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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Notebook Hardware
It gets a bit warm...
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<blockquote data-quote="fleurya" data-source="post: 531518" data-attributes="member: 22866"><p>The best temperature control is the one Apple has already built into the computer. Just trust it. You can do some things to increase airflow around it while gaming or making it do a lot of "heavy lifting" so it doesn't have to work as hard. </p><p></p><p>Do you game with the LCD on the MBP, or using an external monitor? I often play first-person shooter games on an external monitor, but I still have the LCD open at least a little and have four "feet" which hold it about an inch high so it gets plenty of airflow around it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fleurya, post: 531518, member: 22866"] The best temperature control is the one Apple has already built into the computer. Just trust it. You can do some things to increase airflow around it while gaming or making it do a lot of "heavy lifting" so it doesn't have to work as hard. Do you game with the LCD on the MBP, or using an external monitor? I often play first-person shooter games on an external monitor, but I still have the LCD open at least a little and have four "feet" which hold it about an inch high so it gets plenty of airflow around it. [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Notebook Hardware
It gets a bit warm...
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