Why are the thumbs seemingly sharing duties for just one button while the left pinky is completely uninvolved? I guess it's because each thumb handles the other buttons to either side?Usually setup like this if this helps anyone
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Thanks for sharing but this isn't making me any less confused. I don't think I could use it either with my Shane Carwin sized hands. If the buttons on the right side were spaced out some more maybe I could understand itUsually setup like this if this helps anyone
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Personally, I've never tried a hitbox but a lot of people swear by them. They look strange to me as well but if I ever get back into fighting games, I'm going to giver it a shot.Thanks for sharing but this isn't making me any less confused. I don't think I could use it either with my Shane Carwin sized hands. If the buttons on the right side were spaced out some more maybe I could understand it
Usually setup like this if this helps anyone
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So, Xbox is putting their games on PlayStation. PlayStation is putting their games on Steam, which means you'll be able to play them on this handheld Xbox hardware. What a world.
| Console | Nintendo Switch 2 (Portable) | Steam Deck OLED | ASUS ROG Ally Xbox X | ASUS ROG Ally Xbox | ASUS ROG Ally X (2024) | ASUG ROG Ally | Xbox Series S |
| Display | 120Hz LCD (IPS?) | 120Hz OLED | 120Hz Type? | 120Hz Type? | 120Hz IPS | 120Hz IPS | N/A |
| CPU Core/Thread Count | 8 / 8 | 4 / 8 | 8 / 16 | 4 / 8 | 8 / 16 | 6 / 12 | 8 / 16 |
| CPU Frequency | 1.1 GHz | 3.5 GHz | 5.0 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 4.9 GHz | 3.6 GHz (3.4GHz@16 threads) |
| CPU Architecture | ARM v8.2 (Dec-2016) | AMD Zen 2 (July-2019) | AMD Zen 5 (Aug-2024) | AMD Zen 5 (Aug-2024) | AMD Zen 4 (Sep-2022) | AMD Zen 4 (Sep-2022) | AMD Zen 2 (July-2019) |
| Age of CPU Ark @launch | 102 months | 50 months | ~15 months? | ~15 months? | 22 months | 12 months | 16 months |
| Pixel Bandwidth | 13.5 | 25.6 | 129.6 | 28.8 (?) | 86.4 | 20.0 | 50.1 |
| Textel Bandwidth | 26.9 | 51.2 | 172.8 | 57.6 (?) | 129.6 | 40.0 | 125.2 |
| TFLOPS | 1.72 | 1.64 | 11.06 | 1.84 (?) | 8.29 | 2.56 | 4.01 |
| VRAM Bandwidth | 68.3 | 88.0 | 128.0 | 68.3 (?) | 102.4 | 102.4 | 224.0 (8GB) 56.0 (2GB) |
| (V)RAM Capacity | 12GB | 16GB | 24GB | 16GB | 24GB | 16GB | 10GB |
| GPU Architecture | NVIDIA Ampere (May-2020) | AMD RDNA 2.0 (Oct-2020) | AMD RDNA 3.5 (May-2024) | AMD RDNA 2.0 (Oct-2020) | AMD RDNA 3.0 (Dec-2022) | AMD RDNA 3.0 (Dec-2022) | AMD RDNA 2.0 (Oct-2020) |
| Age of GPU Ark @launch | 61 months | 37 months | ~18 months? | ~61 months? | 19 months | 9 months | 1 month |
| Console Release | Jun-2025 | Nov-2023 | Holidays 2025 | Holidays 2025 | July-2024 | Sep-2023 | Nov-2020 |
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Was just looking over the specifications today. It's going to be more powerful than the Series S in every way except (V)RAM bandwidth. The TFLOPS are actually superior to the base PS5. Crazy.
Looks like the base version and "X" version will be identical except the latter will have the neural processing units that come with the Z2 Extreme chip. I am skeptical it will be worth the rumored price increase. I don't recall seeing anything yet that suggests that AMD's FSR, even version 4.0, makes good use of NPU cores yet.
Console Nintendo Switch 2 (Portable) Nintendo Switch (Portable) Steam Deck (OLED) ASUS ROG
Ally Xbox / XASUS ROG
Ally X (2024)ASUG ROG
AllyXbox Series S CPU Core/Thread Count 8 / 8 4* / 4 4 / 8 8 / 16 8 / 16 6 / 12 8 / 16 CPU Frequency 1.1 GHz 1.02 GHz 3.5 GHz 5.0 GHz 5.1 GHz 4.9 GHz 3.6 GHz (3.4GHz@16 threads) CPU Architecture ARMv8.2
(Dec-2016)ARMv8.0
(Oct-2011)AMD Zen 2
(July-2019)AMD Zen 5
(Aug-2024)AMD Zen 4
(Sep-2022)AMD Zen 4
(Sep-2022)AMD Zen 2
(July-2019)Age of CPU Ark @launch 102 months 41 months 31 months ~15 months? 22 months 12 months 16 months Pixel Bandwidth 13.5 12.3 25.6 129.6 86.4 20.0 50.1 Textel Bandwidth 26.9 12.3 51.2 172.8 129.6 40.0 125.2 TFLOPS 1.72 0.39 1.64 11.06 8.29 2.56 4.01 VRAM Bandwidth 68.3 25.6 88.0 128.0 102.4 102.4 224.0 (8GB)
56.0 (2GB)(V)RAM Capacity 12GB 4GB 16GB 16GB / 24GB 24GB 16GB 10GB GPU Architecture NVIDIA
Ampere
(May-2020)NVIDIA
Maxwell 2.0
(Sep-2014)AMD
RDNA 2.0
(Oct-2020)AMD
RDNA 3.5
(May-2024)AMD
RDNA 3.0
(Dec-2022)AMD
RDNA 3.0
(Dec-2022)AMD
RDNA 2.0
(Oct-2020)Age of GPU Ark @launch 61 months 30 months 16 months ~18 months? 19 months 9 months 1 month Console Release Jun-2025 Mar-2017 Feb-2022 Holidays 2025 July-2024 Sep-2023 Nov-2020
The base version's chip is massively cut down, even without mentioning the NPU. The NPU screams classic Microsoft fuckery and is a headscratcher, higher production costs for no real benefits atm.Looks like the base version and "X" version will be identical except the latter will have the neural processing units that come with the Z2 Extreme chip. I am skeptical it will be worth the rumored price increase. I don't recall seeing anything yet that suggests that AMD's FSR, even version 4.0, makes good use of NPU cores yet.
I wouldnt be surprised if it hits 999 or even more. They were the slowest to shift production and are last in line with a lot of ODMs outside of China, so they've had real trouble hitting laptop volumes in the US.I'm really wondering what the price will be for this will be. I think we are looking at $900 easily. Asus recently increased the prices of all their devices.
Please link me the report specifying what the cut down pipelines will be, then, because I'll have to revise my above table to account for it.The base version's chip is massively cut down, even without mentioning the NPU. The NPU screams classic Microsoft fuckery and is a headscratcher, higher production costs for no real benefits atm.
Under the hood, the black edition of the Ally 2 represents ASUS's most ambitious handheld to date. It employs AMD's Ryzen Z2 Extreme processor, an eight‑core chip rated at 36 W, paired with 64 GB of LPDDR5X‑8533 memory. In contrast, the white model will feature AMD's Aeirth Plus APU with four cores operating at 20 W.
For those who don't know, AERITH is the codename for the System-on-Chip used in Steam Deck. It is powered by Zen 2 architecture and features 4 cores and 8 threads. The AERITH Plus looks to be the successor to the AERITH and, as per the record, it brings noticeably higher clocks and an increase in TDP.
These are the specs of the device, it's an IPS display (shared by both models). Aside from the chip, main differences are Ally X gets haptic triggers, a substantially larger battery, and faster RAM too.Please link me the report specifying what the cut down pipelines will be, then, because I'll have to revise my above table to account for it.
Techpowerup isn't wrong for TDP, it's 6-20W, we'll see what Asus ships in as the max. Cache is wrong though, as are frequencies.The issue is they are showing the wrong TDP compared to what we're seeing in reports elsewhere, like those I linked above, unless ASUS will deliberately nerf the refreshed variant of the chipset to a TDP below what Steam itself uses in the older & more primitive version of the chipset; they're not showing the increased GPU frequency; finally, their memory transfer rate also doesn't reflect the newer chipset's reported improvements. So just bear in mind that everything in my chart above is subject to future correction.
Goddamit, that link with the press report was the first one I read. I just ended up on the wrong page for the Z2A.These are the specs of the device, it's an IPS display (shared by both models). Aside from the chip, main differences are Ally X gets haptic triggers, a substantially larger battery, and faster RAM too.
You're correction is correct, not the same chip. (I meant figuratively cut down)
You're confused, you're comparing different chips. That Techpowerup link I provided was for the chip they believed it was going to be from the older, inaccurate reports I linked: the much older Aerith Plus, not the Ryzen Z2A. My confusion stemmed from the Techpowerup spec sheet for that Aerith Plus. None of its figures make sense in light of their own reports (ex. 20W TDP) or others that were pointing to the presumed implementation of that Aerith Plus chip (i.e. 1800MHz GPU boost clock).Techpowerup isn't wrong for TDP, it's 6-20W, we'll see what Asus ships in as the max. Cache is wrong though, as are frequencies.
I'd really only take stats from AMD or Asus now unless someone is dying to speculate for fun (more power to em). Asus may or may not undervolt the SoC, who knows. I'm pretty sure the top feedback Ally PMs would have got would be longer battery life, not more power.You're confused, you're comparing different chips. That Techpowerup link I provided was for the chip they believed it was going to be from the older, inaccurate reports I linked: the much older Aerith Plus, not the Ryzen Z2A. My confusion stemmed from the Techpowerup spec sheet for that Aerith Plus. None of its figures make sense in light of their own reports (ex. 20W TDP) or others that were pointing to the presumed implementation of that Aerith Plus chip (i.e. 1800MHz GPU boost clock).
This is all irrelevant, now. This custom implementation of the Aerith Plus clearly won't exist.
*Edit* Holy God, I'm too tired for this. So the Z2A is the Aerith Plus on the GPU side of the APU. And yeah, because of that, my original confusion stands. Those numbers don't make sense unless ASUS is deliberately nerfing the power and frequencies of the refresh of the chip. If Techpowerup is correct, then it suggests ASUS will deliberately downthrottle the chip to maintain the same performance as the Steam Deck in terms of GPU performance, but at a lower power draw.
So, Xbox is putting their games on PlayStation. PlayStation is putting their games on Steam, which means you'll be able to play them on this handheld Xbox hardware. What a world.