Pocket 386 retro laptop with 40 MHz CPU, 8 MB RAM arrives for under $200

Shawn Knight

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The big picture: When it comes to retro gaming, nothing beats playing on original hardware. For PC gamers, that can often be difficult unless you happen to have an old machine collecting dust in your closet. Fortunately for hardcore retro gamers, there's a new option on the block that lets you play on original hardware without breaking the bank.

The Pocket 386 comes from the same company that put out the Book 8088 showcased here back in July 2023. This new retro laptop is powered by a 386 SX chip clocked at 40 MHz alongside 8 MB of DRAM, a user-replaceable VGA card, and a Yamaha audio card.

Some games are certainly going to run better than others on this machine. Josh with RetroTV Tech tested a handful of titles including Doom, Wolfenstein, and Commander Keen with varying results. Doom was a bit too much for the base machine but Wolfenstein and Commander Keen both ran beautifully.

The laptop additionally features a 7-inch IPS LCD screen with a 16:9 aspect ratio that can be swapped to 4:3 should you prefer a more authentic experience. At 8.3 inches x 4.8 inches x 1.2 inches, it's certainly not going to take up much room in your laptop bag... or pocket.

The pint-sized PC doesn't have a trackpad for mouse control, although you can apparently use the arrow keys to move the cursor. Personally, I'd just plug in a wired PS/2 mouse, hook up an old CRT screen via VGA and call it a day.

Working on the Pocket 386 should be a breeze as pop-off covers grant easy access to the system RAM, sound card, and even the battery. The system is expected to ship with Windows 3.11 although I suspect many will likely upgrade to at least Windows 95.

If you're interested in picking one up, you'll need to head over to Ali Express to do the deed. Normally priced at $300, the Pocket 386 but is currently down to just $193 after an instant 35 percent discount. The laptop is offered in your choice of black or transparent, and comes with a 12-volt charger.

As of this writing, 473 units have been sold and new buyers are looking at an estimated delivery window between June 30 and July 9.

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Windows 95 on a 386SX when they say it can’t even run Doom respectfully? I don’t think so. I remember having a 486DX overclocked to 40 MHz and it sucked with ISA video. It wasn’t until VESA Local Bus (VLB) came around that PCs just began to have acceptable performance…
 
30 years later.... It won't just make a $200 hole in your pocket, it will actually break your pockets, unless you wear MC Hammer pants.
 
What a shame. An i486DX2-66 might have made this worth owning. If the inventor knew the first thing about retro games, they'd know that 40mhz is not enough. 33mhz was poverty and 66mhz was gaming, but not all games could handle 66mhz so the clock doubling was a must have.
 
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2 things,

The CPU is not suited for proper DOS or RETRO gaming.

That battery - li-li ion are problematic and a fire hazzard. I know I'm sounding a bit too overreacting, but there's a chance the battery swells up or catches on fire due to thermal runaway. And it will take the whole plastic laptop with it along with the rest around it if your unlucky.

 
Exactly. A 386SX with its capped buses already limits the system, even if it is OC'd to 40MHz. A TI486DLC/40 would have been somewhat better, but it would have to be a low-power version. But yes, a 486DX, a later low-power version, would have been much better. the slowest 486 is like 30% faster than the fastest 386.
But surely the problem is sourcing, there must be many more 386SX than 486DX low-power versions.
 
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It's somewhere around 25 years ago I built myself a DOS box to keep my retro gaming alive
so this is something I just love seeing. Though It's really just more generically retro than
actual retro gaming on real hardware.
And my DOS box is still just as I built it back then, except the Quantum Bigfoot TX gave out 3–4 years ago.

And just a note, I still use the thing fairly regularly, and I literally have thousands of DOS games.
Don't know how many still work though.
 
It's supposed to be showcased with MS-DOS 5's Dosshell or Windows 3.11, max. Not Win95.

Right now I am using 86Box with various "machines" configurations on my laptop, right from IBM PC XT, Tandy, up to Pentium MMX 166. My desktop can run Pentium II with Voodoo 2 SLI configurations with Windows 98. I'm a vintage PC enthusiast, but 86Box makes tinkering with these (virtual) "Machines" in my laptop anytime, anywhere, very convenient. Since it emulates down to the BIOS level complete with original drivers support.
 
Whilst I'm not a big fan of the 'you can run it on a smartphone' ethos, I'd rather run old stuff on a smartphone (or a pi) with a Bluetooth keyboard.
 
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