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The best Windows PC gaming handheld is still out of stock

A new trend in PC gaming was popularized by Valve’s excellent Steam Deck, a handheld option that brought console-style convenience to the masses who wanted to play titles locked to the platform, whether that’s via Steam or any other storefront. I have my own, and it remains a huge part of my almost-daily gaming routine, but its Linux-based presentation is starting to be overshadowed by Windows-based alternatives.

First, the ASUS ROG Ally showed promising signs of supporting Microsoft’s operating system in a package that could challenge Valve’s leading handheld. It was even one-upped internally by its bigger brother, the highly praised ROG Ally X. However, the original, with its AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme processor, stuck with me for months as a viable Steam Deck alternative. That is, at least, until I got my hands on the MSI Claw 8 AI+ and fell in love with it.

MSI dared to pass on AMD’s offerings as it already enjoyed total domination, its earlier chips appearing in the Steam Deck, and Ryzen Z1 variants appearing in Lenovo’s ‘Nintendo Switch-esque’ Legion Go. Instead, the Claw would use Intel’s mobile chips, starting with codenamed Meteor Lake processors in the previous generation Claw 7 A1M and refreshed with Lunar Lake versions in the Claw 8 AI+. It all sounds fantastic, but there’s a glaring issue — you’ll hardly ever find the thing in stock.

Running fast and cool, the MSI Claw 8 AI+ proved that Intel Arc graphics are more than capable, if expensive. (Image credit: Rebecca Spear / Windows Central)

It’s an axe I’ll grind down to the handle, because it’ll always frustrate me. The high-scoring MSI Claw 8 AI+ should have seen a few price-reducing deals by now, bringing it to a more realistic cost that resembles the post-$100 savings that ASUS has previously bestowed upon the ROG Ally X — but that’s not the case — in fact, it’s much worse than that.

#Windows #gaming #handheld #stock

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