AYA NEO Handheld Gaming PC First Impressions

GBAtemp_AYA NEO first impression.png

It’s here. After less than a year since it was announced, AYA NEO, the AMD-based handheld gaming PC is a reality; at least as far as the review unit that has been provided attests to. Understandably, when news first broke about this device, a lot of people were skeptical. Everything shown was from prototypes and the project came from a fresh startup headed by someone known as Uncle A without prior experience in manufacturing handheld devices. Was this shaping up to be the next Smach Z or PGS already?

But against all odds, the AYA team maintained their progress and delivered. They have been shipping the first units to customers in China and are now gearing up for the overseas market following a crowdfunding campaign that raised over $2.4 million and already sold out its perks. However, the path that they took to reach this point wasn’t exactly a steady one. Following delays and internal disputes, questions about their reliability emerged every so often. But it looks like with team AYA, delays should be expected (delayed shipping of units in China, delayed launch of their Indiegogo campaign) but eventually, they seem to deliver. But of course, caution should be advised as with every crowdfunding product.

That said, the team was kind enough to provide a review unit to GBAtemp but unfortunately, due to current public enemy No.1, COVID-19, shipping was delayed and my review will be posted later than expected, as compared to other outlets that have already been sharing their coverage of the device. But that might be a good thing as you could ask me to check the performance of a specific game or emulator that hasn’t already been publicly tested. I can then include some of those in my full review which is planned to be published in a few weeks’ time. As for this article, it will include my first impressions of the device after having had it for less than a week.


aya top.jpg back.jpg content.jpg specs.PNG


As you can see from the pictures, the unit provided is the clear shell, Founder Edition, that was available only in China and includes a final mould, as opposed to a CNC one that some reviewers had access to. I must say that the clear shell on this unit packs quite a look and is my personal favourite out of the others that will be released internationally (black Dark Star and the white Light Moon). I can also see it appealing to others as it’s reminiscent of retro handhelds with a similar clear shell which hasn’t been very common in recent generations. Seeing through the device’s internals while gaming is indeed something to behold; more so with the lighting effects available in the Founder Edition.

Flipping it over, you can see some green tags or markings that indicate some of the hardware features of the AYA NEO such as the fan, heatsink and processor. I thought that these would have been printed on the inside of the shell (as I would have preferred it) but they are on the outside, meaning that they could be subject to wear with time.

markings.jpg

AYA NEO’s build is pretty good for the first product of the company. If you have a Switch, you’ll have an idea about the build quality already and the weight is more than twice (650g for AYA NEO vs 297g for the Switch) but somewhat akin to a Switch with a power bank attached at the back. In fact, the AYA NEO was inspired by the Switch itself in design and even packs the same pair of joysticks! But that’s not unheard of as other handhelds from China use the same ones as on Anbernic retro handhelds and the BittBoy PocketGo S30. But unlike some of the latter, the AYA NEO has no loose hardware buttons that cause any rattling and there’s no light bleed on the sides of the screen either. The buttons layout is asymmetrical, akin to the Switch, but the buttons themselves are from a different source. For one, the AYA NEO packs a proper D-pad and the face buttons (A/B/X/Y) have a font similar to the one used for the device’s logo. And yes, there’s a membrane underneath these, making for smooth, satisfying presses. As for the shoulder and trigger buttons, they deliver more audible clicks than the face buttons and it should be noted that the trigger buttons aren’t analogue ones.

You might notice that there are additional face buttons on the AYA NEO. On the right, you’ll find a dedicated lighting key, start, select and an Xbox key. And on the left are the Task Manager, Windows, Keyboard (to summon a virtual keyboard). These are easily reachable and quite handy, especially since the device does not feature any physical keyboard.

At the top of the device are two USB-C ports (there’s a third one underneath the device too), a headphone jack, volume +/- keys and the power button. I found the volume and power buttons to be a bit too close and similar to each other, with the + button being right next to the power button. Once, I missed the + key when trying to raise the volume and hit the power button instead and this put the AYA NEO to sleep. It might have been better to include a traditional volume rocker or placing the volume buttons at the other end.

buttons 1.jpg

buttons 2.jpg top.jpg


Other than this hiccup, I’m happy to say that the AYA team did a solid job on the hardware side. It’s sturdy, of a build quality akin to what you expect from a major console manufacturer itself and feels polished. It also helps that the AYA NEO was inspired by the Switch as some accessories are compatible across both devices. For instance, I can fit the AYA NEO in the carry case of the Satisfye SwitchGrip Pro just fine and Switch joystick caps are of course also compatible. AYA has official, dedicated accessories in the works for their handheld like a dock, grip and carry case but these aren’t available yet. What was provided with this review unit was a tempered glass screen protector. It was the first thing I did after opening the package and it was easy to install and fits the device’s screen perfectly.

Regarding the screen, the 7-inch H-IPS display really delivers gorgeous images. And it’s not only for games but also for videos where the colors look vibrant and warm. I was positively surprised by the quality it offers the first time I streamed a YouTube video on it. Same goes for games, images are crisp and the screen does justice to games with detailed environments.

As for performance, if you keep your expectations in check and don’t need 4K, 60 fps gameplay anywhere and everywhere, then you can appreciate that this device does what it set out to do: play AAA games on-the-go. I’ve played some of Cyberpunk 2077 with settings set to medium/low and could get it running with a framerate of around 20 per second, although some details can appear grainy at times. Outriders also performs similarly and fares better overall but details further off in the background look blurry.

I also tried emulating Breath of the Wild on Cemu and got it to run at around 20 fps. I have yet to try other games and emulators but that’ll be for the full review. Personally, I prefer using it to play PC games and those are very much playable and enjoyable on the AYA NEO. I’m particularly fond of the landscape orientation which makes for a more comfortable experience as opposed to something like the GPD Win Max.

While gaming, the fan does cause a faint, yet audible whirl which is easily drowned by a pair of headphones or turning the volume up. Along with the copper piping heatsink, it does the job at preventing the AYA NEO from feeling like a lava rock. The speakers, located on the underside of the device and on either side of the third USB-C port, do a decent job at delivering clear and quality audio.

cyberpunk 3.jpg

cyberpunk 1.jpg cyberpunk 2.jpg
outriders 2.jpg outriders.jpg
zelda 2.jpg zelda 3.jpg

After having used the AYA NEO for a couple of days, it gives a pretty solid impression as being a competent handheld gaming PC. This is especially the case given that it’s the first product of an otherwise unknown startup and also the first AMD-based handheld gaming PC. I will have a full review where I share more of my thoughts, along with video performance of some games/emulators in a few weeks’ time after having had more time with the device. In the meantime, do let me know if there are any aspects of the AYA NEO that you’d like to learn more about!

cyberpunk.jpg
 

Attachments

  • zelda 1.jpg
    zelda 1.jpg
    637.3 KB · Views: 117

Veho

The man who cried "Ni".
Former Staff
Joined
Apr 4, 2006
Messages
11,373
Trophies
3
Age
42
Location
Zagreb
XP
40,844
Country
Croatia
I'll have to check on that. Are there smartphones with two USB-C charging ports?
I know of one, the Lenovo Legion Duel 2, it has two USB-C charging ports, and if you plug in two chargers, you get 90W "turbo" charging.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Julie_Pilgrim

Spider_Man

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
May 28, 2015
Messages
3,924
Trophies
0
Age
38
XP
5,162
Country
United States
Nintendo will probably come up with some bs thing, they can be very creative when the company gets attacked...
but they cant, dont care if the OP wants to wrongfully claim its identical layout to the switch, as for buttons clearly blind as the switch layout is Y X B A, this uses same layout as Xbox/PC, X Y A B.

again people assuming cant this copies off the switch design when nintendo was not the first people to do a tablet gaming device that had controller addons or built in, end of the day the psp came before the switch and so did the vita, essentially the switch is the same concept, just bigger..

and again, this is not inspired by, loads of people keep coming up with new improved ways to have pc gaming on the go, the fact is the tablet market is what actually inspired nintendo, not the other way round.

seeing the increase of people owning tablets, becoming more popular for gaming especially for kids - ta da, nintendo wants a slice.

its annoying when fanboys keep assuming everyone is copying off nintendo, that nintendo are the first to do it, sorry but this isnt true, but what you can say is what ever nintendo do, its always inferior to what others have already done - no innovation anymore, just cheap shit with gimmicks.

this is nothing like the switch, its another windows pc rig, nintendo wont be able to do shit, and if it turns that they can then i guess theyre throwing more money to corrupt judges because end of the day, its an open market, nintendo cant force court action against similar products that do not touch or contain any of their intellectual properties/code/software ect.

think if they could, as this has been in development for a very long time, it probably would have happened by now.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Julie_Pilgrim

Gep_Etto

Being late since '88
Member
Joined
Mar 1, 2021
Messages
375
Trophies
0
XP
1,154
Country
Brazil
Hope those thumb sticks are easy to replace once they start drifting.

This. My Joy-cons are pretty much unusable half of the time and these people use the same, known-to-be-faulty hardware? I get wanting to copy the things Nintendo did right with the Switch, but why copy the things they did wrong, too?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Julie_Pilgrim

BeastMode6

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Sep 27, 2015
Messages
109
Trophies
0
Age
47
XP
560
Country
United States
Ehhh I'd honestly rather just have an exploitable switch. You still get your Nintendo exclusives, and you can also stream PC games using android and parsec (and/or I believe there is something that lets you stream on horizon). As long as you have a solid intranet, you won't notice any input lag, or at least I don't.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Julie_Pilgrim

sloppycrap

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
146
Trophies
0
XP
801
Country
Afghanistan
This is the sort of device I want, but it's not the device I'm going to buy.

I'm almost not a gamer anymore anyway, because the hobby is too expensive. I stuck with it from my dad's Radio Shack Pong up until the PS1 (pong, 2600, SMS, Genesis, Sega CD, Jaguar, Saturn, then a dead spot buying used shit on Usenet - did NES SNES TG16/Duo/Express Virtual Boy NGCD 3DO here) bought an obsolete PS2, then a PSP in 2008 or so. PSP got me back into gaming because it had pretty good 8/16 bit emulators. Vita was the obvious next step, but Sony tried as hard as it could to fuck it up, so I bought a NIB one from a friend who had to buy one in order to get a PS4 (when they were new). I only own a PS3 because I wanted to have some way of putting my legit games on my Vita. I'm never going to sit in front of a TV/computer screen to play games again. It's handheld or nothing for me now.

This is about $600 out of my price range. I'd pay $400 for it, just like I would have bought a Vita for $300, and a memory card for another $100, but the Vita launched with almost no backwards compatibility. Windows gets most of the games I want to play anyways.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Julie_Pilgrim

MultiKoopa

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Jun 11, 2018
Messages
469
Trophies
0
Age
34
XP
1,080
Country
United States
This. My Joy-cons are pretty much unusable half of the time and these people use the same, known-to-be-faulty hardware? I get wanting to copy the things Nintendo did right with the Switch, but why copy the things they did wrong, too?
wait, they're seriously using the same joysticks? oh ffs

Ehhh I'd honestly rather just have an exploitable switch. You still get your Nintendo exclusives, and you can also stream PC games using android and parsec (and/or I believe there is something that lets you stream on horizon). As long as you have a solid intranet, you won't notice any input lag, or at least I don't.
uh
how about somewhere outside the home?
 

Rahkeesh

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Apr 3, 2018
Messages
2,178
Trophies
1
Age
42
XP
3,261
Country
United States
Exploitable unbanned switches are getting pretty close to the cost of one of these things. If you're mainly into PC games something like this is probably the better choice, even if you lean on streaming half the time.
 

BeastMode6

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Sep 27, 2015
Messages
109
Trophies
0
Age
47
XP
560
Country
United States
Exploitable unbanned switches are getting pretty close to the cost of one of these things. If you're mainly into PC games something like this is probably the better choice, even if you lean on streaming half the time.
Don't know the current going price for erista unpatched switches but I got mine last september for about $350.
 

Veho

The man who cried "Ni".
Former Staff
Joined
Apr 4, 2006
Messages
11,373
Trophies
3
Age
42
Location
Zagreb
XP
40,844
Country
Croatia
ok, I've tried it and also confirmed with the AYA team: charging is limited to only one port at a time.
Thank you for checking.

Well, there's a feature suggestion for their next version :lol:
 

Prans

Geek, gamer, human
OP
Editorial Team
Joined
Apr 22, 2012
Messages
2,969
Trophies
2
Location
There itself.
XP
44,418
Initial run seems to be filled now. Dunno if they plan to do another but I'm super interested. getting tired of these rockchip garbage piles.
yeah all perks are sold out as mentioned in the article. They'll likely sell "retail" versions on their website after shipping the crowdfunded units.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Julie_Pilgrim

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum

General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    BakerMan @ BakerMan: idk, i don't have one