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Such is the folly of the redesigned and rebadged Asus ROG Ally X. A handheld gaming PC that goes a long way to ironing out many of the kinks inherent in Windows-based devices, but does so with what I believe is a fundamental misunderstanding of why people buy handhelds in the first place.
At its heart, it’s a new version of the Asus handheld, but with a new AMD APU inside and a reskinned, reimagined version of Windows on top. And both are improvements over what’s gone before. But Microsoft, having ditched its own plans for an in-house handheld, has slapped an Xbox badge on it and is now asking gamers to pay far more than they have for any Xbox console that has ever existed.
This is the Xbox Ally X: An Xbox that isn’t, and a handheld PC that’s kinda got it right, but also kinda wrong.
Asus ROG Xbox Ally X – our verdict
But none of them have really competed with the Steam Deck on its own terms. They’ve all strived to make a better, more powerful version, and in doing so have pushed the pricing up and up and up, without thinking about why people were so keen on the more affordable Deck. This has only served to make the ol’ Valve Steam machine relevant for longer than arguably anyone expected.
This is my biggest issue with the Xbox Ally X, because while it is objectively better than the Steam Deck in almost every way, it is so much more expensive it barely makes sense to talk about it in the same breath. And, while I do kinda like handheld gaming PCs, I couldn’t reasonably have one as my one and only device. At this price, Microsoft and Asus is almost asking you to.
Which is a shame because it is otherwise a fantastic device. The AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme chip is a very sensible cell APU, slicing the extreme CPU element of the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 whereas retaining the wonderful Radeon 890M iGPU. And, although I assumed it ridiculous once I first noticed it, I’ve rapidly come round to the controller-like design; it truly is extremely snug and extra ergonomic than some other handheld I’ve used. And I’ve used loads.
And it is quiet, too. This is possibly the factor that has impressed me probably the most, as a result of it’s totally unobtrusive whenever you’re gaming, even at Turbo settings. Most of the time you are more likely to be on the 17 W Performance mode on battery, and at that time, it is barely audible. Certainly not over the impressively loud audio system.
Though the brand new Windows overlay isn’t going to have the ability to compete with SteamOS, when it comes to an entire platform unity perspective, it is however a giant enchancment over the horribly fiddly expertise of attempting to make use of a standard Windows desktop on a piddly little 7-inch display. Obviously, the Xbox full-screen expertise is carefully associated to the Xbox dashboard, nevertheless it additionally works neatly as a PC interface, permitting you to flip between recreation storefronts and libraries comfy.
Though, I’ll say, the vast majority of us are going to nonetheless spend the overwhelming majority of our time sitting in Steam’s Big Picture Mode. At least it’s going to boot rapidly into the hand held interface, although, and does enter and exit sleep higher than most others.
If you are coming to this anticipating a completely Xbox expertise… effectively, you will be disenchanted.
But must you purchase one? If you will have cash to burn, and are determined for the last word handheld gaming PC expertise, then the Xbox ROG Ally X is the one you will have. It’s highly effective, feels nice (although I feel nonetheless appears to be like kinda ridiculous), lasts a very long time, and runs tremendous quietly, too.
Though when you’re simply after a second system as a small scale companion to your gaming PC, and do not need to primarily pay the identical once more for half the efficiency, it is a far more durable promote. You can discover machines with very comparable efficiency, in any Z1 Extreme system, for lots much less. The authentic Legion Go, for instance, is often discounted to round half the worth of the Xbox Ally X and can fortunately home SteamOS when you’re after a really seamless handheld expertise.
And when you’re coming to this anticipating a completely Xbox expertise, and an upgraded Xbox expertise from the costliest Xbox ‘console’ Microsoft has ever launched… effectively, you will be disenchanted. It’s nonetheless very a lot a PC expertise, with PC video games and all of the foibles that often include it. This continues to be not a console.
This is not an Xbox.
Specs of the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X
The essential ROG Xbox Ally X specs surround the use of the new AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme chip. This is the inevitable Strix Point successor to the Z1 Extreme, though this time around uses Zen 5c cores as well as traditional Zen 5 cores to make up its CPU component. The TL;DR of Zen 5c is that they’re the same as normal Zen 5 cores, except they take up less space because they’re clocked slower and have less L3 cache at their disposal.
Smartly, for a handheld-focused APU, AMD has stripped back the core count from the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 it’s ostensibly based upon.
| Header Cell – Column 0 |
Asus ROG XBox Ally X |
Asus ROG Ally X |
|---|---|---|
|
Processor |
AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme |
AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme |
|
CPU architecture |
Zen 5 / Zen 5c |
Zen 4 |
|
Core / threads |
8 / 16 |
8 / 16 |
|
CPU boost clock |
5 GHz |
5.1 GHz |
|
GPU architecture |
RDNA 3.5 |
RDNA 3 |
|
Shader count |
1024 |
768 |
|
GPU boost clock |
2.9 GHz |
2.7 GHz |
|
VRAM |
8 GB (shared, adjustable) |
8 GB (shared, adjustable) |
|
Memory |
24 GB LPDDR5x-8000 |
24 GB LPDDR5-6500 |
|
Screen |
7-inch IPS LCD display |
7-inch IPS LCD display |
|
Resolution / Refresh rate |
1920 x 1080 / 120 Hz |
1920 x 1080 / 120 Hz |
|
Peak brightness |
500 nits |
500 nits |
|
Storage |
1 TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 2280 SSD |
1 TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 2280 SSD |
|
Connectivity |
1x USB4 Type-C with DP 2.1 / PD 3.0 / TB 4 compatible |
1x USB4 Type-C, 1x USB 3.2 Gen Type-C, 1x 3.5 mm audio, 1x UHS-II microSD reader |
|
Dimensions |
290.5 x 121.5 x 50.7 cm |
280 x 111 x 24.7-36.9 mm |
|
Battery |
80 Wh |
80 Wh |
|
Weight |
715 g |
678 g |
|
Price |
$800/£800 |
One full Zen 5 core is gone, and so have three of the Zen 5c complement. That leaves a complete of eight cores and 16 threads, which is greater than sufficient for a handheld, however nonetheless means it has some real processing chops must you want to dock it to a display, keyboard, and mouse, and fake it is a correct PC. ‘Cos it nonetheless is.
The key factor, although, is clearly the GPU element of this chip. AMD has left the complete 16 Compute Unit Radeon 890M iGPU in there, working the RDNA 3.5 graphics structure. That offers it arguably probably the most performant graphics element of any handheld, and that is born out by our body price figures for the Xbox Ally X, placing it simply forward of the competitors.
Elsewhere, the specs listing of the brand new Xbox Ally X reads just like the outdated ROG Ally X that got here earlier than. Okay, the 24 GB LPDDR5x is working a tad faster, at 8,000 MT/s in opposition to 6500 MT/s, however in any other case it is largely the identical.
Gaming and efficiency of the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X
In brief, that is the quickest handheld gaming PC we have examined on PC Gamer, and we have run a load of them, particularly the newest machines, via our benchmarking exams. I’ve put the Xbox Ally X in opposition to the unique Ally X with its Z1 Extreme APU, the OneXPlayer OneXFly F1 Pro, with its Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 chip, and the MSI Claw 8 AI+ with its Lunar Lake-based Core Ultra 7 285V CPU.
And it beats them all.
But it’s not night and day. I will say that at the top end of the Turbo performance preset, there is only ever a handful of frames per second between them, but when you are talking about the performance of an iGPU, you’re also talking about relatively low frame rates. And at those levels, a handful of FPS here and there can make the difference between smooth and choked gaming.
What I do really appreciate about the Radeon 890M chip, however, is how well it does at lower power settings. I was impressed with the OneXFly F1 Pro running at 15 W, and the same is true of the Xbox Ally X running in its 17 W Performance preset. I was genuinely stunned to boot up FC 26 at 1080p native and find it responsive and smooth. I’d left it on the Auto preset, so it was obviously not on the highest settings, but I didn’t feel the need to try and make it look any better.
You do have the opportunity to use FSR upscaling and AMD’s own frame generation features with the Radeon 890M iGPU, too, and that can really make a huge difference on a handheld machine. But I do want to note that I have regularly seen artifacting with frame gen on the Xbox Ally X.
Xbox full screen experience on the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X
This was honestly the part I was most interested to see with the new ROG Xbox Ally X, the handheld-focused version of Windows. Essentially, it’s a stripped-back interface, with some standard Windows elements and background processes parked until you switch to Windows Desktop Mode.
Sadly, Microsoft isn’t just rolling this out as a new option for any current Windows-based handheld, with support for other devices coming sometime in the new year.
So, for now, this is an Xbox Ally X thing, bar some kinda awkward workarounds. That’s a shame, because it does make a big difference to the overall experience. As you would expect from the Xbox branding, the Xbox full screen experience, as it’s called, is very reminiscent of the design of the Xbox Series X/S UI, but you get to swipe between per-app panels when you want to shift between, say, the Xbox app, the Epic Games Store, or Steam.
Or Armoury Crate. Yes, this is still an Asus product, so it will always have to have Armoury Crate running things, and so you will end up with times where you’re not sure whether the setting you’re after will be found in the Xbox UI or Armoury Crate’s overlay or mainscreen.
And this is why it’s never going to deliver the unified experience you get with the Steam Deck, or any other device now running SteamOS, such as the Legion Go S.
But it boots quickly and, crucially for me, it will enter and exit sleep modes quickly and with the minimum of fuss. What it doesn’t have, which any Xbox console player will miss, is the Quick Resume feature. On the Series X, I still find it magic that I can shut down the machine mid-game and a couple of days later come back to the exact same point when I boot up. No such luck here, and you will have the Windows thing of games shutting down when the machine goes into hibernation.
I’ll say it again. This is not an Xbox.
It is, though, quicker than the desktop version of Windows. Like SteamOS, you can flip between full screen and desktop modes, though you will have to reboot in between if you want to get the performance optimisations. Though when I say it’s quicker, there are only very slight frame rate differences between games running full screen or in the standard desktop mode, but I dare say you’d still rather have them than not.
I’ve not noticed any difference in battery life from the restricted background processes of the Xbox full screen experience, which is something I was hopeful for. Still, the big battery of the Ally X means it remains one of the longest-lasting handhelds you can buy.
Design of the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X
This is one of the things that surprised me about the Xbox Ally X; I actually like the design. Okay, not aesthetically speaking—I still find it looks ridiculous with those grips protruding from the base—but from an ergonomic perspective, it’s the most comfortable handheld gaming PC I’ve ever used.
It matches perfectly with the offset thumbsticks in a way no other device does, and that’s thanks to the elongated grips. I have a mildly busted thumb, and standard handhelds require a certain contortion of the right-hand thumb to reach the lower thumbstick on that side. Either that or you grip the device so low down that it doesn’t feel comfortable or give you easy access to the other buttons.
With the ROG Xbox Ally X, it feels like holding a standard, well-designed Microsoft Xbox controller, and that also makes it far more comfortable for long stints with the device in hand.
It’s also a bit chunkier than the original Ally X. Normally, that would get a thumbs down from me (if my thumb wasn’t mildly busted), but you barely notice it because of those extended grips, and yet it makes a big difference. This is what allows the Xbox Ally X to run so much quieter than other devices while gaming.
It certainly passes the ‘how embarrassed would you be gaming on a train’ test. Admittedly, that’s a very British test, but you don’t want to be tutted at on the 9.43 to Paddington for playing on a device with the fans roaring like a jet turbine.
Otherwise, it’s all much the same as the original Ally X, except for an extra Xbox button that brings up the Gamebar overlay or lets you switch between app tiles.
Display on the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X
Aside from the price, this is the biggest disappointment with the Xbox Ally X. I know that a 500 nit 1080p display was all the original device had, but I was hoping for a bit of an upgrade, especially if I’m paying $1,000 for the privilege. Going back to the OneXFly F1 Pro, with its beautiful 1080p OLED panel, I’m wishing I could make the trade.
My soldering skills are sadly not up to it, however.
Honestly, the Xbox Ally X display feels rather flat, especially by comparison, and never really feels like it’s reaching the full 500 nits heights. Even at 100% brightness, there is no pop or vibrancy to the colours.
It’s responsive, though, and I never experienced any ghosting in even the most fast-paced of games on the device.
The bottom line
The ROG Xbox Ally X is at once both the best handheld gaming PC I’ve used, but also a lesson in where the industry is going awry with this category of device. Valve got it so right with the pricing of the Steam Deck, and that’s why it’s still going strong in 2025. Microsoft, on the other hand, is being far too aggressive, expecting people to pay $200 more than an Ally X for a new chassis, an updated APU, and an OS overlay.
And don’t get me started about the ludicrous pricing of the ROG Xbox Ally (non-X) with its Steam Deck-like efficiency and $600 pricetag.

Best handheld PC 2025
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