Samsung SSDs are known to be pretty reliable. I can't speak for everyone who has ever owned one, but I've bought multiple Samsung drives over the years and never have once had a single one fail. I've had other SSDs fail, but not ones made by Samsung (just anecdotal experience, take it with a grain of salt. But I've put some of them through a LOT of abuse.)
Also, the larger the SSD, the longer its lifespan will be in terms of its ability to take a lot of writes. The SSD's controller has wear leveling stuff built in, so if you were to keep writing the same file over and over again in the same place, the controller would actually move that data physically on the SSD to different locations on the flash each time (even though it wouldn't move in your filesystem, so it would still be in the same place as far as the operating system is concerned). The larger the capacity of the drive, the more flash there is to spread writes around to, so larger drives can withstand more lifetime writes than smaller drives can.
Those 2TB Samsung drives can take a LOT of abuse. You could put that thing through constant 30GB of swap usage all day every day and probably still not wear out that drive. Those things are likely going to be able to take petabytes of writes before the wear out (an incomprehensibly large amount of data for these kinds of workloads). Of course, still back up your data just in case, but I wouldn't worry about impending failure on these, I think your drives will far outlast the computer that you're using.
(Those TBW rating numbers tend to be underestimated for a lot of SSDs. Samsung drives have been known to far outlast their official TBW ratings in various independent tests.)