Emulation Hardware The never-ending quest for the perfect handheld

titan_tim

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Currently, we are in a golden-age of emulation handhelds. The market is being flooded with new machines, and gaming companies have seemingly thrown up their hands in defeat at the idea of protecting their older games from them. It feels similar to when new Pentium PC's were coming out seemingly every couple months with bigger and better chips and capabilities.

Like an obedient consumer-whore, I jumped onto many of these devices and always found something could have been done better. This is all very subjective, and people all have different requirements for what they believe to be a perfect device.



Here's a quick breakdown of the devices I've bought over the years:

• GCW Zero: A decent start for a kickstarter machine. Horribly terrible OS, and verry painful to put games in. Buttons felt cheap. Could do up to SNES, so not that powerful.

• Dingoo A320: A step-up from the GCW, and very pocketable. Could do up to arcade games fairly well. Horrible placement for the L / R buttons made fighting games horrible.

• RG351P: Could do up to PS1 well with some Dreamcast. Great quality build. Extremely pocketable. No WIFI!!! If you use retro-achievements, that's a dealbreaker. It had the wifi dongle, but it looked ridiculous sticking out of the top.

• RG351M: Same as above, but heavier and with wifi. This was my daily driver for a while. Still a tiny bit underpowered and unnecessarily heavy. Plastic is the way to go.

• AYN Odin: Powerful enough to do up to do almost up to GC and PS2. Feels great in the hands. Great battery life. Not pocketable at all, especially with the necessary case. Also running on a chip that's multiple years old. Playing android games feels a bit sluggish.

• AYANEO Geek 1S: Went all out to get a powerful handheld. Can run anything I can throw at it. Smaller and more powerful than a steam deck, but still feels huge. With the case, it takes up a huge amount of space in a bag, and the battery life isn't great. Very useful for long flights, but not a daily driver.



There are still some being released by Anbernic that are interesting. The RG35XX-H and RGB30 look nice, but they're not enough of an upgrade from the RG351M. The addition of Bluetooth is always nice. The Retroid Pocket 4 looks interesting, although it looks a little less pocketable. The slightly larger screen may be the sweet spot for RPG games on the go.

I'm sure there are other people who have their issues with what they have, or they've found the perfect device for what they need. Always happy to hear what people have to say.
 

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  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    They haslve dedicated on board chips that aren't tweaked like x64/x32 afaik
  • ColdBlitz @ ColdBlitz:
    but its a custom os for both of them
  • ColdBlitz @ ColdBlitz:
    designed for only specific hardware
  • ColdBlitz @ ColdBlitz:
    so you have to learn to emulate that specific hardware which isn't as easy as you'd think
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    It's a locked down Linux distro basically
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    I think the only custom hardware is to do with the SSD and a security chip
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Probably combined in one chip
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    They place married security chips onto boards iirc
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Damn Frontier is offering 5Gbps now lol
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    I honestly can't recommend any of the big 3 this years I'd say buy a rog ally z1 if we're being honest
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Honestly after the PS3 and 360 I just went full PC
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    Every games basically cross platform they only have about 6 titles making it worth the $600 price tag
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Didn't see much need for a console, all the advantages have kind of disappeared
  • ColdBlitz @ ColdBlitz:
    the ps3 used to support installing linux because the cpu was so powerful
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    Then the games are $70 and they want to reboot and refresh the same game every year
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    The ps3 was always Linux they just found a way to make it open source
  • ColdBlitz @ ColdBlitz:
    I'm avoiding buying from the big 3 at all atm
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    At one point PC game pads where poorly supported, loading a game had setup, it was complicated. Now it's almost as easy as a console.
  • ColdBlitz @ ColdBlitz:
    nintendo needs to up their game soon
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    Yeah even bt support for Xbox one controllers are just as easy as pairing
    +1
  • ColdBlitz @ ColdBlitz:
    considering the steamdeck can emulate the switch (yikes) theres almost 0 reason to buy the switch apart from playing online and using cartridges
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    Xinput and 360 dongles were a driver nightmare
  • K3Nv2 @ K3Nv2:
    I remember having to manually put in drivers and what not
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Yeah the 360 dongles sucked
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    But the new Xbox pads? PIr it up and if a game supports it it just works
    Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo: But the new Xbox pads? PIr it up and if a game supports it it just works