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AYA Neo console

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We have been sharing news on the AYA Neo console ever since it was announced. It’s the first handheld gaming console that will be powered by AMD Ryzen CPU. The development on this console has started way before Ryzen 5000 series codenamed “Cezanne” were announced, hence it is based on older “Renoir” architecture. The console features a 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 4500U CPU with a Zen2 core architecture. This particular Ryzen CPU has no SMT, which means it only has 6 threads.

The console has recently started shipping to first customers and reviewers. The first model that was released is called Aya Neo Founder, which is a special edition with translucent chassis. This console is now shipping to crowdfunding backers. The manufacturer is expected to implement various changes to the device before it reaches the retail market, hence the Founders should be considered an early design that may look different from the finished product.

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AYA Neo Founder also comes with 16GB of LPDDR4X memory and either 512GB or 1TB of NVMe storage. The console is equipped with a 1280×800 IPS display, which ensures that Ryzen CPU integrated graphics can still provide a playable experience with a framerate above 30 in most games. The 47wH battery can officially provide up to 6 hours of use, but in heavy gaming, it is usually around 2 hours.

AMD Ryzen 5 4500U features Radeon 6 Vega graphics with only 6 Compute Units (384 Streaming Processors). Despite such a low number of cores, this is actually more than enough to run various emulators and even games with SoC power locked to 5W (from nominal 15W). This expands the battery life to multiple hours.

YouTubers such as ETA PRIME or Taki Udon have released their first look video featuring the console. The console can provide playable framerate at 1280×800 resolution with settings at medium to low. Some games are playable with APU power locked to 5W. The videos that are attached later in this post also include emulator tests. Those tests are early previews with detailed reviews expected in the coming weeks.

Aya Neo will compete in the handheld gaming market with upcoming One Gx1 Pro and GDP Win3. Both will feature Intel Tiger Lake CPUs with Xe Graphics. If not for the very high price of these devices, 2021 could become the first year when gaming on integrated graphics actually becomes popular.

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One year ago at CES 2020 in Las Vegas, Alienware made waves with a modular gaming PC that worked like a Nintendo Switch, with a pair of gamepads flanking a powerful Windows 10 tablet. Sadly, Alienware’s UFO was just a concept, as was Lenovo’s take on the idea this year — but two companies are now taking up the torch with a pair of crowdfunded gadgets you might actually see in your lifetime. They look seriously legit.

The 5.5-inch GPD Win 3 and the 7-inch Aya Neo aren’t going about it in quite the same way; while the Ava tries to closely match Nintendo’s console in shape, size, and with strictly gaming controls on board, the GPD sticks to its palmtop computer roots with a slide-up screen that reveals a tiny backlit keyboard. There’s also a fingerprint sensor, a microSD slot and an optional Thunderbolt 4 dock if you want to use the GPD like a full Windows 10 computer.

 

What’s the same: both are genuinely trying to deliver a powerful tablet surrounded by joysticks and buttons for under $1,000 each. With Intel’s latest Tiger Lake chips and AMD’s Ryzen 4500U respectively, each has some of the latest and greatest integrated graphics you can buy, and they claim pretty decent performance as a result — Cyberpunk 2077 can reportedly hit 30fps at the Aya Neo’s 1280x800 resolution at low settings, and GPD offers a long list of examples of recent, demanding games that you can coax well over the 50fps mark with its Intel Xe graphics.

As you can see in the spec comparo sheet I whipped up below, each features 16GB of DDR4 memory, a speedy NVMe solid state drive, Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.0, a pair of stereo speakers, a genuine headphone jack, and multiple USB ports. Not bad!

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Just know that these systems are going to be chonky compared to an actual Nintendo Switch’s 0.55-inch thick frame and 0.88-pound weight, and battery life will be a big question, with both the Aya Neo and GPD Win 3 allowing you to fine-tune the chip’s TDP wattage to get the most out of their tablet-sized cells. NotebookCheck says you shouldn’t expect to get more than 1.5 hours out of the GPD Win 3 while playing a demanding game, though Taki Udon on YouTube claims you can get 2-3 hours out of an early Aya Neo.

A note on crowdfunding:

Crowdfunding is a chaotic field by nature: companies looking for funding tend to make big promises. According to a study run by Kickstarter in 2015, roughly 1 in 10 “successful” products that reach their funding goals fail to actually deliver rewards. Of the ones that do deliver, delays, missed deadlines, or overpromised ideas mean that there’s often disappointment in store for those products that do get done.

The best defense is to use your best judgment. Ask yourself: does the product look legitimate? Is the company making outlandish claims? Is there a working prototype? Does the company mention existing plans to manufacture and ship finished products? Has it completed a Kickstarter before?

And remember: you’re not necessarily buying a product when you back it on a crowdfunding site.

Speaking of Taki Udon’s video, it looks like a fantastic overview of the handheld, so I recommend checking it out, and this second vid that shows off how well games like Cyberpunk 2077 and Sekiro play on his Founder’s model. It’s not enough to convince me to crowdfund a company I’ve never heard of, but it’s a good start.

You should also know that not all of these handhelds are going to look and play the same: the transparent Aya you’re seeing in the videos was a limited edition of 15,000 for early pre-orders in China, with final models launching in black and white instead when they ship in April. Aya will be launching its Indiegogo campaign in February with a “super early bird limited price” of $699, with no word on how much the rest of us might pay.

The GPD Win 3 is already on Indiegogo, where you’ll pay $799 for the Core i5-1135G7 version, with the more powerful i7 chip starting at $899, or $949 for a package with the optional USB, HDMI and Gigabit Ethernet docking station.

Between these handheld gaming PCs, the cute upcoming Playdate and the gorgeous Analogue Pocket, some of the squeaky clean mods we’ve seen of late, not to mention the popularity of the Switch itself and the march of ever smaller and more powerful chips, it feels like we might be entering a gaming handheld renaissance. Here’s hoping.

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Straipsnis apie sios konsoles pasirodyma sukele daug fantazijos mano galvoje. Jeigu sita konsole galingesne uz dabartinti Switch - kas musu laukia ateityje? Kokio galingumo nesiojamas konsoles mes turesime savo rankose? Ar tokios konsoles ateityje bus ant tiek galingos, kad mes galesime jas tiesiog prijungti prie PC ekrano ir naudotis kaip tikru PC? Nebus sunkios dezes su detalemis joje, turesime toki aparaciuka kuris atstos mums viska, kas dabar atrodo normalu ir praktiska.. :) uch..

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