Skip to main content
PC Gamer PC Gamer THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES
flag of UK
UK
flag of US
US
flag of Canada
Canada
flag of Australia
Australia
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Games
  • Hardware
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Video
  • Forum
  • More
    • PC Gaming Show
    • Software
    • Movies & TV
    • Codes
    • Coupons
    • Magazine
    • Newsletter
    • Affiliate links
    • Meet the team
    • Community guidelines
    • About PC Gamer
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
Why subscribe?
  • Subscribe to the world's #1 PC gaming mag
  • Try a single issue or save on a subscription
  • Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From$32.49
Subscribe now
Popular
  • Battlefield 6
  • Essential Hardware
  • WoW Midnight
  • Silksong
  • Quizzes
Don't miss these
Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT mini PC and AtomMan Venus UM790 mini PCs
Gaming PCs Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most
The Velocity Micro Raptor ES40 and HP Omen 35L gaming PCs on a blue background with the PC Gamer recommended badge in the top right corner
Gaming PCs Best gaming PCs in 2025: these are the rigs and brands I recommend today
MSI Vector 16 HX AI and Razer Blade 16 gaming laptops on a blue background with a PC Gamer logo in the foreground
Gaming Laptops Best gaming laptop 2025: I've tested the best laptops for gaming of this generation and here are the ones I recommend
Various bits of hardware float in the swirling pink PC G deal void.
Hardware 13 of the best post-Prime Day PC gaming deals still live and kicking today
AMD, Secretlab, Skytech, Zotac products composited on a pink gradient background
Hardware Best October Prime Day Deals Live — The best PC gaming hardware deals still live
8th May 1980: Four-year-old Antonia Salmon with one of her birthday presents, a computer which used to belong to her father.
Hardware Zoomable magazine archive lets you plunge eyeball-first into personal computing's first baby steps through the 70s and beyond
A hand attempting to install a graphics card that's too big for the PC case.
Games Everything that grinds our gears about PC gaming in 2025
A collection of GPUs, well-lit and carefully lined up along multiple shelving units.
Graphics Cards Private collector's GPU horde tours through 30 years of Nvidia and AMD hardware history
The protagonist of Butterflies wielding his butterfly net.
Games I played communist Germany's only arcade cabinet and you can too, comrade
Apple I
Hardware An original Apple I PC just sold for $500K and now I'm frantically ransacking boxes of old PC and Apple kit for my retirement fund
Chicken egg icon on computer screen with mouse pointer
Hardware Windows 95, arguably the first PC gaming OS, is still being used... to sort eggs in Germany
A snippet from Computer Entertainer showing a 1980s PC with a CRT monitor.
Games One of the first ever American videogame magazines is now available online for free
A curly-haired boy yelling while wearing a pair of headphones.
Windows It's 2025 and my PC still has no idea what audio devices are connected to it
A number of black 56 Kbps dial-up modems stacked on top of eachother, red lights blinking.
Hardware Fancy some unorthodox, techy ASMR? Try the soothing sound of 12 dial-up modems all trying to connect to the internet at once
A nightmarish amalgamation of controller and mouse as described by US Patent Application Publication No. 2025/0229172 A1.
Controllers I don't think they should make this
  1. Hardware

The 16 Worst Failed Computers of All Time

Features
By Maximum PC Staff ( Maximum PC ) published 20 April 2011

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Greetings. And welcome to. The Old PC Yard.

There are. Bzzzzt . Numerous. Failures in PC history. We’ve isolated the. Worst 16. Around.

We are certain that a smart human such as yourself. Will. Have strong opinions on this list. If TRUE, then replay in. Comments. If FALSE, have a. Nice day.

Initiating countdown module in 5…4…3…2…

16. IBM PCjr (1984): Nicknamed the Peanut, the PCjr was surprisingly expensive given its similarities to the Commodore 64 and Atari systems. It came in two models—a 64KB 4860-004 at $670 and a 128KB 4860-067 at $1270. Each offered color CGW graphics, a 4.77MHz Intel 8088 proc, wireless keyboard, lightpen port, two ROM cartridge slots, two joystick ports, and full PC compatibility. Critics universally panned the chiclet-style keyboard, and gamers maintained their loyalty to the Apple II.

Page 1 of 16
Page 1 of 16

15. Mac Portable (1989): With a hinged black and white active matrix LCD screen, a removable trackball for a mouse, expandable SRAM, a fairly speedy boot from sleep mode, a SCSI mode that allowed it to be used as a hard drive, video out, and a low-power 16MHz Motorola 68HC000, Apple’s very first portable computer was ahead of its time. Unfortunately, it was neither light in weight (16.5 pounds) nor a commercial success.

Page 2 of 16
Page 2 of 16

14. Commodore Plus/4 (1984): Commodore released like 2,000 computers in about 5 years time. That’s baffling. The Plus/4 was a home computer with a built-in software suite—word processor, spreadsheet, database, and graphs. It had 64kb of memory, a MOS 8501 proc, and a pretty snazzy-looking chassis. Unfortunately, Commodore 64 fans called it the Minus 60. ‘Nuff said.

Page 3 of 16
Page 3 of 16

13. GateWay Destination (1996): Gateway’s $4,000 PCTV was ahead of its time, so much so that it never really sold that well. The system came with a set of surround speakers, a tuner card, and a 36” 640 x 480 CRT monitor. We take the HTPC for granted today, but in an era where Windows was still fairly crash-prone, a home theater slash computer made no sense at all.

Page 4 of 16
Page 4 of 16

12. IBM PS/2 (1987): How ya’ gonna’ do it? PS/2 It! Or not. The Personal System/2 was IBM’s failed attempt to regain control of the clone market via a closed, proprietary architecture. IBM originally intended for OS/2 (get it?) to be the OS, but at the time of release, it wasn’t ready. Consumers balked en masse at IBM’s evil empire play. But the system introduced several important new standards, including Micro Channel Architecture, the PS/2 interface, VGA connectors, and 3.5” floppies.

Page 5 of 16
Page 5 of 16

11. Sinclair QL (1984): The QL in the name was short for quantum leap, and with a Motorola 68008, 128KB of memory (expandable to 640KB), LAN ports, two built-in ZX Microdrive tape cartridges, and a built-in multi-tasking OS named QDOS, it certainly seemed advance. Unfortunately, the Sinclair QL shipped five months late and was buggy enough to doom it to failure…FOREVER.

Page 6 of 16
Page 6 of 16

10. Apple III (1980): It was essentially an Apple II designed for the business crowd, and was powered by an 8-bit 1.8MHz SynterTek 6502A processor. It also had 16-color high-res graphics, an 80-column display with upper AND lowercase characters, and a numeric keypad. All of this cost between $5,000 to $7,000, making it outrageously expensive and wildly unpopular.

Page 7 of 16
Page 7 of 16

9. Go L Mach L 3.8 (never released): We’re ashamed to admit that Maximum PC got suckered into the hype around Liebermann Inc’s PC-on-steroids. The company promised outrageous speeds and features that went way beyond the state of the art in 2003, including 5.0GHz systems, five-screen displays, outrageous cooling schemes, Solid State Drives, and data throughput speeds of 8GB/s. The company went out of business in 2004, having never shipped a single product.

Page 8 of 16
Page 8 of 16

8. Apple Lisa (1983): In the words of The Arnold, Apple’s first crack at a GUI-based business computer was one ugly muthableep. It was, however, a powerful machine for its time, with a 5MHz 68000 CPU, 1MB RAM, two 5.25-inch drives, a hard drive, and a paper calculator. Unfortunately, it cost $10,000. Success: denied.

Page 9 of 16
Page 9 of 16

7. Commodore 128 (1985): If you’re a way-back Commodore geek, you were probably excited about the Commodore 128. It sported 128KB of memory, an 80-column display, and two dedicated processors—a 2 MHz 8502 and a Zilog Z80. (They didn’t work in tandem.) A dedicated C64 mode ensured 100% compatibility. Ultimately, however, the masses didn’t want a low-cost, business-oriented machine. We wanted games, awesome music, and great graphics. We wanted the Amiga.

Page 10 of 16
Page 10 of 16

6. Osborne Executive (1982): Adam Osborne’s self-named 1980 portable sold surprisingly well. The Osborne Executive? Not so much. As legend has it, the Executive played a direct role in shutting down Osborne Computers. Once it was announced, computer retailers immediately began cancelling orders for the Osborne 1. The company declared bankruptcy later in 1983. Forever after, the Obsorne effect would refer to a company obsolescing an existing product by pre-hyping the successor.

Page 11 of 16
Page 11 of 16

5. NeXT Computer (1988): Based on the Motorola’s new 25MHz 68030 CPU and including 8MB-64MB of RAM, a 330MB hard drive and an 1120x832 grayscale display, Steve Jobs’ NeXT station cost $10,000 a pop. It was inaccessible to most and didn’t sell very well. Despite its limited commercial success, NeXT played a pivotal role in history. Tim Berners-Lee used a NeXT Computer at CERN as the world’s first web server. And much of the Mac OS X environment is built on OPENSTEP’s foundation.

Page 12 of 16
Page 12 of 16

4. Atari Falcon (1992): Technically named the Falcon030, the final computer Atari Corp produced embodied the disarray that must have existed at the company during its final years. A 32-bit 68030 CPU in a 16-bit data bus? FAIL. Well, at least it had a Motorola DSP56000. Atari canceled the Falcon in 1993 to focus on the, ahem, Jaguar. Ahem.

Page 13 of 16
Page 13 of 16

3. Coleco Adam (1983): Released in time for the holidays in 1983, the Adam was plagued with issues. Defective tape drives, an electromagnetic surge on startup that was capable of nullifying tapes or discs left in the system, and a power supply that was located in the printer. Hey, at least it played Colecovision games. Unfortunately, it didn’t do much else. Returns killed the company, and even a newer Adam that cost less and offered a $500 scholarship for kids couldn’t compensate.

Page 14 of 16
Page 14 of 16

2. Power Mac G4 Cube (2000): Measuring 8 cubic inches and suspended in an acrylic enclosure—bah, pretty G4 Cube and pretty G4 fanboys make Hulk mad. Critics agreed—most argued that it was too expensive, didn’t include a display, and worst of all, had a “manufacturing issue” that led to cracks in the fancy, newfangled case. We’ll say no more.

Page 15 of 16
Page 15 of 16

1. Babbage’s Difference Engine (1822): Like so many other computer makers on this list, Charles Babbage was ahead of his time. WAY ahead. Unfortunately, high costs prevented the mathematician from realizing his dream of building a steam-powered mechanical machine that could compute values of polynomial functions. The London Science Museum did realize his dream, however. In 1991, using some of the original parts, scientists completed a working version of the difference engine.

Page 16 of 16
Page 16 of 16
Maximum PC Staff
Read more
8th May 1980: Four-year-old Antonia Salmon with one of her birthday presents, a computer which used to belong to her father.
Zoomable magazine archive lets you plunge eyeball-first into personal computing's first baby steps through the 70s and beyond
 
 
A hand attempting to install a graphics card that's too big for the PC case.
Everything that grinds our gears about PC gaming in 2025
 
 
A collection of GPUs, well-lit and carefully lined up along multiple shelving units.
Private collector's GPU horde tours through 30 years of Nvidia and AMD hardware history
 
 
The protagonist of Butterflies wielding his butterfly net.
I played communist Germany's only arcade cabinet and you can too, comrade
 
 
Apple I
An original Apple I PC just sold for $500K and now I'm frantically ransacking boxes of old PC and Apple kit for my retirement fund
 
 
Chicken egg icon on computer screen with mouse pointer
Windows 95, arguably the first PC gaming OS, is still being used... to sort eggs in Germany
 
 
Latest in Hardware
POLAND - 2023/01/24: In this photo illustration, a Paypal logo is displayed on a smartphone. (Photo Illustration by Omar Marques/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
PayPal's crypto partner accidentally minted $300,000,000,000,000 worth of stablecoins, which is more than twice the world's total GDP
 
 
A photo showing a top-down view of a TP-Link Archer BE9700 Wi-Fi 7 router.
Routers don't grab headlines like graphics cards but having a good one in your home can make a world of difference to your digital life
 
 
The TP-Link Archer AXE75 WiFi 6E router floats in a void.
Standard router no longer cutting it? Our favourite Wi-Fi 6E box is now only $120
 
 
RandomGaminginHD holding a 4 GB RX 570 graphics card.
Battlefield 6 is so well-optimised it's playable on an eight-year-old RX 570 with just 4 GB of VRAM
 
 
Logitech G321 Lightspeed gaming headset
Logitech G321 Lightspeed review
 
 
A Gigabyte Gaming A16 Pro gaming laptop on a light blue background.
Gigabyte's new gaming laptops come with voice control for performance, fan, and privacy settings, so you can shout at them if they won't pipe down
 
 
Latest in Features
Collage showing upcoming movies
2027 is shaping up to be the biggest year for videogame movies yet, with the live-action Zelda movie, A Minecraft Movie sequel, Death Stranding, and more heavy-hitters planned
 
 
Close up of Shodan, antagonist of System Shock 2. Feminine face with circuitry spreading over it and out into wires surrounding.
26 years later, System Shock 2's music is a crucial part of its level design, and turning it off is a tragedy
 
 
A man crying at a grave in Red Dead Online.
'A glimmer of hope': What does GTA 6 mean for Red Dead Online?
 
 
Daryl riding a shark in Super Daryl Deluxe.
Can you find the 10 real games in this jumble of 30 fake ones? Try to see through my lies in our latest quiz
 
 
An edited picture of an orc opening a bag that, instead of gold, is filled with random items.
Every MMO I play in 2025, I end up with a bag filled with trash—but that won't change any time soon, if at all
 
 
The protagonist of Butterflies wielding his butterfly net.
I played communist Germany's only arcade cabinet and you can too, comrade
 
 
  1. MSI Vector 16 HX AI and Razer Blade 16 gaming laptops on a blue background with a PC Gamer logo in the foreground
    1
    Best gaming laptop 2025: I've tested the best laptops for gaming of this generation and here are the ones I recommend
  2. 2
    Best SSD for gaming in 2025: the fastest and the best value solid state drives to perk up your PC
  3. 3
    Best Hall effect keyboards in 2025: the fastest, most customizable keyboards for competitive gaming
  4. 4
    Best PCIe 5.0 SSD for gaming in 2025: the only Gen 5 drives I will allow in my PC
  5. 5
    Best graphics cards in 2025: I've tested pretty much every AMD and Nvidia GPU of the past 20 years and these are today's top cards
  1. Asus ROG Xbox Ally X handheld gaming PC
    1
    Asus ROG Xbox Ally X handheld gaming PC review
  2. 2
    Keeper review — A short adventure that will stick with you for a long time
  3. 3
    Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines 2 review: A brilliant undead mystery that never quite gets comfortable in its RPG skin
  4. 4
    Logitech G321 Lightspeed review
  5. 5
    TP-Link Deco BE25 BE5000 review

PC Gamer is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...