I Love My Computer is the debut studio album by Australian electronic musician, DJ, and producer Ninajirachi, released on 8 August 2025 by NLV Records.
Primarily written and produced by Wilson herself, I Love My Computer is an electronic dance music album inspired by Australian electronic music from her childhood, as well as the genres of trance and complextro. Upon announcement, she said "I've spent more time with my computer than any one person. It helped me discover who I am⦠All of my music is computer musicâÂÂit's my instrument, and I don't know who I would be without it." The album is noted for its loosely autobiographical lyricism and commentary on technology and the Internet, as well as references to online and Australian culture.
I Love My Computer received critical acclaim and peaked at number 12 on the ARIA Albums Chart. It won Best Independent Release at the 2025 ARIA Music Awards, and was also nominated for Album of the Year, Best Dance/Electronic Release, Best Cover Art, Best Engineered Release and Best Produced Release. It also won the 2025 Australian Music Prize and Album of the Year at the 2025 J Awards, with the music video for "Fuck My Computer" winning Music Video of the Year.
Vivian Medithi of The Fader described the album as a "mix of bloghouse, trance, and hardstyle" that "recombines DNA from Skrillex and FlumeâÂÂs big-tent EDM with the flubbery pop of PC Music and Porter Robinson."
Jared Richards of The Guardian described the album as "an immensely fun and inventive dance album that doubles as a surprisingly touching coming-of-age story."
Alessio Anesi of EDM.com said: "The stunning album effectively crystallises the Australian artist as one of today's brightest young stars in the electronic music scene." Anesi said "[the] production lands as among the most unique in the contemporary electronic music landscape. Although Ninajirachi draws from sounds that were trending when she just was a toddlerâÂÂlike electroclash, trance and the complextro of Wolfgang Gartner and ZeddâÂÂthis record feels modern and completely her own."
Katie Bain of Billboard described the album as "smart, stylish and ebullient, with a bit of edge and a lot of observations on living and loving in our computer world", calling it "one of the year's best dance albums".
All tracks are written and produced by Nina Wilson, except where noted.
Credits adapted from the album's liner notes and Tidal.