Asus on Thursday officially introduced the ROG Ally, its first handheld gaming PC. With numerous handheld gaming systems around, most notably Steam Deck, Asus needed something special to be successful and fulfill the promise of the ROG brand. To that end, the ROG Ally promises a unique combination of performance enabled by AMD's latest mobile CPU, high compatibility due to usage of Windows 11, portability, and other features.

Performance: To Extreme, or Not to Extreme?

First teased by Asus last month, the ROG Ally is the company's effort to break into the handheld gaming PC space, which Valve has essentially broken open in the past year with the Steam Deck.

When developing ROG Ally, Asus wanted to build a no-compromise machine that would bring the performance of mobile PCs the portability that comes with handheld device. This is where AMD's recently-launched Zen 4-based Ryzen Z1 and Ryzen Z1 Extreme SoCs, which are aimed specifically at ultra-portable devices, come into play.

Based on AMD's 4nm Phoenix silicon, the eight-core Ryzen Z1 Extreme processor and its 12 CU RDNA 3-based GPU resembles the company's Ryzen 7 7840U CPU. Meanwhile Asus is also offering a version of Ally using the lower-tier Z1 chip, which still uses eight CPU cores and pairs that with a 4 CU GPU. On paper, the Z1 Extreme chip is significantly more powerful in graphics tasks as a result (~3x), however in practice the chips are closer, as thermal and memory bandwidth limits keep the Extreme chip from running too far ahead.

Speaking of graphics performance, it should be noted that Asus's ROG Ally console is equipped with the ROG XG Mobile connector (a PCIe 3.0 x8 for data and a USB-C for power and USB connections) that can be used to connect an Asus ROG XG Mobile eGFX dock with the handheld. The XG docks come with a range of GPUs installed, up to a GeForce RTX 4090 Laptop GPU. The XG dock essentially transforms ROG Ally into a high-performance gaming system, albeit by supplanting much of its on-board functionality. The fact that Asus offers eGFX capability right out-of-box is a significant feature differentiator for the ROG Ally, though be prepared to invest the $1999.99 if you want the top-end GeForce RTX 4090 Laptop-equipped XG dock.

Both versions of ROG Ally will come with 16GB of LPDDR5-6400 memory and a 512GB SSD in an M.2-2230 form-factor with a PCIe 4.0 interface. While replacing the M.2 drive is reportedly a relatively easy task, for those who want to expand storage space without opening anything up, the console also has an UHS-II-compliant microSD card slot.

Display: Full-HD at 120 Hz

The ROG Ally is not only the first handheld with the Ryzen Z1 Extreme CPU, but will also be among the first portable game consoles with a 1920x1080 resolution 7-inch display; and one that supports a maximum refresh rate of 120 Hz, no less. The Gorilla Glass Victus-covered display uses an IPS-class panel with a peak luminance of 500 nits as well as Dolby Vision HDR support to make games more appealing.

In addition to Dolby Vision HDR-badged display, the Asus ROG Ally also has Dolby Atmos-certified audio subsystem with Smart Amp speakers and noise cancelation technology. 

Ergonomics: 600 Grams and All the Controls

When it comes to mobile devices, ergonomics is crucial. Yet, it is pretty hard to design a handheld game console that essentially uses laptop-class silicon with all of its peculiarities. When Asus began work on its ROG Ally, it asked mobile gamers about what they think was the most important feature for their portable console and apparently it was weight. So Asus set about deigning a device that would weigh around 600 grams and would be comfortable to use.

"When we go through survey with our focus group, the number one thing that they wanted was a balanced weight handheld device," said Shawn Yen, vice president of Asus's Gaming Business Unit responsible for ROG products. "The target was 600 grams because the current handheld devices in the market today are too heavy. It is not something that they can engage for a very long period of time. So, their game time got cut down because it is not comfortable. So, uh, when we first thought about the design target for ROG Ally, we were thinking about a device that can get into gamers' hands for hours of fun time."

The display and chassis are among the heaviest components of virtually all mobile devices, so there is little that can be done about those. But in a bid to optimize the weight and distribute it across the device, the company had to implement a very well thought motherboard design, and use anti-gravity heat pipes to ensure proper cooling at all times without using too many of them as this increases weight. Meanwhile, Asus still had to use two fans and a radiator with 0.1 mm ultra-thin fins to ensure that the CPU is cooled down properly as it still can dissipate up to 30W of heat. To further optimize weight, Asus opted for a polycarbonate chassis.

Since Asus ROG Ally is essentially a Windows 11-based PC albeit in a portable game console form factor, the company had to incorporate all the pads and buttons featured on conventional gamepads and some more controls for Windows (e.g., touchscreen) and ROG Ally-specific things like Armor Crate game launcher and two macro buttons. It's also worth noting that, seemingly because of the use of Windows 11, the Ally is not capable of consistently suspending games while it sleeps, a notable difference compared to other handheld consoles.

Meanwhile, the trade-off to hitting their weight target while still using a relatively powerful SoC has been battery life. The Ally comes with a 40Wh batter, and Asus officially advertises the handheld as offering up to 2 hours of battery life in heavy gaming workloads. Early reviews, in turn, have matched this, if not coming in below 2 hours in some cases. The higher-resolution display and high-performance AMD CPU are both key differentiating factors of the Ally, but these parts come at a high power cost.

Vast Connectivity

Being a PC, the ROG Ally is poised to offer connectivity that one comes to expect from a portable computer. Therefore, the unit features a Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth adapter for connectivity, it includes a MicroSD card slot for additional storage, a USB Type-C port for both charging and display output, an ROG XG Mobile connector for external GPUs, and a TRRS audio connector for headsets.

The Price

The ROG Ally with AMD's Ryzen Z1 Extreme CPU is set to be launched globally on June 13, 2023, at a price point of $699.99. Meanwhile the non-extreme Z1 version of the Ally has been lited for $599.99, though no release date has been set. The first reviews are already out, so Asus is giving potential customers a long lead time to evaluate the console before it's released next month.

Source: Asus

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  • xol - Saturday, May 13, 2023 - link

    If it's going to play Series S/X / PS5 targetted games at 720p then I would expect it would need the 8 cores...

    That's my assumption anyway
  • StevoLincolnite - Tuesday, May 16, 2023 - link

    It's an incorrect assumption as no game on Xbox Series S/X and the Playstation 5 uses 8 cores.

    And they will never use all 8 cores.
  • ToTTenTranz - Saturday, May 13, 2023 - link

    There are findings of a smaller "Phoenix2" SoC in Linux drivers. It reportedly has a 2x Zen4 + 4x Zen4c CPU, 4x RDNA3 WGPs (8CUs) and I read somewhere that is supports the faster LPDDR5X 8533MT/s.

    The Phoenix on the Z1 / 7x40U was designed for laptops so it isn't all that interesting for handhelds, but this Phoenix2 should be the actual successor of Van Gogh.

    It could also be that a bunch of laptop brands (Dell, MSI, Gigabyte, Lenovo) are waiting for Phoenix2 to release their handheld.
  • StevoLincolnite - Tuesday, May 16, 2023 - link

    Considering these parts are mostly bandwidth limited anyway, that would be a massive boon.

    I would rather a smaller more efficient SOC that can boost to high clocks when needed that is backed by oodles of bandwidth than the opposite.
  • nandnandnand - Saturday, May 13, 2023 - link

    8-cores are tiny, getting even smaller with each node, and are what you need to keep up with the big consoles.
  • thestryker - Saturday, May 13, 2023 - link

    AMD hasn't had anything below 6c since Zen 2 so I wouldn't expect to see lower core count until they move to hybrid architecture. I'd have been happy with a high end IGP and a 6 core chip for this, but the Z1 appears to be a power optimized mobile chip rather than being fully new silicon and the 12CU IGP are limited to 8c processors.
  • xol - Sunday, May 14, 2023 - link

    5300G says hi
  • nandnandnand - Sunday, May 14, 2023 - link

    There's a reason it's OEM-only. 8-core dies and chiplets should almost never be turned into quad-core products.

    BTW, if you want an even more absurd example, look no further than the Ryzen 3 5125C.
  • meacupla - Sunday, May 14, 2023 - link

    Ryzen 3 7320U is also anemic, despite having LPDDR5
  • nandnandnand - Sunday, May 14, 2023 - link

    Mendocino is based on a quad-core die, so it's actually a step in the right direction (5125C uses an 8-core die with 6 cores disabled). But it took a 75% cut in RDNA2 CUs instead of being a carbon copy of Steam Deck's 8 CU Van Gogh, and it's overpriced IMO. In the long run, they could spam out Mendocino as a 6nm budget chip for years to come, and it could end up in the $80-150 laptops. It has decent performance for the low-end, and AV1 decode.

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