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In July 2021, Valve revealed the Steam Deck, a Switch-like handheld device packed with features including a huge variety of control options, a 7-inch touchscreen, the ability to connect to external displays, and a quick suspend / resume feature. The device began shipping in February 2022, starting at $399.

With an unprecedented degree of support from Valve and the help of the gaming community, it progressed from being a “glorious mess” in our initial review to becoming one of The Verge’s favorite gadgets of 2022 and something other companies couldn’t really match. More than two years after the Steam Deck launched, the landscape is very different now that new competition has arrived in the form of Windows-powered handhelds like the Asus ROG Ally, the Lenovo Legion Go, and Ayaneo’s assorted decks.

Now Valve’s new revision of the Steam Deck adds an OLED screen along with tons of other improvements that Sean Hollister says make it “everything the original should have been.”

We’ve been keeping a close eye on the Steam Deck and rivals, and you can read all of our coverage here.

  • Jsaux now sells a ROG Ally battery upgrade kit with 62.5 percent more battery.

    Do you have an OG Asus ROG Ally with a 40Wh pack? Jsaux, the biggest name in handheld accessory innovations, is now selling a 65Wh upgrade kit for $80. It comes with a slightly thicker back cover and an extended heatsink too. If that’s not enough battery, iFixit’s slightly hackier mod can give you an ROG Ally X-beating 88Wh. Jsaux seems to be out of stock, but you can smash a “notify me” button.

  • The Steam Deck Folio is the Kickstarter case I didn’t know I wanted.

    Thin enough to fit inside the Steam Deck’s case, protects joysticks and screen, unfolds to become a magnetic stand — dare I back it? Well, Shane Blomberg tells me his partners have lined up a factory that serves Incipio and Tumi; his partner Scott Truong has designed goods for both those brands; it takes minimal tooling to make this a reality, and that they’ve successfully shipped a pair of previous Kickstarters.

    Oh, and they say they’ve already tested the magnets to ensure no interference with the Steam Deck’s fan.

    The “Steam Deck Folio.”
    The “Steam Deck Folio.”
    GIFs: Kickstarter
  • Three years later, the Steam Deck has dominated handheld PC gaming

    Photo of the right half of a Steam deck against an orange background.
    Photo of the right half of a Steam deck against an orange background.
    Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

    Today is the third anniversary of Valve’s Steam Deck, the handheld gaming PC that all but created the market for handheld gaming PCs. It was a mess to start! But three years later, The Verge has data showing how it has dominated the nascent market. While Valve told us in November 2023 that it had sold “multiple millions” of the AMD-powered handheld, we’ve never had a good glimpse at how big it is or how Windows competitors stack up… till now. It seems the Steam Deck, so far, has been bigger than all its competitors combined.

    Market research firm IDC uses supply chains to estimate just how many handheld gaming systems have shipped around the world, and creates spending forecasts. When I asked IDC market research analyst Lewis Ward if he’d be willing to isolate SteamOS and Windows gaming handhelds from that data, he said yes.

    Read Article >
  • Lenovo Legion Go S review: feels good, plays bad

    lenovo-legion-go-sean-hollister-verge-331A1087-2
    lenovo-legion-go-sean-hollister-verge-331A1087-2
    Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

    The Lenovo Legion Go S was supposed to change things. It was poised to show Valve isn’t the only one that can build an affordable, portable, potent handheld gaming PC — you just need the right design and the right OS.

    I was intrigued when Valve’s own Steam Deck designers told me this Windows handheld would double as the first authorized third-party SteamOS handheld this May. When I heard Lenovo had procured an exclusive AMD chip that would help that SteamOS version hit $499, I got excited for a true Steam Deck competitor.

    Read Article >
  • Damn, Polygon beat me to the Ayaneo 3.

    Chris Plante! How dare you suggest the device I called “the most exciting PC handheld” is better than the Steam Deck because it’s “on steroids in every way?”

    Plante, direct-messaging me on Slack:

    For me being on steroids is not inherently a good thing. people’s hearts explode and their privates shrink

    Oh! Well then. That DOES sound like the pre-production model they sent me. For a better “Steam Deck Plus” experience in the meanwhile, try this!

  • I plugged an Nvidia RTX 5090 into a gaming handheld

    rtx-5090-egpu-sean-hollister-verge-331A1080-2
    rtx-5090-egpu-sean-hollister-verge-331A1080-2
    The RTX 5090, in a Minisforum DEG1, plugged into a GPD Win Max 2.
    Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

    Two weeks ago, I showed you how the world’s fastest graphics card works in a small form factor PC. To my surprise, Nvidia’s RTX 5090 Founders Edition delivered the vast majority of its performance even in a 12.7-liter desktop with a five-year-old CPU.

    It made me wonder: what if I plugged this card into a handheld gaming PC instead? So I did, and let me tell you: it’s a wonder to behold. It’s enough to make me believe in a rich future where handhelds get more powerful when you dock them at home.

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  • From Steam Deck to Steam Brick.

    To make the Steam Deck even more portable, modder Crastinator-pro stripped the handheld down to the bare essentials needed to play games while connected to a TV or pair of AR glasses.

    The smaller and lighter Steam Brick says goodbye to the Steam Deck’s screen, controls, and battery and stuffs the remaining electronics into a custom 3D-printed housing featuring just a USB port and a power button.

    The custom Steam Brick console next to all the parts of the Steam Deck that had to be stripped away to make it.
    The Steam Brick makes the Steam Deck an even more portable console by stripping away its built-in controls and screen.
    Image: Crastinator-pro / GitHub
  • What handheld PCs should do to fight the Nintendo Switch 2

    The Lenovo Legion Go S with SteamOS.
    The Lenovo Legion Go S with SteamOS.
    The Lenovo Legion Go S with SteamOS.
    Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

    I stopped buying most games for my Nintendo Switch the day I bought a Steam Deck. My Switch has been a Mario and Zelda machine ever since. It’s simple: the Steam Deck took the Switch’s best trick — pick-up-and-play portability — while offering more games that run better. I can easily resume the ones I started on my desktop PC, or continue to play portable titles on my desktop and marvel at improved graphics.

    But the Nintendo Switch 2, coming later this year, may change that value proposition. Not only will it continue to be the console that attracts families and kids with inventive, surprising, must-try exclusive Nintendo games that use its detachable Joy-Cons’ many tricks, but it also has a real chance at convincing the enthusiasts who might otherwise buy a handheld gaming PC — or who were waiting for handheld PCs to become less of a wild west.

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  • The $900 Ayaneo 3 is the most exciting PC handheld the company’s yet made

    Ayaneo builds the best-looking handheld PCs in the business, but they’ve always been boutique. The 2023 Ayaneo 2, for example, cost $1,300 for an arguably worse experience than the $400 Steam Deck. But that experience isn’t dampening my excitement for the new 7-inch Ayaneo 3.

    Not only does this one start at $900, within striking distance of the highest-end handhelds you’ll find at retail, it’s the most feature-packed portable I’ve seen — with two USB4 ports and OcuLink and RGB-ringed Hall effect joysticks and your choice of two seemingly killer screens. Perhaps most exciting: a way to finally fix a handheld’s joystick and button layout to match your ergonomic preferences!

    Read Article >
  • Maybe giant gaming handhelds are where it’s at

    The Asus ROG Flow Z13 (2025) gaming tablet mounted in a clamp-style controller, sitting beside the much smaller Steam Deck.
    The Asus ROG Flow Z13 (2025) gaming tablet mounted in a clamp-style controller, sitting beside the much smaller Steam Deck.

    If you thought the Steam Deck was big, let alone Acer’s Nitro Blaze 11, get a load of this Frankenstein’s monster of a PC gaming handheld I’ve cobbled together. This is a pre-production version of Asus’s upcoming ROG Flow Z13 tablet combined with a GameSir G8 Plus clamp-on mobile controller; the Z13’s AMD Strix Halo processor makes it probably the most powerful handheld gaming device you can play. That is, of course, until your hands cramp under its weight.

    It’s utterly ridiculous, I love it, and I’m beginning to think big screens are the future.

    Read Article >
  • Hey that’s me, chatting about the Intel / Quanta prototype modular handheld concept that surprised me at CES.

    Ever wanted to have dinner with The Verge’s staff, shooting the shit about gadgets? Here’s the next best thing: we filmed a roundtable chat over our actual team dinner at CES in Las Vegas; this clip is just a taste.

    If you’d rather have more photos and not-quite-details about this prototype, find ‘em here.

  • I played with the new Legion Go 2, too.

    The SteamOS and/or Windows-toting Lenovo Legion Go S was the best handheld of CES 2025, but it wasn’t the only Lenovo portable I took for a spin! The third time was the charm for this detachable-controller and kickstand Legion Go 2 prototype, which I found working at the third venue I encountered it.

  • Microsoft is combining ‘the best of Xbox and Windows together’ for handhelds

    Vector collage of the Xbox logo.
    Vector collage of the Xbox logo.
    Image: The Verge

    Xbox chief Phil Spencer has been dropping hints about an Xbox handheld for months, but what about Windows handheld gaming PCs? Jason Ronald, Microsoft’s VP of “Next Generation,” tells The Verge that we should expect to see the Windows handheld gaming experience change within this calendar year.

    Ronald was a roundtable panelist this evening at an AMD and Lenovo event titled “The Future of Gaming Handhelds,” which was mostly a coming-out party for Lenovo’s new Legion Go S. But he did hint onstage that Microsoft plans to bring the Xbox experience to Windows PCs, rather than the other way around — and expanded on that considerably after we caught up with him later.

    Read Article >
  • I finally touched the MSI Claw 8 AI Plus.

    The Intel Lunar Lake handheld, on sale now, looks and feels SO much better than the original, and I hear it performs far better, too.

    1/6
  • A look inside the Lenovo Legion Go S.

    Lenovo sent Dave2D an entire pre-production unit of the soon-to-be Steam-ified Legion Go S, complete with its Lenovo-exclusive AMD Z2 Go chip, so he’s got the best look yet. You can see its full-length SSD slot here (with spacer for smaller drives) for easy upgrades.

    He also ran early benchmarks that suggest it’ll surely have more performance than the Steam Deck. We both agree it won’t be a battery life champ.

    Image: Dave2D
  • Valve will officially let you install SteamOS on other handhelds as soon as this April

    Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

    SteamOS was always supposed to be bigger than Valve’s own Steam Deck, and 2025 is the year it finally expands. Not only will Lenovo ship the first third-party SteamOS handheld this May, Valve has now revealed it will let you install a working copy of SteamOS on other handhelds even sooner than that.

    Pierre-Loup Griffais, one of the lead designers on the Steam Deck and SteamOS, tells me a beta for other handhelds “is slated to ship after March sometime,” and that you might discover the OS just starts working properly after that happens!

    Read Article >
  • Up close with the SteamOS-powered Lenovo Legion Go S.

    Physically, and on paper, I would pick this one over the original Legion Go in a heartbeat. It feels so much better — and it’s the first third-party handheld with SteamOS, which vastly improves that feel.

    Sorry I couldn’t provide any performance or battery impressions, though: this unit has an old Z1 Extreme chip inside, no intensive games on display, not even a Portal 2 savegame.

  • Lenovo’s officially making a Legion Go 2, too.

    The Legion Go S is the immediate successor to the Legion Go handheld, minus the detachable gamepads / mouse / kickstand and plus a SteamOS option. But a Legion Go 2 is coming sometime in 2025, Lenovo has announced.

    Specs include Ryzen Z2 Extreme, an 8.8-inch 144Hz OLED screen with VRR (!), and a big 74Wh battery. This one didn’t turn on, but the grips are definitely comfier!

    1/5Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
  • Lenovo Legion Go S official: $499 buys the first authorized third-party SteamOS handheld

    The Lenovo Legion Go S, with SteamOS.
    The Lenovo Legion Go S, with SteamOS.
    The Lenovo Legion Go S, with SteamOS.
    Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

    Lenovo is trying an experiment. In May, it will officially become the very first company outside of Valve to ship a handheld gaming PC with the Steam Deck’s wonderfully pick-up-and-play SteamOS instead of Microsoft Windows. And at $499, it’ll be a true Steam Deck rival, joining it as one of the lower-priced PC handhelds you can buy.

    That handheld will be the 1.6-pound Lenovo Legion Go S, a new and improved version of the company’s eight-inch handheld that ditches the Nintendo Switch-like detachable gamepads and kickstand for a lighter and more traditional design, with a sculpted grip that felt supremely comfortable in my hands.

    Read Article >
  • Asus just announced the world’s first Thunderbolt 5 eGPU

    The 2025 Asus XG Mobile, now with standard Thunderbolt 5 instead of a proprietary connector.
    The 2025 Asus XG Mobile, now with standard Thunderbolt 5 instead of a proprietary connector.
    The 2025 Asus XG Mobile, now with standard Thunderbolt 5 instead of a proprietary connector.
    Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

    This smoky black translucent box isn’t a gaming PC — instead, it might be the most powerful single-cable portable docking station ever conceived. When you plug your laptop or handheld into the just-announced 2025 Asus XG Mobile, it promises to add the power of Nvidia’s top-flight GeForce RTX 5090 mobile chip, and up to 140 watts of electricity, and two monitors, and a USB and SD-card-reading hub, and 5Gbps ethernet simultaneously.

    That’s because it’s the world’s first* Thunderbolt 5 external graphics card and one of the first Thunderbolt 5 docks, using the new 80 gigabit per second bidirectional link to do more things with a single cable than we’ve ever seen before.

    Read Article >
  • No, Valve isn’t working with GPD to bring SteamOS to its handheld.

    Valve just squashed its second Steam Deck-adjacent rumor in one day. “We’re not currently working with GPD on official SteamOS support,” Valve designer Lawrence Yang tells The Verge.

    GPD said it planned to offer SteamOS on its Win 4 handheld, “with system adaptation provided by Valve.” Ayaneo once claimed to have SteamOS too. We’re expecting Lenovo to announce the first third-party SteamOS handheld this week.

  • Intel brought a big honking stereo 3D handheld gaming PC to CES 2025.

    It’s co-developed with Tencent, it’s called the Sunday Dragon, and it’s absolutely huge with an 11-inch autostereoscopic screen (like the Nintendo 3DS but massive). I nearly dropped it trying to remove its detachable controllers.

    The 3D popped to life just fine for me, and while the heft gave me pause, the grips are sculpted nicely. Lunar Lake inside.

    Dedicated 3D-2D switch.
    <em>Looks like a dock for a keyboard cover.</em>
    1/7
  • AMD’s Z2 handheld gaming chips are official — and not coming to a Steam Deck near you

    AMD has just officially announced its full lineup of Ryzen Z2 chips for handheld gaming PCs like the Steam Deck, after a brief tease this fall — but as of today, it’s pretty muddy who they’re for or what they’re going to do for handheld PC gaming.

    First off, although AMD told journalists in a pre-recorded briefing that Valve’s Steam Deck, Lenovo Legion Go, and Asus ROG Ally lineups would all feature the new chips, it’s not clear that’s actually true.

    Read Article >
  • Acer made an enormous 11-inch gaming handheld

    Promotional art of Acer’s Nitro Blaze 11.
    Promotional art of Acer’s Nitro Blaze 11.
    Image: Acer

    Acer is announcing two new Nitro Blaze gaming handhelds at CES 2025, and one of them, the Nitro Blaze 11, is truly giant with a massive 10.95-inch screen.

    Seriously, it’s huge — just look at this photo of a person holding it! It’s absurd!

    Read Article >
  • Ayaneo 3: could the “world’s first modular handheld” solve the great joystick debate?

    It’s probably going to cost a buttload of money, but I’m seriously intrigued: could this modular design let some of us get symmetrical sticks, others offset Xbox-style sticks, and still others enjoy touchpads or extra buttons instead?

    Still, looks like you’ll have to “pick two” at a time — while the Steam Deck offers dual touchpads, dual sticks and D-pad simultaneously.

    More in Ayaneo’s video.
    More in Ayaneo’s video.
    Image: Ayaneo
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