Some games age like fine wine, which is why retro gaming is so popular. In fact, if you want to play games that are 10, 20, or even 30 years old, there are plenty of options on PC and console. However, if you want to play them on the go, those options significantly narrow. Fortunately, several devices let you play your favorite Game Boy, NES, PlayStation, and even GameCube games on the go (if you can get them legitimately, of course; we won’t tell you to do otherwise). Read on for the best retro handhelds we’ve tested, followed by some important things to know about retro gaming.
Deeper Dive: Our Top Tested Picks
Best for Handheld Game Collectors
Analogue Pocket
- Perfectly plays Game Boy, Game Boy Color, and Game Boy Advance games
- Incredible screen, with convincing filters to emulate classic system LCDs
- Excellent build quality
- Can be connected to a TV with optional Analogue Dock
- Adapters support additional systems’ games
- Extra development and music features
- Exposed cartridge slot doesn’t securely hold game cartridges
- Feels loose when docked
This is one of the nicest retro gaming handhelds, and one of the “purest.” The device is effectively a combination of the Game Boy/Game Boy Color/Game Boy Advance systems, but with an incredibly sharp OLED screen, fantastic build quality, and plenty of expandability, including a dock that lets you output video to a TV. It’s first and foremost a cartridge-based handheld, letting you play your old Game Boy games, along with some others if you get adapters.
The programmable OpenFPGA aspect of the Analogue Pocket makes it interesting for homebrew developers and emulation, though. In fact, shortly after the software launched, cores were released that let you play your Game Boy roms with little difficulty.
Collectors. Out of the box, this is the best handheld for playing physical Game Boy games, replacing the original Game Boys and Game Boy Advances completely with a superior experience that looks so much better and stays technically true to how the games originally run. OpenFPGA also makes this appealing for homebrew developers who want to see what they can do with hardware designed to act like other hardware, but in a portable device.
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Analogue Pocket Review
Best for Nintendo’s Classics
Nintendo Switch Lite
- Smaller and lighter than the Switch in handheld mode, with the same gaming experience
- Solid build
- Direction pad
- No TV output or vibration
- Nintendo’s cloud saves are still limited
The original Nintendo Switch is an amazing game system that works as a home console when connected your TV or as a handheld when removed from its dock. The Nintendo Switch Lite takes the Switch’s power and game library, removes the home console functionality, and cuts $100 off the price. If you pair it with Nintendo Switch Online ($20 per year), you get dozens of NES, Super NES, and Game Boy games to play on the system—and that’s only the start. Another $30 for the Expansion Pass adds Nintendo 64, Sega Genesis, and Game Boy Advance games to the list. You also can also buy many classic Nintendo and Sega arcade titles, a surprising number of classic PC games, and nearly every Neo Geo game ever made, a la carte.
Technically, most Switch games are emulated in some form; you just can’t load your own roms (wherever you may find them). They’re being emulated “legitimately,” with each game (or game collection) supplied by the license holder. So while emulation is a factor, it isn’t nearly the dark, gray area associated with some of the open, emulation-focused handhelds on this list.
This is the most accessible portable gaming device currently available, with loads of games beyond just retro options. It’s worthwhile for anyone, unless you want to get the full Switch or OLED Switch systems that also work well as handhelds.
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Nintendo Switch Lite Review
Best Windows PC Gaming Handheld
Asus ROG Ally
- Attractive 1080p 120Hz display
- Slick design and sturdy build
- Steady performance in most gaming scenarios
- Runs full Windows 11
- Decent battery life outside of gaming
- Asus software changes modes and remaps controls on the fly
- Many games require lower graphics settings for smooth performance
- Super short battery life while gaming
- Some finicky controls, particularly for navigating Windows
Asus’ answer to the Steam Deck is a bit more expensive, but sleeker and more flexible out of the box. It’s purely a Windows 11 portable, and comparable with the Acer Nitro 5 gaming laptop in performance. It also has a 120Hz 1080p screen that’s superior to the Steam Deck. That can certainly justify its higher price than Valve’s portable.
This is for PC gamers who want some solid power on the go, and who don’t want to deal with the limitations of SteamOS or the work of getting Windows or another OS running smoothly on the Steam Deck. It’s a good upgrade in terms of hardware across the board, and the better screen will particularly go a long way.
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Asus ROG Ally Review
Best Small Tablet
Razer Edge
- Powerful for the price
- Smooth game streaming
- Removable controllers
- Facilitates convenient, one-hand use
- Android is clunky and inconsistent for physical controls
- Razer Nexus software is full of irritating elements
- Lacks a kickstand
The Razer Edge is different from the other devices in this list because it’s really just a small Android tablet with a great snap-on controller. That’s enough, though, especially since the Edge packs enough power to emulate up to seventh-generation consoles and Wi-Fi 6E to play games from game streaming services. It’s Android-based, but Razer includes an excellent menu system and physical controls-to-touch screen translation that makes playing games a reliable, intuitive experience.
The Edge costs as much as the base-level Steam Deck, but it’s really a good halfway point between the cheaper emulation-based handhelds on this list and Valve’s portable. It’s smaller, easier to carry around, and has much better battery life. The Edge also works well as a small, powerful entertainment tablet after you remove the controllers.
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Razer Edge Review
Best for Playing Steam Games on the Go
Valve Steam Deck OLED
- Fantastic OLED screen
- Improved battery
- Faster downloads
- Runs quietly
- Excellent emulation support
- Can barely handle the latest AAA releases
- Anti-glare screen only available for highest tier model
The Steam Deck was already an impressive system when it came out, and Valve made it even better by adding an OLED screen, Wi-Fi 6E, and a longer-lasting battery. It’s without a doubt the superior version of the device that made handheld gaming computers mainstream.
The Steam Deck is handheld if you have a huge Steam library. However, if you want to play retro titles outside of what’s available on Steam, you must get comfortable with some software modifications (either wrestling with Linux or installing a Windows partition). There’s enough power in the device to make it worthwhile, though.
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Valve Steam Deck OLED Review
Best for Easy Emulation
Anbernic RG351P
- Good build quality
- Excellent performance for 2D and PlayStation games
- Ideal screen for Game Boy Advance games
- Inconsistent Nintendo 64 emulation
- No Wi-Fi or HDMI out
- Non-GBA games must be stretched or pillarboxed
The Anbernic RG351P is a Linux-based emulation handheld, but don’t let that put you off. It’s surprisingly easy to get games (up to the original PlayStation) to appear in the system’s interface; you simply drag and drop games into system folders. It’s just as simple to completely overhaul the interface with a handful of third-party, customizable loaders. The system also has a good build, and an ideal screen for Game Boy Advance games. The Anbernic RG351P is one of the most accessible, emulation-based, retro gaming handhelds we’ve seen so far.
Getting “legitimate” copies of games to put on the system is another story. Some system versions come pre-loaded with legally dubious rom libraries. If you want to add your own games, though, you’ll have to find your own ways to acquire them.
The RG351P is getting a bit long in the tooth, and Anbernic has followed up on it with several new models including the metal RG351M, the Game Boy-like RG351V, and the more powerful RG353PS and RG405M. Still, the RG351P is a rock-solid handheld, and still one of the best portables if you have a huge collection of sixth-generation-and-earlier roms.
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Anbernic RG351P Review
Best for New Cartridge-Based Gaming
Evercade
- Good build quality for the price
- Cartridge design enables expansion
- Affordable
- Some games are inferior versions
- Face buttons are arranged strangely for retro games by default.
Evercade is a fascinating handheld so old school that it still uses cartridges. At $20 a pop, each game card comes with a collection of classic games (and obscure gems) from various publishers, including Atari, Data East, Namco, and Technos. As a bonus, Evercade has HDMI-out, so you can connect it to your TV.
Technically speaking, the Evercade is an emulation-based system. The game roms are simply stored on the cartridges rather than in the system’s storage, and to play them, the Evercade emulates numerous older platforms. Like the Nintendo Switch’s retro titles, these games and collections are legal and legitimate, since they’re authorized by the publishers that own them.
This is for retro gamers with eclectic tastes in late 1980s and early 1990s games who want the rush of cartridge collecting, but without paying the exorbitant, contemporary prices for the original, complete-in-box classics. The system’s fairly inexpensive, each cartridge has several different games, and they all look nice on a shelf.
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Evercade Review
Best For Tabletop PC Gaming
Lenovo Legion Go
- Gorgeous 8.8-inch QHD screen
- Steady performance with many AAA games
- Runs full Windows 11
- Two USB-C ports
- Included carrying case
- Buggy Legion Space software
- Gaming at QHD rarely worth it
- FPS mode is clunky
- Detaching controllers is awkward
- Heavy
The Lenovo Legion Go is unique on this list because it isn’t just a gaming handheld. Like the standard Nintendo Switch, you can use it as a handheld device or a tabletop system (or connect it to a TV with a USB-C-to-HDMI cable). It’s chunky compared with the Steam Deck and ROG Ally, but its removable controllers and kickstand mean you can kick back and play games anywhere there’s some desk space. The right controller even (awkwardly) works as a vertical mouse.
If you want a fully functional gaming PC with a bit more flexibility than the handheld-only Steam Deck or ROG Ally, the Legion Go is the system to go with. Just be aware of its ergonomic concerns when you do want to hold it in your hands.
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Lenovo Legion Go Review
Best Budget Android Gaming Handheld
Retroid Pocket 3
- Sleek, Switch-like design
- Significantly improved launcher
- Good performance up to fifth-generation game systems
- Different emulators require various amounts of configuration
- Buttons feel a little mushy out of the box, though replacements are included
- Android remains a clunky platform for retro gaming
Android is a more awkward operating system for controller-based gaming, even if the ecosystem offers plenty of options for emulators. The Retroid Pocket 3 smooths the rough edges of the Retroid Pocket 2 for an easier experience with loading and playing classic games, though you’ll still have to do some configuration work. It’s particularly appealing because it looks and feels like a Switch Lite and its hardware can offer great emulation up to fifth-generation systems, for a reasonable price.
The Retroid Pocket 3 is a great device if you want all of the emulation options of Linux-based portables like the Anbernic RG351P but a bit more power and flexibility thanks to Android. You’ll have to spend some time getting it to behave the way you want, but as a budget handheld it’s a solid choice.
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Retroid Pocket 3 Review
Buying Guide: The Best Retro Handhelds for 2025
Are Retro Handhelds Good for Emulation?
It’s practically impossible to talk about classic gaming without talking about emulation, and that’s the case here. More than half of these gaming handhelds are “legitimate,” in that they have commercial software ecosystems and use video game cards, cartridges, or official downloads to function. They’re still technically emulation-based; in many cases, they use roms and emulators that mimic those games’ native systems to run on modern hardware (though there are some cases of classic games being completely ported).
Some of these gaming handhelds are open, emulation-based devices. That means you’re on your own to find retro games to play. Roms are a legal gray area, so we can’t point you in a direction to find them besides “back up your purchased physical games, if you have the hardware to do so.” You can find dozens of different Linux- and Android-based gaming handhelds, most of which originate in China, on sites like AliExpress. The two on this list are just a sampling of the many retro gaming handhelds that you can buy, but they’re among the most well-made in the category. And whether they come with roms themselves is purely up to whoever is shipping them.
Retro Handhelds vs. Portable Gaming PCs
Then there’s the curious category of what are effectively PCs in handheld game system bodies. The Steam Deck, ROG Ally, and Lenovo Legion Go are all fully functional PCs with specs comparable to midrange laptops featuring relatively strong integrated graphics. You can use Steam to download classic games on any of them, and both the Steam Deck’s Linux environment and the Windows 11 operating system on devices like the Ally and Legion Go both offer the opportunity to dive into emulation.
Recommended by Our Editors
If you prefer to play classic games on your PC (or want to know what software to install on your PC-like handheld), check out our guide to the best emulators. And if you want to play old-school games on your TV, read up on the best retro gaming consoles.