There’s no question that playing video games can help you stay healthy, but it’s important to be aware of the risks associated with coronavirus infection. Here are three tips to help you fight coronavirus infection while gaming:

  1. Use a gaming PC as your primary health care provider. A gaming PC is a great place to get vaccinated against the flu, and it can also help you stay healthy overall by providing plenty of resources for activities such as online gaming and working on projects.
  2. Use Folding@home to keep yourself healthy. Folding@home is a free software program that helps you fold sheets of paper into different shapes, which can help you stay healthy by providing physical activity and some cognitive stimulation.
  3. Be sure to get vaccinated against the flu! The best way to protect yourself from coronavirus infection is to get vaccinated against the flu, andgamingPCs are a great way to do this. If you don’t have time for a full vaccine shot, there are other ways to protect yourself from the flu, such as staying home during cold weather or using an air-purifying mask when outside.

How Folding@home Works

Folding@home is a distributed computing project that’s been around since the year 2000. It’s named after “protein folding.” If you install the software and join a project, it will run in the background and use spare graphics processing (GPU) power to run calculations. Your PC will be one of the hundreds of thousands of PCs running these calculations, all working together.

The software has previously been used to help find cures to cancer, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s, influenza, and many other diseases. Now, Folding@home is helping scientists understand the structure of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19. As Folding@home director Greg Bowman explains, a better understanding of the virus could aid in the development of life-saving drugs.

In other words, you can put your PC’s GPU to work crunching numbers that will help scientists better understand and fight the novel coronavirus. You can read specifics about how Folding@home is “simulating the dynamics of COVID-19 proteins to hunt for new therapeutic opportunities” on the project’s website.

This work is GPU-dependent and requires NVIDIA or AMD graphics hardware. It will work best on computers with powerful graphics hardware.

How to Put Your GPU to Work With Folding@home

To put your PC to work battling coronavirus, download the Folding@home installer and run it to install the software. It’s available for Windows, Mac, and Linux. We’ll show how it works on Windows here.

Once you’ve installed the Folding@home software, you’ll be taken to the https://client.foldingathome.org/ page, where you can control the software on your PC. You can choose to fold anonymously or set up an identity.

If you set up an identity, you can track your work and earn points. You can even join a team with other people and compete to see who can earn the most points—just a bit of friendly competition.

However, you don’t need to set up an identity—you can just select “Fold as Anonymous” and click “Start Folding” to begin.

To ensure you’re helping with COVID-19 research, ensure “Any disease” is selected under the “I support research fighting” box. This is the default option. With it enabled, Folding@home will prioritize work related to the novel coronavirus.

Work may not be available immediately, and your client may work on other diseases like Alzheimer’s, cancer, Huntington’s, or Parkinson’s while waiting for COVID-19 jobs. Leave it running in the background, and it will automatically start any available work.

The Folding@home software will remain running in the background—even when you have the web page closed. It will automatically use any spare resources and get out of the way when you’re using your GPU for other purposes, like playing a PC game.

Look for the Folding@home icon in your computer’s notification area (system tray) to find options, pause it, or quit the software and prevent it from running.

If you decide you no longer want to participate, head to the Uninstall or change a program list in Windows and uninstall the “FAHClient” program.

Even NVIDIA has called for gamers to install Folding@home and donate any spare computing power they might have. Computers all over the world are joining the fight.

Join us and our friends at @OfficialPCMR in supporting folding@home and donating unused GPU computing power to fight against COVID-19!

Learn more → https://t.co/EQE4u7xTZT pic.twitter.com/uO0ZCq8PEv

— NVIDIA GeForce (@NVIDIAGeForce) March 13, 2020