The retro charm of old school gadgets never dies, and we’re experiencing that full steam this week, right from the Atari 2600+ Pac-Man Edition to the LEGO Game Boy. Add another one to the list that’ll transport you into the sands of time with its vintage feel. Meet the MainGear’s Retro95 PC that looks like an old computer from the 90s running Windows 95 OS, but its neo-retro charm will have you glued to the screen.
Contrary to its beige exterior, the computer is a respectably powerful machine on the inside. The machine has a Ryzen 7 9800X3D GPU, an RTX 5080 graphics card, 8TB NVMe SSD storage, and the option to slot in a whopping 96GB DDR5 RAM. Understandably, to run these power-hungry components, the PSU is an 850-watt beast. To keep things ultra-realistic, the power and reset buttons, LEDs at the front reiterate the PC’s timeless charm. I wish there could have been a turbo button too, so that the user could overclock the blazing-fast CPU.
Designer: MainGear
Retro95, booted straight out of the 90s era, has two floppy drives at the front, which have a purpose. One of them conceals a front-panel I/O having modern connectivity options like a headphone jack, a USB-C port, and a couple of USB-A ports. The other one is an optional 24x DVD-R drive slot in disguise. The machine needs efficient cooling, so the dated design conceals the Noctua fans with large vents on multiple sides. This cooling hardware is known for its superior cooling performance with minimal noise and the ability to keep the modern processing components running smoothly without any throttling.
According to MainGear CEO Wallace Santos, “This one is for the gamers who lugged CRTs to LAN parties, swapped out disks between levels and got their gaming news from magazines. The Retro95 drop is our way of honoring the classic era of gaming, with a system that looks like the one you had as a kid but runs like the monster you’d spec from MainGear today.”
Coming back to the old school looks, MainGear chose the horizontal PC case, which houses the CRT monitor, acting as a pedestal for the seemingly aged display. These PC cases were the norm in the 80s and 90s for their ease of use when it came to inserting the floppy disks. Just so you know, the PC runs on Windows 11, and it’s no April Fools Day joke. You can get your hands on one right now from the official website, and you need to do it fast, as it is a special edition PC that’ll be available only until the stocks last. For a starting price tag of $1,599 (depending on the internal components chosen), the Retro95 PC is a must-buy for geeks who want to hit different with their workstation setup.
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