Maingear’s newest (appropriately named) Retro95 is a misleading love letter to old-school “pizza field” PCs: Wolfenstein 3D and Sierra journey video games on the skin; Cyberpunk 2077 in ray-traced 4K on the within.
That is as a result of you may match this sucker with as much as NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 graphics. It helps Intel and AMD processors, as much as the Ryzen 7 9800X3D. You may also customise it with as much as 96GB of DDR5 reminiscence, 8TB of Gen4 NVMe storage, Noctua followers and an 850W PSU. It is a ray-traced wolf in pixelated sheep’s clothes.
It appears just like the Retro95’s case is sourced from the Silverstone FLP01. (That is smart since Maingear is a customized PC builder.) The case is an ode to beige horizontal PC instances, designed to function a pedestal for CRT screens. They had been the default from the early Nineteen Eighties to mid-Nineties. (In case you desire the tower design that succeeded it, Silverstone’s follow-up to the FLP01 ought to scratch that itch.)
The Retro95 features a hidden front-panel I/O array and fashionable airflow design. And if its exterior has you nostalgic for video games you performed on similar-looking PCs, you may add a DVD drive. (Who’s up for Carmen Sandiego?)
“This one is for the avid gamers who lugged CRTs to LAN events, swapped out disks between ranges and bought their gaming information from magazines,” Maingear CEO Wallace Santos wrote in a press launch. “The Retro95 drop is our method of honoring the basic period of gaming, with a system that appears just like the one you had as a child however runs just like the monster you’d spec from Maingear at this time.”
Sadly, the Retro95 is a limited-edition run. Maingear says as soon as it sells out, that is sport over. Given its high-powered {hardware} and particular version standing, it is no shock that this PC ain’t low-cost. It begins at $1,599. You’ll be able to order one solely from Maingear’s web site on July 23.

