Gaming handhelds in the Philippines now span from ₱1,550 to almost ₱60,000, and the catalog keeps growing. On the low end you get retro emulators that fit a coin purse. On the high end you get full Windows pocket PCs that run the same Steam library as your desktop.
This is our complete list. We pulled every handheld we could verify from local stores like DataBlitz and Game One, plus official pricing from ASUS, MSI, Lenovo, Nintendo, and Sony. We sorted all of them from the most expensive to the cheapest, and each model name links straight to a store page so you can check stock and buy.
One device pushed us to track the whole market: the AYN Odin 3 Pro landed locally at ₱26,995 with a Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, a price that sits right between budget Android units and premium Windows handhelds.
Complete gaming handheld price list (most expensive to cheapest)
Tap any model name to open its store page.
Prices may change depending on the dealer, the store promo, and the unit configuration. Treat the figures above as a baseline, not a fixed quote. Several older units show as sold out at DataBlitz, so stock and price can both shift. Always confirm the final price and the warranty with the seller before you pay.
The handhelds, grouped by brand
MSI Claw
MSI now has two flagships in the country. The Intel-powered Claw 8 AI+ tops this whole list, while the newer AMD-based Claw A8 matches the ROG Ally X on paper. Both use 8-inch screens, dual Thunderbolt or USB4 ports, and a fingerprint reader.
MSI Claw key specs:
Intel Core Ultra 7 258V or AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme
Intel Arc 140V or AMD Radeon graphics
24GB or 32GB RAM
1TB SSD
8-inch FHD+ IPS, 1920×1200, 120Hz
80Wh battery
Windows 11 Home
Where to buy:
MSI Claw 8 AI+ A2VM, Intel Core Ultra 7 258V, 32GB/1TB: ₱59,995 DataBlitz →
MSI Claw A8, AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme, 24GB/1TB: ₱56,995 DataBlitz →
ASUS ROG Ally and ROG Xbox Ally
ASUS runs the widest Windows lineup here. The Xbox Ally pair adds contoured Xbox grips, a full-screen Xbox interface, and a Game Pass bundle. The older ROG Ally trio still sells, with the base Z1 now the value pick. For the earlier rollout, see our ASUS ROG Ally X Philippine pricing report.
ASUS ROG Ally key specs:
AMD Ryzen Z1, Z1 Extreme, Z2 A, or Ryzen AI Z2 Extreme
16GB or 24GB LPDDR5 RAM
512GB or 1TB SSD
7-inch FHD IPS, 1920×1080, 120Hz
40Wh to 80Wh battery depending on model
Windows 11
Where to buy:
ASUS ROG Ally X, Z1 Extreme, 24GB/1TB: ₱56,995 DataBlitz →
ASUS ROG Xbox Ally X, Ryzen AI Z2 Extreme, 24GB/1TB: ₱56,995
ASUS ROG Xbox Ally, Ryzen Z2 A, 16GB/512GB: ₱36,995
ASUS ROG Ally, Z1 Extreme, 16GB/512GB: ₱34,850 DataBlitz →
ASUS ROG Ally, Z1, 16GB/512GB: ₱30,995 DataBlitz →
Lenovo Legion Go and Legion Go S
Lenovo plays the big-screen angle. The original Legion Go has the largest panel here at 8.8 inches with detachable controllers. The newer Legion Go S is smaller and lighter on the Ryzen Z2 Go.
Lenovo Legion Go key specs:
AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme or Ryzen Z2 Go
16GB LPDDR5X RAM
512GB SSD
8.8-inch QHD 144Hz or 8-inch WUXGA 120Hz IPS
Detachable controllers on the original Go
Windows 11 Home
Where to buy:
Lenovo Legion Go S, Ryzen Z2 Go, 16GB/512GB: ₱44,995 DataBlitz →
Lenovo Legion Go, Ryzen Z1 Extreme, 16GB/512GB: ₱39,995 DataBlitz →
Valve Steam Deck
The handheld that started the current wave. The OLED refresh brings a brighter screen, lighter body, and bigger battery. The older LCD model still sells in three storage tiers. All run SteamOS, not Windows. Valve also released a limited edition Steam Deck OLED in White for collectors.
Valve Steam Deck key specs:
AMD APU, Zen 2 CPU, RDNA 2 graphics
16GB LPDDR5 RAM
64GB eMMC, 256GB, 512GB, or 1TB SSD
7-inch LCD or 7.4-inch OLED
1280×800, 60Hz LCD or 90Hz OLED
SteamOS 3 (Linux)
Where to buy:
Steam Deck OLED, 512GB or 1TB: from ₱43,995 DataBlitz →
Steam Deck LCD, 512GB: ₱28,950 DataBlitz →
Steam Deck LCD, 256GB: ₱26,950 DataBlitz →
Steam Deck LCD, 64GB: ₱22,995 DataBlitz →
GPD
GPD covers the clamshell and slider niche, where the handheld doubles as a tiny laptop with a built-in keyboard. The lineup runs from the powerful Win Max 2 down to the older Win 3 slider.
GPD key specs:
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U, 7840U, 8840U, 4800U, or Intel Core i7-1195G7
16GB or 32GB RAM
1TB or 2TB SSD
5.5-inch to 10.1-inch screen depending on model
Built-in keyboard on Win Max and Win Mini units
Windows 11
Where to buy:
GPD Win Max 2, Ryzen 7 6800U, 32GB/1TB: ₱52,995 DataBlitz →
GPD Win Mini 2024, Ryzen 7 8840U, 32GB/2TB: ₱49,995 DataBlitz →
GPD Win Max 2, Ryzen 7 6800U, 16GB/1TB: ₱46,995 DataBlitz →
GPD Win Mini, Ryzen 7 7840U, 32GB/2TB: ₱42,995 DataBlitz →
GPD Win Max 2021, Core i7-1195G7, 16GB/1TB: ₱32,995 DataBlitz →
GPD Win Max 2021, Ryzen 7 4800U, 16GB/1TB: ₱29,995 DataBlitz →
GPD Win 3, Core i7-1195G7, 16GB/1TB: ₱27,995 DataBlitz →
OneXplayer
OneXplayer is the other clamshell and slate maker stocked locally, built around older Intel and AMD chips. The Mini Pro is the stronger of the two, on the Ryzen 7 6800U.
OneXplayer key specs:
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U or Intel Core i7-1195G7
16GB RAM
512GB or 1TB SSD
7-inch IPS, 1920×1200
Windows 11
Where to buy:
OneXplayer Mini Pro, Ryzen 7 6800U, 16GB/1TB: ₱34,950 DataBlitz →
OneXplayer Mini Pro, Ryzen 7 6800U, 16GB/512GB: ₱29,950 DataBlitz →
OneXplayer Mini, Core i7-1195G7, 16GB/512GB: ₱25,950 DataBlitz →
AYANEO
AYANEO spans both Windows and Android. The Air 1S is the top Windows unit, the Next and Air models are older Windows handhelds, and the Pocket S is the Android one built on a Snapdragon gaming chip.
AYANEO key specs:
AMD Ryzen 7 7840U, 7 5825U, 5 5560U, or Snapdragon G3x Gen 2
16GB or 32GB RAM
512GB to 2TB storage
5.5-inch AMOLED, 7-inch IPS, or 6-inch IPS depending on model
Windows 11 or Android
Where to buy:
AYANEO Air 1S, Ryzen 7 7840U, 32GB/2TB: ₱49,995 DataBlitz →
AYANEO Next, Ryzen 7 5825U, 16GB/1TB: ₱29,995 DataBlitz →
AYANEO Air Pro, Ryzen 5 5560U, 16GB/512GB: ₱25,995 DataBlitz →
AYANEO Air, Ryzen 5 5560U, 16GB/512GB: ₱23,995 DataBlitz →
AYANEO Pocket S, Snapdragon G3x Gen 2, 16GB/1TB: ₱22,995 DataBlitz →
AYANEO Pocket S, Snapdragon G3x Gen 2, 12GB/128GB: ₱19,995 DataBlitz →
We have a full AYANEO Pocket S review for hands-on impressions, and AYANEO has since teased the AYANEO 3 for its next step.
AYN Odin 3 Pro
The unit that anchored this roundup. It runs Android on a Snapdragon 8 Elite, which is flagship-phone silicon, paired with a 120Hz AMOLED and a huge 8000mAh battery. That makes it strong for emulation and Android games, and lighter than any Windows handheld here at 390g.
AYN Odin 3 Pro specs:
Snapdragon 8 Elite, 3nm
Adreno 830 GPU
12GB LPDDR5X RAM
256GB UFS 4.0
6-inch AMOLED, 1080×1920, 120Hz
8000mAh battery, 60W charging
Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 6.0
USB 3.1 Type-C, 3.5mm jack, microSD
DisplayPort 4K at 60Hz output
Android 15
390g
Where to buy:
AYN Odin 3 Pro, Snapdragon 8 Elite, 12GB/256GB: ₱26,995 DataBlitz →
Nintendo
Nintendo has three on the shelf. The Switch 2 is the big upgrade, the OLED is the mainstream pick, and the Lite is the cheapest way into the library. Backwards compatibility carries your old games to the Switch 2, a point we covered when Nintendo confirmed Switch 2 backwards compatibility.
Nintendo Switch key specs:
Custom NVIDIA processor
32GB, 64GB, or 256GB storage
5.5-inch LCD, 7-inch OLED, or 7.9-inch LCD
720p or 1080p, up to 120Hz on the Switch 2
Joy-Con on the Switch 2 and OLED, built-in controls on the Lite
Nintendo Switch or Switch 2 system software
Where to buy:
Nintendo Switch 2: ₱31,990
Nintendo Switch OLED: ₱15,750 DataBlitz →
Nintendo Switch Lite: ₱9,950 DataBlitz →
Sony PlayStation Portal
Not a standalone console. The Portal streams games from your PS5 over Wi-Fi, so it needs a PS5 to work. In return you get a full DualSense layout with haptics and adaptive triggers on an 8-inch 1080p screen.
Sony PlayStation Portal specs:
8-inch LCD, 1080p, 60Hz
DualSense controls with haptics and adaptive triggers
Wi-Fi remote play for PS5
No standalone games, PS5 required
520g
Where to buy:
PlayStation Portal: ₱15,950
PlayStation Portal 30th Anniversary: ₱19,995 DataBlitz →
Retroid
Retroid handhelds are Android emulators that punch above their price. The Pocket 4 Pro is the strongest, on a Dimensity 1100, and the rest cover smaller, cheaper builds. See our note on the Retroid Pocket 4 Pro arriving at DataBlitz.
Retroid key specs:
MediaTek Dimensity 1100, Unisoc Tiger T618, or Unisoc Tiger T610
4GB or 8GB RAM
128GB storage with microSD
4.7-inch IPS on the Pocket 4 Pro, smaller panels on the rest
Android
Where to buy:
Retroid Pocket 4 Pro, Dimensity 1100, 8GB/128GB: ₱11,995 DataBlitz →
Retroid Pocket Flip, Unisoc T618: ₱8,495 DataBlitz →
Retroid Pocket 3+, Unisoc T618: ₱7,995 DataBlitz →
Retroid Pocket 2S, Unisoc T610: ₱6,495 DataBlitz →
Anbernic
Anbernic is the budget retro workhorse. The RG405 units run Android on a Unisoc T618 in metal bodies, the RG353V uses a Rockchip chip, and the RG35XX line covers the cheapest Linux emulators here.
Anbernic key specs:
Unisoc Tiger T618, Rockchip RK3566, Allwinner H700, or Actions ATM7039S
RAM and storage vary by model
4-inch to 3.5-inch IPS screens
Android or Linux depending on model
Where to buy:
Anbernic RG405M, Unisoc T618, 128GB: ₱8,550 DataBlitz →
Anbernic RG405V, Unisoc T618: ₱7,550 DataBlitz →
Anbernic RG353V, Rockchip RK3566: ₱4,895 DataBlitz →
Anbernic RG35XXSP, Allwinner H700: ₱3,095 DataBlitz →
Anbernic RG35XX H, Allwinner H700: ₱2,695 DataBlitz →
Anbernic RG35XX, Actions ATM7039S: ₱1,550 DataBlitz →
Miyoo Mini Plus
The pocket-money entry point. This tiny Linux unit nails 8-bit, 16-bit, and early PlayStation games, and that is the whole point. No Android, no streaming, just clean retro play for less than a single AAA game.
Miyoo Mini Plus specs:
SigmaStar SSD202D, dual-core Cortex-A7
3.5-inch IPS, 640×480
microSD storage
3000mAh battery
Linux with community firmware
Where to buy:
Miyoo Mini Plus: ₱2,995 DataBlitz →
So which one is for you
Spend the most and a Windows handheld like the MSI Claw 8 AI+ or the ROG Ally X gives you your full PC library on the go. Spend in the middle and the AYN Odin 3 Pro or a Nintendo Switch 2 covers Android, emulation, or first-party games without the heat and fan noise. Spend the least and a Miyoo Mini Plus or an Anbernic RG35XX still delivers a real retro library for the price of lunch.
The right pick comes down to one question: do you want to play your existing PC and console games, or do you want a fresh, lighter device built around emulation and mobile titles?
So here is what we want to know. With more than forty handhelds now sold here, which one would you actually carry every day: a full-power Windows pocket PC, or a light Android unit like the AYN Odin 3 Pro? And is there one we still missed that deserves a spot? Drop your pick in the comments and tell us what you would buy first, and why.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply