Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Gaming
  4. Legacy Archives

Maingear’s New Pulse 14 aims to balance power, portability and price

Add as a preferred source on Google

It isn’t easy to find a worthwhile gaming laptop. Hardware-makers have to make serious compromises to make something that meets players’ mobile gaming and computing needs. This leads to a marketplace littered with products that aren’t quite up to snuff. Maingear will try to strike the right balance between portability and performance with its refreshed Pulse 14 laptop, which is equipped with one of Nvidia’s brand new GeForce GTX 800M-series GPUs.

The base model features an Intel Core i5-4300M processor, a Nvidia GeForce GTX 850M, 8GB of RAM and a 500 GB 7,200 rpm hard drive. The mid-range model beefs up to an Intel Core i7-4702MQ processor and a 500GB hard drive with 8GB of flash storage. Though the top-of-the-line Pulse 14 sports the same CPU as the mid-range version, it has double the RAM (16GB) and boasts more and significantly faster storage in the form of two 128GB mSATA SSDs in RAID 0 along with a 1 TB hard drive. Ports include two USB 3.0, one USB 2.0, VGA, HDMI, and Ethernet. Each Maingear Pulse 14 has the same GeForce GTX 850M GPU under the lid.

Recommended Videos

Here’s a question we have about the new Maingear Pulse 14 right off the bat: why don’t you have the option to outfit it with a GPU that’s more powerful than the GeForce GTX 850M? That’s not a knock on that GPU, but considering this is supposed to be a gaming notebook, we’d think that the more powerful GPUs would be available with the Pulse 14 as well. On the other hand, as gaming notebooks go, the new Pulse 14 is pretty affordable, and stuffing the 850M into it as opposed to the other new Nvidia GPUs that are higher up on the totem pole help Maingear make that possible.

The low end goes for $1,199, the mid-range costs $1,399 and the high end carries an asking price of $1,699.

The new Maingear Pulse 14 should be available starting today. You can pick one up on the official Maingear website.

What do you think? Sound off in the comments below.

Mike Epstein
Former Associate Editor, Gaming
Michael is a New York-based tech and culture reporter, and a graduate of Northwestwern University’s Medill School of…
Apple’s 2026 Back to School promo saves you up to $150 on a new Mac or iPad
The exact amount depends on which device you buy, but the offer doesn't apply to all Mac and iPad models.
Apple Back to School 2026 featured

Apple has kicked off its 2026 Back to School promotion, and this year's offer swaps out the free accessory bundle from last year with gift cards. Eligible buyers who purchase a MacBook Pro get a $150 gift card, while a MacBook Air, iPad Pro, or iPad Air earns a $100 gift card. The promotion runs through August 27 in the US, with international versions rolling out on different timelines and, in some regions, different rewards entirely.

Not every device is eligible

Read more
OpenAI made a tiny $230 keyboard that lets you turn up an AI’s brainpower
The Codex Micro puts reasoning settings, agent status lights, and programmable AI shortcuts directly on your desk
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

OpenAI has made a $230 mini keyboard that lets Codex users adjust how hard its AI thinks with a physical dial. The Codex Micro also provides dedicated buttons for launching workflows and checking on active agents without bouncing between chats.

Developed with keyboard maker Work Louder, the compact Mac and Windows accessory connects over Bluetooth or USB-C. OpenAI’s store currently lists it as out of stock, although the company says more units are coming.

Read more
Google rejects alarming report that says its Search AI tools are unsafe for kids
The company says it couldn’t reproduce many of the responses cited and argues that the testing doesn’t reliably measure product safety
Google AI Mode on mobile and desktop

Google has rejected a new report that labels its AI-powered Search features an “unacceptable risk” for children and teenagers.

Common Sense Media’s Youth AI Safety Institute gave AI Overviews and AI Mode its lowest overall rating. The two tools performed poorly against seven of the institute’s eight AI safety principles and failed every category involving potentially severe harm. Google says those findings came from searches that don’t resemble how people normally use its products.

Read more