His search history: how to fix overheating Xbox
The dust cover on top will keep the dust in and the one on the side will stop the air flow and your Xbox will over heat
"Cover up any unused ports" covers power supply
Bro just turned his 90 percent air flow to a 40 percent
Bruh, the top dust cover killed međź’€. The airflow goes up so there isnt much of any dust to worry there, on the back ok but on top no
“So im gonna use a dust cover to possibly overheat this device and make it power off because im a fucking idiot”-this guy
how to suffocate a series x tutorial đź’€ edit: my first ever comment to reach 6k likes so ty. but all he did wrong was placing that dust filter on the exhaust at the top, stop being salty for no reason.
Him: I fixed it Me: đź’€
PSA: Don't put dust covers on exhaust ports, only intake ports
"I'm gonna be fixing this controller's problem by buying a controller that's more than twice as expensive."
Fun fact. Console manufacturers didn’t include dust covers for a reason.
The best part about having a series x is that unlike a 360 it never overheats and I don't need a space heater in the winter because it keeps my room at a pleasant 90 degrees.
The hole on top is an exhaust. Putting a filter on that will just keep dust in.
I would prefer to use a dust cover (without holes) on top when it's switched off, that way you're guaranteed not to get any dust inside. When it's on, simply remove it so you won't have the risk of overheating, and the fan should naturally blow away any dust that tries to settle in.
How to get your Xbox to start having ventilation issues:
This dude went to a lot of trouble to mess up airflow designed by engineers way smarter than he is.
This is a solid tutorial on how to make your Xbox overheat
For a budget gamer, I'd recommend the G7 SE controller, it's under $70 and has hall effect thumbsticks
Bro really got a HDMI coverđź’€
@boxiii