In February, permission was given to set up the suite on the 1,600-crew carrier as part of a partnership between the Royal Navy and the British eSports...
In a nutshell: While modern aircraft carriers are gigantic vessels packed with amenities one might not expect to see on a warship, the UK Royal Navy's HMS Prince of Wales has something unique: a full eSports/gaming suite for the crew to compete against each other.
In February, permission was given to set up the suite on the 1,600-crew carrier as part of a partnership between the Royal Navy and the British eSports Federation.
The gaming room includes 12 high-end Alienware Aurora R15 gaming desktop PCs, featuring RTX 4080 graphics cards and Core i7 CPUs – the systems are capable of running far more than just low-demand eSports games. The room also has LED lights, a widescreen TV, and office chairs.
The MoD sees embracing gamer culture as a way of attracting and retaining young people, particularly for roles in cyber defence and technology-focused positions. The UK government launched a recruitment plan this year to fast-track gamers into cyber defence roles.
These machines are capable of running high-demand games in the sense that a program crashing presupposes that the program loaded to some extent in the first place
"this baby has a 4 speed manual transmission, an am/fm radio, and floor mats!" right out of The Price Is Right 'feature list'. Mouse and keyboard not included.
More of the fact that they are 2.5x the price of the parts, and the cases they are in are the opposite of 'optimized for cooling'. Thermal throttling is the name of the game here.
Like a Ferrari that looks great (great in air-quotes here) in the driveway, but overheats a block down the street, essentially.