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ComputingGamingMicrosoftTechWindows

Maingear’s Retro95 is the coolest retro-modern gaming PC of 2025

Featuring a front panel that mimics floppy drives and side vents for Noctua cooling, the Retro95 mixes vintage design with serious modern performance.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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- Editor-in-Chief
Jul 26, 2025, 5:24 AM EDT
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Maingear’s Retro95 modern gaming PC.
Image: Maingear
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Picture this: it’s 1995, and you’re sitting in front of a bulky beige PC, waiting for Windows 95 to boot up while the dial-up modem screeches in the background. Floppy disks are scattered across your desk, and you’re gearing up for a LAN party with your buddies to play Doom. Fast forward to today, and Maingear is bringing that vibe back with a twist—the Retro95, a horizontal desktop that looks like it time-traveled from the ’90s but packs the kind of modern muscle that would’ve blown our minds back then. It’s a sleeper build for anyone who gets misty-eyed thinking about the good ol’ days but still wants a rig that can handle 2023’s demands.

The Retro95 isn’t just a PC—it’s a nostalgia trip. Maingear has nailed the ’90s aesthetic with a beige horizontal case that screams “I belong next to a CRT monitor.” It’s a customized take on the SilverStone FLP01, a case that started as an April Fools’ prank in 2023 before fans demanded it become real. The front panel sports two floppy drive bays, instantly taking you back to the era when 3.5-inch disks were your lifeline for installing SimCity 2000 or saving your high school essays.

But here’s where it gets clever: those floppy bays aren’t just for show. One hides an optional 24x DVD-R drive—because who doesn’t want to burn a mixtape or watch a scratched DVD for old times’ sake? The other conceals a modern front-panel I/O, complete with a headphone jack, a USB-C port, and two USB-A ports. It’s like Maingear snuck a smartphone into a Walkman and hoped we wouldn’t notice. You’ve also got the classic power and disk activity LEDs glowing softly, alongside power and reset buttons. All that’s missing is a turbo button—imagine overclocking a modern CPU with that satisfying click.

Compared to today’s towers with their sleek lines, RGB lights, and tempered glass, the Retro95 is gloriously unapologetic. It’s boxy, it’s beige, and it’s proud of it. For those of us who grew up with PCs that looked like they could double as a microwave, this design hits all the right notes.

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Don’t let the vintage vibes fool you—the Retro95 is a beast under the hood. Maingear’s stuffed this thing with cutting-edge components that make it more than just a conversation piece. You can spec it out with AMD’s Ryzen 7 9800X3D, a processor that’s tearing up benchmarks with its 3D V-Cache tech. Pair that with an NVIDIA RTX 5080 GPU, and you’ve got enough graphical oomph to run Cyberpunk 2077 at max settings—something the ’90s could only dream of. Throw in up to 96GB of RAM and 8TB of lightning-fast NVMe storage, and you’re looking at a rig that laughs at the 4MB RAM and 540MB hard drives we bragged about back in the day.

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Cooling all that power in a retro case could’ve been a challenge, but Maingear’s got it covered with Noctua fans—those brown-and-beige beauties known for stellar performance and near-silent operation. The case’s sides are well-ventilated too, so you won’t have to worry about thermal throttling when you’re rendering 4K videos or fragging in Call of Duty. It’s a perfect marriage of form and function: the outside says “1995,” but the inside screams “right now.”

For the uninitiated—or those too young to remember—the ’90s were a wild time for PCs. Windows 95 dropped in August of that year, bringing a Start menu and a user-friendly interface that made computing feel less like rocket science. The internet was creeping into homes via dial-up, with AOL CDs arriving in the mail like unwanted holiday fruitcakes. Floppy disks ruled the roost, holding a measly 1.44MB each, while gamers hauled their heavy towers to LAN parties for all-night sessions of Quake and Warcraft II. It was clunky, it was slow, but it was magical—a foundation for everything we take for granted today.

The Retro95 captures that spirit without the downsides. No more waiting five minutes for a game to load off a floppy or praying your modem doesn’t disconnect mid-download. Instead, you get the look and feel of that era with the speed and reliability of 2023.

At $1,599 to start, the Retro95 isn’t cheap, but it’s not a novelty either. It’s a fully functional, high-performance PC that just happens to wear its heart on its beige sleeve. The attention to detail—like those hidden modern ports and the optional DVD drive—shows Maingear isn’t messing around. This is for the niche crowd who wants a conversation starter that can also pull double duty as a workhorse.

And if you’re tempted, you’d better move fast. Maingear’s billing this as a limited drop, with a warning straight out of a ’90s arcade: “Once they’re gone, it’s game over.” That scarcity adds a layer of exclusivity, making the Retro95 feel like a collector’s item as much as a machine. According to Maingear’s site, it’s available now, but with no promise of restocks, hesitation could mean missing out.

Maingear’s Retro95 is a brilliant mashup of past and present. It’s for the folks who smile at the thought of floppy disk whirrs but wouldn’t trade their NVMe speeds for anything. It’s a sleeper build in every sense—unassuming on the outside, ferocious within. Whether you’re a retro tech enthusiast, a gamer with a soft spot for the ’90s, or just someone who wants a PC that stands out in a sea of black monoliths, the Retro95 delivers.

In a tech world obsessed with what’s next, the Retro95 reminds us where we came from—without making us suffer through 56K modems again. It’s proof that sometimes, the best way to innovate is to look back, dust off the old beige box, and give it a heart transplant.


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