>>13005The arcane arts have found their way into PC manufacturing and hardware circles, discreetly and with utmost secrecy of course.
Whatever blasted magick's they use certainly work and they manifest mainly through LED lights as that can be a good way to coverup and conceal the true nature of these bright lights that shine inside your case, day in and day out, secretly working their magicks-
Red LEDs= Faster performance but at a cost of increased power wattage depending on cpu/gpu
Blue LEDs= Cooler temps, with a slight performance hit but not major, which is why they are so popular now in laptops.
Green LEDs= Speedier CPU calculations allowing for a slight boost in FPS in most games
Yellow LEDs= Enhanced sound hardware, even if your mobo includes just the most basic on-board system, this makes it sound like a $200 all inclusive audio board in one, audiophiles swear by it, and it makes your headphones sound much better when plugged in.
Purple LEDs= Unknown/experimental magicks, rare to acquire and not recommended
Cyan LEDs= Imbued with specialized magicks to prevent against most types of malware/adware/spyware and more serious trojans and rootkits, can be a good substitute for an expensive subscriber based anti-virus software. For awhile Microsoft Security Essentials utilized trace amounts of that magick type but then for unknown reasons abruptly cancelled it and MSE is shittier now as a result.
Orange LEDs= Small significant boost to your ping and download/upload rate, uses the darkest and most dangerous of studied magicks, top ISP's have worked hard to counteract it's effects but have yet to achieve any significant breakthroughs.
That's all the common known ones. Mix and match at your risk however, each LED type when mixed with another can act out in unforeseen and strange ways.
Random pic related, a PC at 10C average temperature while overclocking 2.5GHz to 5.5GHz and running Crysis on medium at the same time, adorned with blue LEDs. A powerful magick tool it is.