![]() We don’t know for sure what kind of performance these specs are capable of for the ROG Ally, but we’re expecting it to allow games to run at higher graphics settings than the Steam Deck devices. Further, the Z1 will feature 4 graphical compute units and the Z1 Extreme is set to come with 12, that’s compared with 8 on the Steam Deck.Ĭomparing the architectures, the Steam Deck is using a Zen 2 CPU and RDNA 2 GPU, which means it’s a little behind in terms of component generations. We don’t know the clock speeds of the new chip just yet, but early Geekbench tests (via Videocardz) touts that the Z1 will run up to 5.0GHz and the Z1 Extreme going up to 5.1GHz. Both will be 4nm, with a Zen 4 CPU and RDNA 3 GPU. The Asus ROG Ally packs a custom AMD Ryzen Z1 series chip, that’ll come in two flavours: Ryzen Z1 and Ryzen Z1 Extreme. While we can’t verify that claim until testing, it’s not a huge surprise given the components powering the portable. ![]() The Asus ROG Ally is more powerfulĪccording to YouTuber Dave2D, Asus claims that the new ROG Ally portable is 2x more powerful than the Steam Deck. For now, read on for what you need to know on Asus handheld versus the Steam Deck. You’ll have to wait for price and release date for the ROG Ally though, that’s coming on May 11. Now we know more details on its key internals, forged by AMD, we can look deeper at how these specs stack up with the competition. But, it’s looking so good that price is surely going to be an issue. The Asus ROG Ally seems like it could be the first serious competitor to Valve’s gaming handheld. ![]() Let’s dive into what this means for how it’ll compare with the Steam Deck. We’ve just gotten more details on the ROG Ally, courtesy of Asus and AMD, namely details of the Ryzen Z1 series chips it’ll feature.
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