Entertainment

Essential Upgrades for Every Serious PC Gamer’s Home Office or Den

posted by Chris Valentine

Most avid PC gamers spend a lot of time at their desks. For those same gamers that use that desk as a home office, every piece of equipment in the room needs to earn its spot twice over. That should be the mentality when considering these gear upgrades – not “cool gear,” but sturdy, high-performance upgrades that work during work calls, on creative projects, and through six-hour gaming sessions.

Start with the ergonomic triangle

Ensure the geometry is right before upgrading any peripheral. Your monitor height, desk level, and seating position create an ergonomic triangle – and if one point is off, the other two can’t compensate.

The top of your monitor should be at or just below eye level. Your forearms should be roughly parallel to the floor with your hands on the keyboard. And your feet should not be dangling but rather flat on the floor. It seems easy, but the bulk of gaming setups get at least one of these wrong, usually because the chair is an afterthought.

The right gaming chair is more than just for aesthetics. Adjustable lumbar support maintains the natural curve of your lower spine throughout those lengthy gaming sessions – and it’s more crucial than most people realize until they’ve spent a few years ignoring it. Adjustable lumbar support and proper sitting posture significantly reduce musculoskeletal risk for those sitting more than four to six hours per day. That’s the majority of serious gamers and remote workers.

Monitor and display: where specs actually matter

People often mention the refresh rate, but the truth is that it doesn’t really matter if the panel has poor colors or isn’t the right size. For a hybrid workspace, a 27-inch monitor with a refresh rate between 144Hz and 165Hz does the trick. It has a high color gamut that allows both color-accurate work, and smooth gaming.

Regardless of the monitor you choose, it’s a great idea to get a VESA-compatible monitor arm. It opens up a lot of your desk real estate, allows you to position the monitor exactly how you like it, and also helps in organizing the cables. It’s simply worth it.

Lighting that works for both modes

Intelligent lighting that has a high CRI (Color Rendering Index) of 90 or more gives you the right amount of precise lighting you need to work during the day and play around with the ambiance for the night. Bias lighting behind the monitor can be extremely useful for reducing eye strain from long hours of high-contrast bright screen usage in an otherwise dark room.

The problem is that most people just throw up some RGB strips for funsies and call it a day. If you are using the same room all day and then starting your gaming session, you need lighting that serves a purpose before anything else. Tunable white solutions that also reduce the blue light you are exposed to when you game at night are definitely worth the money.

Contact point upgrades: keyboard, mouse, and seat

The things you actually touch with your hands and body are where you notice the difference between bad and good equipment the most. Monitors and speakers are important, but the keyboard, mouse, and chair are what you’re physically interfacing with every second you’re at the desk.

Mechanical keyboards feel and sound massively different based on the type of switch used in them. Linear switches are often preferred by gamers who want a fast, quiet actuation. Tactile switches are often preferred by writers or people who type a lot. There’s no right answer here – but the difference between a decent mechanical board and a membrane keyboard is apparent to literally everyone.

On the mouse side of things, peripheral latency is something to keep in mind if you’re gaming seriously. Wired mice still have the advantage here, although it’s really not that noticeable with the latest generation of high-end wireless kit. More important for most people is weight and shape: a mouse that suits your grip style perfectly will always outperform a technically better mouse that doesn’t.

Cable management and network: the invisible upgrades

A tidy desk is not about how it looks but about how it helps you think and focus better. Things like under-desk cable trays, velcro ties, and shifting to wireless peripherals can all reduce the mental load and distractions, making it easier to get things done.

When it comes to your PC, broadband internet is usually not the limiting factor when it comes to latency and gaming stability. It’s much more likely to be the quality and consistency of your network connection, where a wired ethernet line into your PC is still the most robust solution.

Finally, a UPS. Unsaved work and games lost to a power flicker isn’t a great feeling, and backing them with a small UPS can save you that hurt at least once. Also, they can last a decade.

The right way to think about this

Every upgrade we do here has to serve two purposes at the same time. That’s the criteria. The best battle stations are not those that are built for one use case. They’re built for the person using them, day in and day out, for work and play.

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