I'd also like to add a piece of advice, from one gamer to another.
Parrots and gaming are hard to combine, in my opinion... The thing is, when you're playing, you usually get excited, and if you're using any kind of voice com you'll be talking too. You're clicking rapidly, fingers smattering upon the keyboard. My guess is that any healthy, curious parrot would also get excited by all this, wanting to know what's going on.
I've also tried to keep my parrot Penny entertained by attaching a myriad of toys to her tree, laid some on my desk for her to play with and so forth, but once I start gaming nothing else matters to her. She HAS to join in (which means, touching the mouse with her beak or jumping across the keyboard, not so great for gaming results, lol). And this is even on days where I've been at home all day, spending an entire day socialising with her, training her and playing with toys together. In other words; I don't think it's because she's under-stimulated. I think it's because she's healthy and sociable, and likes to know what's going on.
I don't even try playing during daytime anymore, as I felt like a complete jerk doing something that was fun, that she was not allowed to be a part of. Seeing it from her point of view, her SO was doing something super exciting, and I wouldn't let her help/join in. I know that would make me sad, if I was in her position. So, I've given up on playing during "her" hours and instead I try to keep it to the evenings after she's gone to bed. This works much, much better.
Also, I'm not saying you should quit living your life because of your parrot, there are things that must be done no matter what, like, cooking and eating. I haven't quit cooking or eating, even though she gets a bit upset when I take her to another room when I need to cook, but I do this mainly because I believe a cooking area could be very dangerous to a bird. Especially a curious one. But then again, cooking/eating and gaming are two very different things; I'm quite certain I'd live longer without gaming than I'd do without eating
So, if you do decide to get a parrot, consider changing your lifestyle a bit so that you won't have to push your parrot away from you. I've figured the easiest way to keep both yourself and your parrot happy is to adapt, not to force your bird to adapt. It's probably a lot harder for the bird, than it is for you.