We present high statistics simulation data for the average time ⟨Tcover(L)⟩ that a random walk needs to cover completely a
2-dimensional torus of size L×L. They confirm the mathematical
prediction that ⟨Tcover(L)⟩∼(LlnL)2 for large
L, but the prefactor {\it seems} to deviate significantly from the supposedly
exact result 4/π derived by A. Dembo {\it et al.}, Ann. Math. {\bf 160},
433 (2004), if the most straightforward extrapolation is used. On the other
hand, we find that this scaling does hold for the time TN(t)=1(L) at
which the average number of yet unvisited sites is 1, as also predicted
previously. This might suggest (wrongly) that ⟨Tcover(L)⟩
and TN(t)=1(L) scale differently, although the distribution of
rescaled cover times becomes sharp in the limit L→∞. But our results
can be reconciled with those of Dembo {\it et al.} by a very slow and {\it
non-monotonic} convergence of ⟨Tcover(L)⟩/(LlnL)2, as
had been indeed proven by Belius {\it et al.} [Prob. Theory \& Related Fields
{\bf 167}, 1 (2014)] for Brownian walks, and was conjectured by them to hold
also for lattice walks.Comment: 4 pages, 9 figures; to be published in Phys. Rev.