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8 Underrated Handheld Games Consoles

Published 2 months ago8 minute read

We're all familiar with handheld game systems, namely ones like the DS and PSP. Now with the Switch 2 and Steam Deck, the gap between handhelds and home consoles is so thin it might as well not exist.

That said, I kinda miss dedicated handheld systems. Nowadays, multi-platform games are the exact same on each platform with some graphical downgrades, but we used to get entirely different games before.

Special Edition Consoles - R2D2 Xbox 360, NES Gameboy SP, Pikachu N64

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After the Game Boy, everyone wanted a piece of the handheld system pie, rushing weird bricks with buttons out. While a ton of those handhelds sucked, plenty of them are rarely acknowledged for how cool they are.

I want to highlight some of those handhelds, from the obscure to the commercial failures, that had fun designs, unique features, great games, and went completely under the radar despite that.

Video Game Consoles -Hylian Shield 2DS XL

While you've probably heard of or used the 3DS, Nintendo got a bit silly with the raw number of variations on the same system, from the XL, to the 2DS, to the New 3DS, and finally the New Nintendo 2DS XL.

Despite having one of the dumbest console names ever, the New 2DS offered one of the best form factors the console ever got, even being cheaper due to the lack of the 3D gimmick barely anyone used.

It feels nice in the hands, you don't need to unscrew the back just to access the MicroSD card slot, and the carbon fiber look is genuinely one of my favorite console designs of all time all while featuring some of the best handheld titles ever.

No one talks about it, though. Namely, because the New 3DS and 2DS are such pitiful upgrades, offering a tiny handful of exclusives in exchange for being more expensive and having a pencil eraser for a C-stick.

Image of the Retroid Pocket Flip 2 from Retroid.

For a smaller company, Retroid has been doing just about anything to get their foot in the door, and only really gets appreciated in the emulation scene or by tech nerds with way too much niche hardware.

That said, the Retroid Pocket Flip is just a superb, 3DS-esque android gaming system. Not only is it great for emulation, but also for the growing number of mobile games that are just console games in a trenchcoat.

Worst Console Launch Games Of All Time

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I think it's mainly because an Android handheld with no dedicated exclusives is going to be pretty off-putting to people when it's more expensive than a Switch Lite, but like the Steam Deck, it's just a great way to play existing games.

That said, the form factor feels incredible, and the build quality is even better than you'd expect for a $220 handheld. It's not a heavy hitter, but it's a neat little thing, and I enjoy it for what it is.

sega game gear handheld console titlecard

When the Game Boy took off, SEGA was so adamant about competing with Nintendo that they couldn't just let that slide, attempting to make a handheld that was supposed to be better in every way.

The Game Gear had great games, full-color visuals, 8-bit renditions of the big console titles, and was essentially just a Master System you could take with you in the car, but it was absolutely neutered by its horrific battery life.

Only 3-5 hours of gameplay off of six AA batteries, and that was equivalent to paying $4.50 every time you wanted to use your system. This is especially terrible in comparison to the Game Boy's ~30 hours off four AA batteries.

Even though it sold okay, the Game Gear is sadly barely remembered as more than a neat, nostalgic thing nowadays.

Game Boy and Game Boy Color
Nintendo Game Boy

Nintendo

July 31, 1989

Nintendo Game Boy

$89.99

7.76 oz

When speaking about Nintendo's handheld legacy, most sources, including the company itself, simply go from the original Game Boy to the Game Boy Advance, forgetting the Game Boy Color entirely.

To me, that just isn't fair at all. The Game Boy Color is as much of a separate system as the Switch 2 is, getting a decent quantity of banger exclusives and the best version of Super Mario Bros.

It's similar to the Game Boy, sure, but the extra power combined with a full-color screen made the new games stand out, and even enhanced games like Link's Awakening DX feel way better with the new kid on the block.

For some reason, though, this significantly different system gets counted as the same thing, even in sales numbers, and that's a damn shame. It's such a cool little thing, but people rarely consider it its own beast.

Image of the Neo Geo Pocket Color from Wikipedia.

When you think of handheld gaming in the 90s, you probably only think of the Game Boy and maybe the Game Gear, but the Neo Geo Pocket Color was a legitimate competitor that gets swept under the rug.

For one, it had the only Sonic game to ever get a 10 from IGN, and similarly to the Game Gear, it's a full-color 8-bit system. Unlike that one, two AA batteries would give you a solid 40 hours of battery life.

Unfortunately, this system just happened to release around the same time Pokémon was taking off, leaving Game Boy sales skyrocketing while the Neo Geo Pocket was left to rot in the back of store shelves.

It's a damn shame. The form factor was like a predecessor to the Game Boy Advance. It was pretty budget-friendly, had quite a few great games backing it, but unfortunately led to SNK going bankrupt just two years later.

PSP Vita
PS Vita

Sony

November 15, 2012

PS Vita

$249

9.2 oz

After the wild runaway success of the original PSP and PS2, Sony decided to perform the biggest fumble in history by releasing the PS3 and PS Vita, which rather notoriously did not go well for them.

The Vita was where the root idea of the Switch came from. Console-quality games on the go, with very few compromises needed to get them working well, and that was true, with about a hundred asterisks.

Nintendo Switch, Sony PSP, and Valve Steam Deck split image

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It used an expensive proprietary storage method, and everything about it was incredibly overpriced. The price cut it got did not bring anywhere near the comeback that the PS3 received, which is a damn shame, because the Vita is awesome.

Games like Gravity Rush and Persona 4 Golden were awesome exclusives, and the multi-platform titles it received were always great ways to play those games. Still, it faded into obscurity after the commercial failure.

Image of the GPD Win from Wikipedia.

On the topic of small companies making cool handhelds in the 3DS form factor, the GPD Win was one of the first gaming-focused PC handhelds to ever catch a decent amount of attention for how cool it is.

These things are still going, and despite being significantly outshone by the Steam Deck and ROG Ally nowadays, the GPD Win line are small, powerful computers capable of playing a great number of PC games.

Before the release of the GPD Win, any Windows-based portable device was just a bit too unreasonable to want to use, but this thing gave you something to slip in your pocket and pull out whenever.

I'm particularly fond of the hybrid game controller and keyboard style it has. It's pretty reminiscent of the dumb peripheral for the GameCube with a keyboard shoved into a controller, but actually refined and well done.

Image of the Sega Nomad from Wikipedia.

One of the coolest things to me when I was younger was handhelds that could play retro games by shoving the whole huge cartridges into them, and the Sega Nomad was doing that like a decade before it was a trend.

It was Sega's last ever handheld console, and it was essentially just a portable Genesis, allowing you to seamlessly use your Genesis cartridges and play them anywhere. That was a banger idea.

It had a massive library of great games off the bat, could connect to a TV and be used as a hybrid home console and handheld, and because this company is addicted to bullets in their feet, it required six AA batteries for four hours of battery life.

It was $179 on launch, which was pretty steep at the time, had no exclusives or pack-ins, and despite being a great concept, died out because SEGA couldn't be bothered to advertise it, which is such a shame.

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