PC/Mobile Several US States Are Attempting to Ban Gaming PC's

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PC gaming is about to get a whole lot less impressive across several US states. California, Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington are beginning to ban powerful gaming PCs due to new power consumption regulations. As a result, retailers are blocking orders containing top components to these six states. In effect, it’s a government-issued gaming PC.

The ban targets PCs with high power consumption when idle. Provided a powerful PC has a power supply that is able to lower the power usage enough while idle, it will satisfy the CEC energy efficiency requirements. However, PCs using a power supply that still uses a lot of power while idle will be banned in certain states.

It should be noted that most manufacturers and system integrators have planned for the changes. The majority of modern power supplies should be fine.

California, Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington are beginning to prevent gamers from buying high-spec gaming PCs due to power consumption regulations. Adding certain components to a PC can result in it breaching power consumption rules, effectively locking gamers in these states out of the highest settings and best gaming experience.

The new rules have been incoming since 2016, with the completion forecast for July 2021. California residents can read the compliance advisory on appliance efficiency regulations for computers and monitors here. Although California isn’t the only state adopting these regulations, it’s arguably the most surprising as the home of Silicon Valley.

Desktop PC and monitor combos can consume several times as much energy as laptops, notebooks, and tablet computers. As a result, they’re a specific focus of the new legislation. Although desktop builds aren’t banned outright, consumers won’t be able to outfit them with all of the highest-end components.
 
So what exactly is the allowed Max Power Usage? 850 Watts?

Also read from the link "Dell refuses to deliver PCs containing a Ryzen 5800 CPU and an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti GPU" Said CPU and GPU are not even power hungry.

How about NASA and pentagon's power hungry supercomputers lol they are not following the regulations.
 
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So what exactly is the allowed Max Power Usage? 850 Watts?

Also read from the link "Dell refuses to deliver PCs containing a Ryzen 5800 CPU and an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti GPU" Said CPU and GPU are not even power hungry.

How about NASA and pentagon's power hungry supercomputers lol they are not following the regulations.
Exactly!
 
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I feel more people will build their own Gaming PCs from computer parts, or hire a computer store or PC technician to build them a Gaming PC from parts instead of buying a Gaming PC from a brand like Dell or Alienware.

People can also travel to other states to buy a more power hungry Gaming PC.
 
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