Asus, the big tease, has been hinting all over about the upcoming ROG Ally, the company's own Steam Deck rival. While there's no official release date as yet, Asus has taken to Twitter to let us know «it may be sooner than you expect.» Alongside this little stir, rumours are now coming thick and fast around a leak that potentially nails which GPU this powerful little handheld gaming device's custom SoC is going to be built around.
As we previously reported, the now totally real ROG Ally(opens in new tab) looks like a serious contender to the Steam Deck, with the rumour mill placing the processor as a custom AMD SoC built on TSMC's 4nm process node. That's according to reports from Dave2D(opens in new tab), who also talks of it housing a Zen 4 CPU and an RDNA 3 GPU behind that 1080p screen.
By way of comparison, the Deck's Aerith APU sports Zen 2 and RDNA 2 hardware in its 7nm semi-custom APU. In order to hit the 120Hz refresh rate of the Ally's 7-inch panel, some serious handheld power is going to be needed, however it turns out.
With VideoCards(opens in new tab) fronting a shipping manifest leak, we're now of the impression the ROG Ally will be coming with a semi-custom variant of the AMD Ryzen 7 7840U APU, which sports a Radeon 780M GPU. That's the same APU found in the GPD Win Max, and in the AOKZEO A1 Pro, though it is likely to have been altered slightly.
Importantly, the Radeon 780M supports DirectX 12 Ultimate which should help improve the Windows gaming experience, since Asus has already confirmed it's choice of OS.
Asus has a history of packing low TDP Ryzen HS-series processors into its mobile machines, and since the ROG Ally is going to need some special treatment in that department as a gaming handheld,
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