Prometheus

I’ve been into PC and PC gaming since like forever. My father told me a story about me pissing into his amiga back in the day .. so I guess I started young?

Anyways… I’ve been building my own PC very early on, be it from mostly used parts. I always was a tinkerer and often abused the hardware to “improve” it.
I even watercooled my system when there were no watercooling parts commercially available – eBay to the rescue. We used Eheim aquarium pumps, motorbike radiators and water blocks that some dude machined with a drill press. FUN!

I HAVE tried to get into console gaming at some point, bought an XBOX 360 Elite, Gears of War (2 I think, but can’t remember) and Call of Duty (I guess 5?) and played a total of three hours on it before selling it to a colleague at work a couple months later. Yeah it really wasn’t what I was after apparently.

Much to the detriment of my wife, my mindset hasn’t changed much. I’ve probably spent more on my PC than some people would on their car at this point… but it was worth every minute of it. Every iteration of my PC gets a new name, and after things like Arctic Blue, Shockwave, Archangel, probably 1-2 names I’ve forgot over the years we’ve now landed on Prometheus.

I own several Tablets and Laptops, but they are almost never used unless I need to configure something in my homelab that requires a console cable or manual ip configuration. Besides my work laptop of course, which is used daily – but since I don’t technically own that one, that doesn’t count.

Prometheus is used for everything else, be it gaming of course, coding or just some YouTube. While I do have a full streaming setup, I rarely use it. I do stream about once or twice a year when my clan attempts new raids in Destiny 2 and I want to share my PoV with other clan members that can’t attend, but that’s about it. Everything is built to my liking and I am really happy with how the system turned out and currently works.

Hardware

  • Case:
    • Thermaltake View 71 TG
  • Mainboard:
    • ASUS X670E-F Gaming
  • CPU:
    • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D
  • RAM:
    • 64GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 Neo RGB (DDR5-6000 CL30)
  • GPU:
    • inno3D NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 SUPER iChill
  • PSU:
    • Seasonic Prime TX-1000
  • Storage:
    • Samsung 980 Pro M.2 (1TB)
      • Western Digital SN850 M.2 (1TB)
        • Samsung 870 Evo (2TB) (2x)
          • Samsung 860 Evo (1TB)
  • Fans:
    • Noctua NF-F12 industriaPPC-2000 (12x) – 6 per Radiator Front & Top in a Push-Pull config
      • Noctua NF-A14 industriaPPC-2000 – Rear intake
      • Phanteks Halos Lux fan frames (6x)
  • Controller:
    • Corsair Lighting Node Pro (4x)
  • System LCD:
    • GOverlay 3.5″
  • Screen:
    • LG 38GK950-B 38″ 21:9 (144Hz, Curved, HDR, with table mount)
  • Periphials:
    • Corsair K100 Keyboard
      • SteelSeries Aerox 5 Wireless (Diablo IV Edition)
        • Microsoft XBOX Elite Series 2 Wireless Controller
          • Sennheiser Momentum 4 Wireless with BTD 600 Dongle
            • Elgato Facecam
              • Elgato Keylight Mini
                • audio-technica AT2020-USB-X

Watercooling

  • CPU:
    • EK-Velocity² D-RGB AM5
  • GPU:
    • inno3D iChill Frostbite (included with GPU)
  • Pump:
    • EK-Quantum Kinetic TBE 200 D5 PWM D-RGB
  • Radiator:
    • EK-CoolStream PE 360 (2x) (Front & Top)
  • Tubing:
    • EK-Tube ZMT Matte Black 16,1/11,1mm
  • Fittings:
    • EK-Quantum Torque STC-12/16
  • Fluid:
    • EK-CryoFuel Clear

History