The Best Handheld Game Consoles

The second golden age of portable gaming is here. Mostly. These are the top gadgets for taking your video games on the go.

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The Undisputed King

Nintendo Switch OLED
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Best for PC Gamers

Valve Steam Deck
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Best Upgrade for PC Gamers

Valve Steam Deck OLED
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For PS5 Streaming

Sony PlayStation Portal
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Other Gaming Handhelds

Photograph: Nena Farrell

There are other gaming handhelds on the market, and many are older, streaming-only devices, or Windows-based handhelds. These aren't our top picks, but are still handheld options we'd recommend over others.

  • Nintendo Switch for $300: The original Switch (7/10, WIRED Recommends) is completely fine to buy if you can find it on sale for $250 or less. Anything more and you may as well pay for the Switch OLED.
  • Nintendo Switch Lite for $200: The Switch Lite (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is the cheapest version of the Switch, but not by a ton. It lacks detachable controllers, and you can't dock it to play on your TV. This is for portable gaming exclusively. If you're fine with that, then you can save a little money with this version, but if you want to play with separate controllers or on your TV–or if you're just unsure–then it's probably worth spending a little extra on the Switch OLED.
  • Mobile game controllers can be a good option for folks who want to game on their phone, and one of our favorites is the Backbone One.

Avoid These Gaming Handhelds

MSI Claw

Photograph: Eric Ravenscraft

This space has been flooded with handhelds and not all of them are great. Some of them are so bad I would argue no one should buy them at all. Or, at the very least, don't buy them unless they go on such a significant sale that they're essentially in the bargain bin. Windows handhelds, in particular, are so finicky that if you buy one of these, you should expect some headaches to get it working if you decide to take that plunge.

  • Asus ROG Ally: I was pretty harsh to the Rog Ally in my review and for good reason. It has the same jank as other Windows-based handhelds, and unreasonably low battery life, even by gaming handheld standards. Updates, since it came out, improved it enough to merit including this one in our Honorable Mentions in the past, but now that the ROG Ally X is out—and often for not much more money than the original—it's hard to recommend this one anymore.
  • MSI Claw: I'd say the MSI Claw (2/10, WIRED Review) is the Pepsi to the Asus ROG Ally's Coke, but it's more like it's the Big K Cola to the Ally's Great Value Cola. Both handhelds are already trying to follow in the footsteps of better devices, but the Claw performed so poorly that MSI announced its upcoming replacement a mere three months later. There's no real reason to buy this unless you're a collector or a masochist.
  • Logitech G Cloud: For this handheld, Logitech took a page out of the PlayStation Portal's playbook, focusing on streaming first. Unfortunately, it doesn't do it as well. For starters, it's considerably more expensive at $300, plus it requires a subscription to streaming services like GeForce Now and Xbox Cloud Gaming. It struggles more than other devices I've tested at streaming games, and its ability to run games locally via Android is similarly not very robust.