• Sat. Nov 2nd, 2024

The Zotac Zone is the first true rival to the Steam Deck OLED

Byadmin

Jun 7, 2024


The Zotac Zone has caught most other Windows-based gaming handhelds napping as it’s arrived with arguably the most compelling package out of all the chief Steam Deck OLED rivals. Top among its credits is its AMOLED screen but it has plenty of other nice qualities too.

There is more than just an OLED screen that keeps the Steam Deck OLED at the top of our best handheld gaming PC guide but it is absolutely one of the key reasons why it’s so beloved. Whether Zotac‘s rival can truly compete is something that we’ll only know with a longer time with the device but our first play on it has our hopes high.

zotac zone hands on 02

Let’s start with that screen then. It’s lovely. It has all the dazzle of the Steam Deck OLED, with its 800nits peak brightness technically being 200nits lower than the Valve device but in practice it proves to be just as good. In the bright lights of the Computex trade show floor it was still dazzling bright.

Like the equally new MSI Claw 8 AI+, the resolution of this screen is 1080p, which puts it higher than the Steam Decks making for a clearly sharper image, without it pushing to the slightly unnecessarily high resolution of the Legion Go.

zotac zone hands on 03

Where we’re less impressed is with the styling and build. Not that it looks horrendous or feels flimsy but the silver paint of the d-pad and triggers along with the shinier grey plastic surrounds of the joysticks just don’t feel quite as well-refined as the finishes on the likes of the Steam Deck.

As for the rest of the Zotac Zone, its ergonomics felt surprisingly refined for a first-generation product. The overall form site nicely in the hand with reasonably deep and rounded grip sections.

zotac zone hands on 05

Interestingly, Zotac has gone completely the opposite direction to MSI with its Claw 8 AI+ second-gen handheld design. That product is noticeably more flared outwards at the bottom than its predecessor whereas Zotac has really tucked the bottom corner of the Zone inwards. It felt nice for a few minutes on the show floor but it’s possibly the wider grip approach is better over a longer period of holding the device.

The controls also fall easily to hand, though I admittedly didn’t get much chance to use the touchpads. The joysticks and triggers all felt as responsive and accurate as I’d hope.

zotac zone hands on 04

Performance was as we’ve come to expect of AMD’s 8840 APU, with it comfortably managing to run Need for Speed smoothly at settings that looked great on the compact screen. The device comes with 512GB of storage and 16GB of RAM, so it hasn’t jumped up to 24GB like on the ROG Ally X. We don’t suspect this will be a problem in the vast majority of instances.

In terms of physical extras, the Zone includes a slim kickstand, microSD slot, a USB 4.0 connection – not two again like on the ROG Ally X – and the rear has switches for converting the triggers to short throw triggers.

zotac zone hands on 06

All told, we’re generally impressed by the package Zotac has put together and are looking forward to giving it a proper test when it launches later in the year for a price of $799/£799.

For more of our thoughts on Asus’ updated competitor to the Zone, check out our ROG Ally X preview while for more stories from the show floor of the world’s largest PC tech trade show, check out our Computex news story hub.



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