Someone at Intel Overclocking Labs pouring LN2 on a processor

Upscaling and frame generation are the final nails in the coffin for overclocking, and I’m absolutely okay with that

Nick Evanson, Hardware writer

Nicholas Evanson

(Image credit: Nicholas Evanson)

This month I’ve been testing: The final batch of ergonomic keyboards for the time being. Shame some of them are so expensive because they’d be spot on for lots of folks. I can’t work without mine and I suspect that true for most ergo fans.

If you could go back in time, say twenty years ago, you would have seen me spend most evenings with a feverish and furrowed brow, head buried deep in the innards of a nest of metal and plastic, my palms stained with silver hallmarks, knuckles cut, fingertips burned. I wasn’t an engineer working on a specialised project for the space industry–I was simply running yet another overclocking experiment, messing about with voltage mods, homemade heatsinks, and BIOS tweaking, all to squeeze the last iota of gaming performance from my PC.

But those days are long gone, as overclocking is a mostly pointless exercise these days and thanks to the likes of upscaling and frame generation, the lid has been well and truly nailed shut.

www.pcgamer.com