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.
Oh I see. So you’re telling me a military bought overpriced hardware… We should alert the media.
Hey, I have no doubt that these are overpriced poorly cooled boxes, Alienware has always been more form than function. But on the other hand, it’s a single vendor and they can just send a machine back if it acts up. I’m betting they don’t want their IT people dumping time and effort into custom builds, so having a single vendor is likely the much preferred option.
And I wasn’t wrong before, the specs are fine, they’ll play basically anything. With suboptimal cooling the fans will be loud, but there’s a good chance that won’t even matter on an aircraft carrier.
My guy it’s not just “the fans will be loud” it’s legitimately “the cooling is inadequate and the case traps heat in a cycle”. The hardware can be fine but if it’s all boiling at 100C it robs performance due to thermal throttling.
If the GN tests accurately map to whatever the navy’s using, the difference in most games isn’t that significant despite the suboptimal cooling, and if they’re usually just playing TF2 and Halo 2 (as per article) then even 50% of full performance should still be plenty.
Exactly… For Halo 2 and TF2, even if this rig were running at 50% efficiency it could do 200 fps at max settings.