If there’s one gadget category I’ve spent an unhealthy amount of time obsessing over in the past few years, it’s handheld gaming PCs. I’ve put hundreds of hours into the Steam Deck, bought an original ROG Ally for myself, and most recently reviewed the ROG Xbox Ally X in depth. I’ve seen this market evolve from a cool experiment into something that can genuinely replace a gaming laptop for quick sessions on the couch or while travelling. I’ve also experienced its biggest weakness firsthand. No matter how good these machines get, there’s always some compromise lurking around the corner, whether it’s battery life, thermals, performance, or software quirks.
So when I landed at Computex 2026 and got the chance to spend time with Acer’s brand-new Predator Atlas 8 and MSI’s latest Claw 8 EX AI+, I was naturally excited. Not just because they looked cool, but because they represented something the handheld market desperately needed: real competition. Truth be told, Intel’s new Arc G3 Extreme processor might just be the most important handheld announcement we’ve seen in years. And honestly? It’s about time.
Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme feels like the reset button the company desperately needed
For years, AMD has been the undisputed king of Windows gaming handhelds, powering everything from the ROG Ally to the Lenovo Legion Go with its Ryzen Z-series chips. Intel’s earlier attempts never quite hit the mark due to inconsistent drivers and weaker efficiency, but the new Arc G3 Extreme feels like a genuine fresh start. Unlike previous efforts that repurposed laptop silicon, this is a graphics-first platform built specifically for handheld gaming, based on Intel’s new Panther Lake architecture and manufactured on the advanced Intel 18A process.
The star of the show is the integrated GPU, which packs 12 next-generation Xe3 graphics cores and supports hardware ray tracing and XeSS 3, including Multi Frame Generation. The goal isn’t just to push higher frame rates but to do so efficiently, giving handheld gamers smoother AAA gameplay without draining the battery at an alarming rate. Intel is even claiming performance gains of up to 42 percent over competing solutions in certain scenarios, alongside significant improvements in performance per watt.

Of course, those claims will need thorough independent testing, but after spending time with the hardware myself, they no longer feel unrealistic. What impressed me wasn’t the FPS counter but how polished the overall experience felt. Games loaded quickly, animations were smooth, and I never noticed any distracting hitching or awkward frame pacing. Everything simply worked, which is surprisingly refreshing in a category that has often demanded a fair bit of patience from early adopters.

Intel also appears to have made meaningful progress on the software side. Earlier Arc products were often criticized for driver inconsistencies, but my brief hands-on experience suggested the company has matured significantly. While a controlled demo floor can never replace long-term testing, the overall experience felt surprisingly refined. Having spent years using previous handhelds, I’ve almost become conditioned to making trade-offs. Lower the wattage to save battery. Drop the graphics preset for smoother gameplay. Plug into the charger because a demanding AAA game is chewing through power at an alarming rate. Now, playing on Intel’s new platform genuinely made me wonder if those compromises are finally starting to shrink.
The Acer Predator Atlas and MSI Claw hands-on experience
While Acer has dabbled in the handheld space before with devices like the Nitro Blaze series, the Predator Atlas 8 feels like the company’s first full-fledged flagship push into the category, delivering comfortable ergonomics, responsive controls, and a premium build that immediately inspires confidence. Its custom AeroBlade cooling kept the device cool even while running demanding games, while the vibrant 8-inch 120Hz display remained easy to view under the harsh lights of the Computex show floor. More importantly, once I started playing, I completely forgot about the specs and simply enjoyed the experience, which is perhaps the highest praise any gaming device can receive.

The MSI Claw 8 EX AI+, on the other hand, feels like the result of MSI genuinely listening to feedback from its earlier handhelds. The redesigned ergonomics make it far more comfortable to hold, the buttons and triggers feel satisfyingly tactile, and the overall experience is noticeably more refined. Paired with Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme and XeSS 3 enhancements, gameplay felt consistently smooth, while Windows’ dedicated Xbox fullscreen interface helped make navigation feel much closer to using a console than a traditional PC.
The future looks bright, but there’s one big catch
After trying both handhelds, I didn’t walk away thinking Acer or MSI had built the better machine. Instead, I kept thinking about the processor powering them. That’s perhaps the biggest compliment I can pay Intel. For the first time in years, AMD finally has a serious challenger in the premium handheld space, and the Arc G3 Extreme feels like more than just another ambitious promise on a presentation slide. That said, the real test begins once these devices hit reviewers’ desks, where battery life, sustained performance, thermals, and driver stability will matter far more than a polished demo.

The other unanswered question is the one every gamer is already asking: how much will these cost? Pricing could ultimately make or break both the Acer Predator Atlas 8 and MSI Claw 8 EX AI+, but regardless of where they land, I left Computex feeling genuinely optimistic about the future of handheld gaming. The Steam Deck started the revolution, ASUS pushed the category forward, and now Intel looks ready to shake things up in a big way. If the Arc G3 Extreme lives up to its promise, the biggest winners won’t be the companies behind it, but gamers like us.
