A friend of mine won an Athlon XP in a forum contest, I think it was Extreme Systems or Extreme Overclocking. He ended up pairing it with an Abit NF7-S, which I recall being a legendary board at the time. He brought it over to my place and we would LAN Unreal Tournament 2003. Those were the days!
Ah, I remember scheming about buying an NF7-S + an Athlon XP Barton and unlocking it, combining it with a geforce 4 ti4200 and overclocking both but not even having enough of the pocket change to pull that off. By the time I was far enough along to have some of that in school, I picked up an A64 and a top of the line Geforce 5 from a black friday sale and had a great time gaming and coding.
Ironically, all the scheming I did about overclocking ended up being very unnecessary and I found it borderline impossible to actually stress the upper limits of the machine's muscle with day to day workloads and so all the research I put into overclocking was not really practically necessary, that it was freeing to not have to even think about the machine and instead focus on the work I wanted to do with the software I was using and building. Surely a lesson that continues to pay dividends, albeit from simpler times...