Does your gaming PC have a name?

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  • DoctorEldritch's Avatar
    Community Manager
    Hello Legion Gamers!

    Today, the 20th of November, is Name Your PC Day! Does your PC have a name?

    The importance of computers in our personal lives can hardly be overstated: we work with them, we game with them, we connect to the world with them, and to celebrate their role in our lives, this day was created to give our trusty computers a dash of personality, making tech feel more like a buddy than a device, by the means of a quirky moniker.

    It could be something as simple as Legion, or something more quirky and personal, sort of an inside joke for you and your fellow gamer friends. Or some cultural reference like HAL or JARVIS. Personally, with this decision, I went to my preference in literature and named my PC "Azathoth".

    To paraphrase the immortal words of the Bard,

    “What’s in a name? That which we call PC
    By any other name would game as rad.”


    So what other name would you choose for your PC?

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  • 15 Replies

  • Saka's Avatar
    Level 52
    My computers do have names, but they are usually not something big and glorious. Currently I am using a Saka-Tux. 😁
    Unamused Snarktooth. Advocate for hearing loss & accessibility. Person, friend and a terrible/terrific* artist.
    *delete as appropriate
  • DoctorEldritch's Avatar
    Community Manager
    @Saka I get the Saka part, but why the Tux? Is it because your PC is black and formal?
  • Saka's Avatar
    Level 52
    @DoctorEldritch No, the Tux is because Linux mascot/logo is a penguin named Tux. I have dual boot on my system.
    Unamused Snarktooth. Advocate for hearing loss & accessibility. Person, friend and a terrible/terrific* artist.
    *delete as appropriate
  • DoctorEldritch's Avatar
    Community Manager
    @Saka Ah, I get it. Makes sense. and when you say "Currently I am using", do you mean LOQ?
  • Saka's Avatar
    Level 52
    @DoctorEldritch Uh, actually no. It's a Legion 5 Pro that I got back in 2021.

    I gifted the LOQ to my spouse, because he had been really struggling enjoying new games with his aging desktop. The graphics really struggled maintaining steady frame rates in newest titles. Normally we'd have upgraded that system already, but first covid and crypto bubble happened, and later due to my persistent health issues our pockets were drained. I got my Legion laptop because of covid too, my 2017 system was on its last legs and a stand-alone graphics card for desktop would have cost almost as much as a whole high end laptop at the time.

    I am still paying off this laptop for one more year, so it would have sucked to just put it on the shelf and have it collect dust. Besides, the performance difference between the Legion and LOQ was only visible to the naked eye in some of the newest releases, namely Diablo IV and Baldur's Gate. That came mostly from the software tricks only available for the latest generation of Nvidia card. Otherwise it's an increase I can live without.

    The 13th gen i7 is faster than the Zen3 R7, but it's not that noticeable in the games I actually play, even in CPU-bound scenarios. I will add though, that I did eliminate a significant memory bottleneck early on for my Legion, I bought a much faster memory when I upgraded the laptop to 32GB. Thus, my unit is not exactly standard any more.

    There's also the matter that 3070 has more tensor cores than 4060, so it is a lot faster in computing (CUDA). Thanks to my choice of education/career, that is not without significance to me.
    Unamused Snarktooth. Advocate for hearing loss & accessibility. Person, friend and a terrible/terrific* artist.
    *delete as appropriate
  • DoctorEldritch's Avatar
    Community Manager
    @Saka It is indeed good that your choice of education/career allows you to tinker with the device and make it best suited for you, and thank you for a detailed explanation of your reasoning and process, maybe @GoLLuM13 will find it illuminating as well. Personally, I wish I knew more about PCs to be able to make modifications like that, but I would never dare open a PC up out of the fear of screwing something up under the hood there.

    Did your spouse name LOQ something, per chance?
  • GoLLuM13's Avatar
    Level 52
    I always name my PCs with the same pattern, "GoLLuM13-xxxx" where xxxx is the acronym of the motherboard model or laptop model, for example if it is a Lenovo Legion 7i it would be "GoLLuM13-L7i"
    Tag me to be sure I see the answer and reply to you / Taguez moi pour être sûr que je vois la réponse et vous réponde en retour
    Most of my writings in no particular order (mostly in French) / La plupart de mes écrits sans ordre particulier
    >> HERE/ ICI <<

  • Saka's Avatar
    Level 52
    @DoctorEldritch Apparently he did! And he is way more creative than me when it comes to names. Turns out it is Rhea, a moon of Saturn.

    It's not like I did anything very complex with the Legion. The memory or drives are easy to replace once you remove the bottom plate. It's actually easier than in the LOQ, because there is no annoying plastic shroud blocking the screws. The thing is that I had the knowledge about how memory works and I got sticks were a bit against the recommendations, because the speed is actually slower, but they have significantly lower latencies. So the delay accessing memory is lower than when using the faster stick with higher latency. It really improved the latency-sensitive tasks.

    In modern laptops a lot of stuff is soldered down, so there's not a whole lot of modifications one can make. I think you can also replace the wifi card. Maybe? I can't remember if it was socketed or not. Fun fact, a year ago my spouse had his BT die completely in the desktop. The wifi still worked, but unreliably. He was about to consider buying a new motherboard, but I figured a 20 euro fix + some swearing, because I made him do the manual work. Reattaching the antenna to the new wifi card is a bit annoying it turns out. However, the fix resulted in more reliable BT and wifi for the desktop than ever before. Intel has really good wifi modules, but they are not as commonly used as Realtek ones. I suspect it might be because of cost. After all a better wifi card isn't something exciting to most people. 😆
    Unamused Snarktooth. Advocate for hearing loss & accessibility. Person, friend and a terrible/terrific* artist.
    *delete as appropriate
  • DoctorEldritch's Avatar
    Community Manager
    @GoLLuM13 This looks more like an official name that gets registered in the System of the PC, is that what you're talking about?