need high write, they can be pricey though
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Look at the new E18 pSLC drives on DigitalSpaceport. They're being bought up by the Chia and ZFS crowds because of high sustained writes and write endurance. They come in 320GB and 640GB versions (essentially 1TB and 2TB models, with pSLC firmware).
From what I understand the first batch is almost bought out, but eventually they have enough of them to be selling through Amazon as well.
But if this is a boot drive... you don't need anything special. You're going to use like 1-2% of its rated TBW per year: so any warranty would time out well before you hit endurance limits. Buy a midrange consumer 2-4TB NVMe on Black Friday and be done with it.
If you're number one concern is data integrity, you might think TLC vs MLC VS SLC matters. After all, storing more bits in an electron gate makes it easier for them to leak out and lose data.
The thing is, prices are getting so cheap on SSDs, that the cost to buy a brand-new replacement SSD is cheaper than spending extra on enterprise SSDs. If you're already practicing backups (which you should), modern consumer Samsung SSDs will provide the most reliability/performance per dollar.