Slender wrote: ↑06 Jul 2025, 12:33
you are still new to this forum. Yes, bad electricity can charge your devices with something that just won't go away. This applies to iPhones charged in bad places. This applies to computers that return to normal after 15 minutes in a good place. This problem affects both AC and DC devices equally.
What’s next — capacitors catching a virus?
Like one day they start coughing and ask you to take them to the hospital?
Wanna play on pure electricity? Just get a double online converter, bro.
Or better yet — buy two. What's the problem, c'mon.
And yeah, obviously — if there's something wrong with the power, devices can break.
But that's like... 6th grade school physics. Basic electricity 101.
Better to be a newbie who backs things up with theories, explanations, and actual data,
than someone who just says "it feels better here" or "worse over there" — based on vibes, guesses, and zero evidence.
And no — shaky YouTube videos claiming "look how smooth it feels" don’t count as evidence.
IMHO, the issue isn’t "electricity". It’s the fact that we *do* feel real differences in the *same* game,
on the *same* hardware, *within minutes* — and that’s what needs explaining.
And Slender — let me ask you directly:
If I send you 200 bytes of text all at once, and someone else sends you 1000 bytes of text all at once,
who gave you *more* data?
And who gave you *more* information to understand?