The Ayaneo Konkr Fit is a handheld console equipped with a Ryzen AI 400 chip, an OLED screen, and an 80 Wh battery.
The Ayaneo Konkr Fit is the company's upcoming Windows-powered handheld console, featuring a relatively small OLED screen and a fairly large battery.
Finally, we get to see AMD's 'new but not-so-new' AI 400 series chips in a handheld gaming device, and surprisingly, it has a rather small OLED screen and a fairly large battery.
The Ayaneo Konkr Fit is the company's upcoming Windows-based handheld console. It's equipped with the recently announced AI 9 HX 470 chip. With four Zen 5 cores and eight Zen 5c cores, and a maximum clock speed of 5.2 GHz, it's a fairly powerful chip.
Previously, Ayaneo's Konkr line relied on Snapdragon chips, specifically the G3 Gen 3 or 8 Elite, which was an improvement over the Android operating system of the Snapdragon Pocket Fit. The integration of Windows support gives this handset greater compatibility with the vast game library on Steam.
If you're confused by the names, the Konkr Fit is the larger version, using an AMD chip and Windows operating system. It comes with a 7-inch OLED screen. The Konkr Pocket Fit uses the Android operating system, is smaller, and likely cheaper, ranging in price from $299 to $329. The Pocket Fit has a 6-inch LCD screen. They look almost identical, but the Windows version is noticeably larger when placed side-by-side.
Previously, Ayaneo devices were excellent. The Flip DS was a great clamshell Windows device, and the more recent Ayaneo 3, while having some bugs, is highly customizable and powerful.
The AMD Konkr Fit was showcased in Ayaneo's latest live stream, where the host picked it up and introduced it to the camera. Unfortunately, we didn't get to see much of the testing, but we did get a glimpse of Cyberpunk 2077 gameplay. At first glance, the Konkr Fit looks very similar to the Konkr Pocket Fit, but it's quite bulky on the sides.
That size is likely to accommodate the large 80 Wh battery. That's the same battery size as the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X. Of course, battery size doesn't entirely reflect battery life, as different components use different amounts of power, but the AI HX 470 has a reduced TDP of 15 W, just like the Xbox Ally X.
In fact, the Z2 Extreme, using the same 890M graphics card as the AI 470, is a pretty good competitor in the handheld gaming device segment. We're talking about higher performance, but the same GPU architecture based on RDNA 3.5 and a 4nm manufacturing process.
Another reason the device's edges look rather bulky could be due to the cooling system. The AI 470's TDP can be configured up to 54 W, which is quite hot for a handheld device, so compromises are necessary to cool the chip. Until we get a look at the internal components or receive more information from Ayaneo, these are just speculations. We still don't have a release date or even a release timeframe.
Update 25 March 2026
Marvin Fry
Marvin Fry is a game analyst who serves as a crucial link between data and game design, using in-game metrics and player behavior data to improve game quality, engagement, and monetization.