Absolutely right, and not only UT but also Quake3, Descent3, Solitaire (ok, not really), HalfLife... You also become part of a very dedicated team that does a variety of projects and does them all pretty well. Besides just RC5, Team Anandtech also does Search for Extraterrestial Intelligence at Home (SETI@home), the OGR project that is the sister project to RC5-64, and DCypher's Gamma-Flux project. If I am leaving out anyone, no offense meant.
Different processers have different strong and weak areas, so some people are doing OGR on AMD K6-family processors and RC5 on others, perhaps with SETI running on the Katmai-family Pentium3's, since they do so well at it. All for the success of our team in all the areas, so don't feel like RC5 is the only show in town here, although it is certainly a focus right now... we are overtaking Team Slashdot, who is currently #1, but the Dutch Power Cows are hot on our tail and will overtake both Slashdot AND ourselves by sometime February, at the current projections.
Personally, I have a lot of fun being on the team with such a bunch of friendly teammates. Maybe that sounds tacky, but they are great people who will help you with any problem, and with great patience at that. Just read the friendly replies to any newbie's questions in this Distributed-Computing forum, and you will see that Team Anandtech has class.
Pop into our IRC channel, which is #teamanandtech channel on
www.worldirc.org, and say hi, and watch us trip all over eachother to answer any questions you might have! : ) Hope you'll jump on board, and bring some friends with you!
EDIT: Haha, my teammates have proven my point by posting three replies in the time it took me to type this!