
With ASUS seemingly teasing an Xbox handheld last week, there's been a lot of talk about the device in the days ever since, and Xbox boss Phil Spencer has also teased something to do with handhelds happening in 2025.
In an interview with iJustine, Spencer mentioned that his team have "teased and talked" about handheld plans for this year, but stopped short of confirming anything specific.
Here's the handheld snippet from the interview, as transcribed by ourselves at Pure Xbox:
Host: Is there anything exciting that you can tell us to expect from Xbox this year?
Phil: ...we've teased and talked about handhelds and I'm very excited because we both travel, and sometimes you can't always take your console or your whole gaming desktop with you.
Elaborating on the wider strategy, Spencer insisted Xbox is about "the person" rather than the device these days:
But it's really about building the experience around the person, and that's what really gets me excited. [Xbox] isn't one single device at the centre, it's not one game, it is the player - making sure all of your games are available, all of your save games, all of your entitlements are available wherever you go.
Of course, the ASUS Xbox handheld isn't expected to run all Xbox consoles natively, but it'll support a large number of them via Xbox Cloud Gaming, while Xbox Play Anywhere will provide "free" PC versions for over 1,100 Xbox games.
With the Nintendo Switch 2 out in the wild, there's good reason for ASUS to act quickly - to capitalise on the controversy surrounding that device, and to ensure that potential Switch 2 buyers know there's another option for them as well.
As soon as we hear anything more concrete about the ASUS Xbox handheld, we'll let you know.
What are your thoughts on this? Let us know down in the comments section below.
[source youtube.com]
Comments 27
The new Xbox ecosystem is Windows+NextBox+Handhelds+Cloud
They want everyone's 30%.
They are trying to take on Steam.
Even for home console gamers like me, the best thing about Xbox is this: "making sure all of your games are available, all of your save games, all of your entitlements are available wherever you go." That's what makes Xbox the most user-friendly and future-proof option outside pure PC gaming.
I think that Microsoft's focus now is unifying the PC and console libraries with additional ports and that the future games will only have one version that can be run with different settings on each device (console, PC, handheld) and Cloud, unifying a capped Windows build for gaming in the process.
I'm not sure they want everyone's 30%, @TheGiraffe. It's far more likely to be the other way round, with Microsoft being forced to pay that 30% to everyone else as their games are sold on store fronts other than their own...
@TheGiraffe XBOX already changed the "cut" on the pc store form 30% to 12,5%. So no.
Capitalise on the Switch 2 controversy?
The worst case S2 sales will blow this thing out the water!
@GeorgeKal
Oh I didn't know that, that's cool
@TheGiraffe yea they are trying really hard to boost the pc store. Funny thing is if you buy a play anywhere game from the pc store it's 12,5 but if you buy it on consoles the cut is still 30%
@Medic_alert They will, but that doesn't mean they shouldn't try to compete for some of the sales.
I see here a brand which respect it's consumers. Thank you Microsoft!👍
I guess you have 2 or 3 subjects to discuss with Nintendo. Nintendo really don't care at all about it's consumers. It will be fun with the new tarrifs in USA. 🤣
@FraserG from a company point of view I guess that depends if it makes any money.
The Asus thing is probably pretty low risk though because I think the machine will pretty much be a re-shell of an existing product.
I have my doubts but I will be open-minded about everything they do.
I amassed a sizeable library plus been a GPU subscriber almost non stop in past 5 years so not a fan of idea fully going to PS6 next gen.
However I made a choice to only invest in 1 ecosystem next gen (aside from switch 2). The idea of buying 2 of the same boxes at 600-800 that play 99% same games does not excite me.
I currently own both ps5 and SX and man they are more of the same tbh.
But I think for MS to win me they have to go PC-way and figure out my console library Backwards compatibility.
For now unfortunately I lean more towards Ps6 but lets see what Ms come up with. Its just PS becoming a de-facto default choice with best support and all games, I like some of the Ps games along with Ms ones too.
Cannot wait to hear more about this but I'm more for the 2027 version, and very keen to hear more about that. That, and next gen hardware. It's gunna be epic!
UTOPIA, @Kaloudz!!! 😂
Said it before and I'll say it again I have no interest in a Xbox handheld if it's just an Xbox-branded handheld PC. There's already a bunch of those that are going to be cheaper/better than whatever this is (which is almost certainly an Ally with an Xbox button.)
I'm funny like that, I want an Xbox handheld to play my Xbox Library.
@Fiendish-Beaver I'll see you there lol
I don't expect the console to be affordable, tbh. Even with the rumors, $500 is likely the entry price.
Highly unlikely, @Kaloudz. However, you can but dream. Maybe a little of the merchandise from Drug Supplier Simulator will help you with that...! 🤣
Gonna be funny when this thing launches and fails to get anywhere near Steam Decks sales. And Steam Deck sales are tiny compared to Switch. Xbox has felt like an aimless brand for over a decade now.
@Fiendish-Beaver Life is but a dream, my friend. I want that song in your head all day
Removed - trolling/baiting
@TheGiraffe they are trying the exact opposite actually, to use steam as a selling point for the new xbox, so they can upsell gamepass
As they say, its NOT about the 'Console' or a 'specific' hardware platform that you 'must' buy to be able to play 'your' games on - its about having the choice based on your situation, gaming preferences and/or budget.
If you can't afford or justify the cost of a Series X or S, then maybe you already have devices you can play the latest Xbox games on - including last gen Xbox hardware (Xbox One S/X) that won't get a native release. You don't have to upgrade to the latest Console or 'miss out'. If you have a decent PC, you aren't forced to buy a console to play a 'handful' of games that are 'delayed' from PC just to sell consoles - at least not an Xbox console.
As for situation, there maybe times when you have the time to play but can't use the TV (family watching something or travelling on a train) but you can use a Handheld device or even Cloud if the Wifi is good enough. So having Play Anywhere and Direct Storage to install the 'version' for the Hardware is very useful - as is the Cloud Saves.
I think its great to be able to play 'Xbox' anywhere - not just on the Sofa in front of the TV. Hardware may just enable you to play games at higher resolution, increased Visual quality settings (both more important if playing on Large displays) and/or higher frame rates but for a LOT of gamers, these aren't that important to them - being able to play, not miss out, is most important and if that means its less than 1080p or only 30fps, at least they can still play it and enjoy it!
The more important the Graphics and/or Frame Rate is to a person, the more they are likely to spend on Hardware. Even consoles have multi-tier options and the Series S is more popular (sales wise) than Series X as was the PS4 vs Pro or XB1S vs XB1X - which shows the majority will buy the 'cheaper' option so 'content' with the lower res, lower quality visuals and/or lower frame rates too...
Hmm, a rebranded Asus ROG Ally in a market already catered to combined with no access to your native Xbox library and no doubt carrying a hefty price tag...
I don't know about "excited", but it's certainly going to be interesting to see how they can make a success of it.
The comment about entitlement makes it clear to me that handheld plans this year are more windows PC gaming plans and focused on ramping up Xbox Play Anywhere and improving the gaming experience on Windows. None of which I'm against. I love my Lenovo Legion Go as is and there's certainly a ton of room to love it more. The "true" Xbox handheld rumored to be coming in later years (with next gen) is interesting on its own on the console side, but on the PC gaming side windows has needed to step up its game for a long while now so this is good to see. If they can pull off some major immediate boosts to Xbox Play Anywhere at the same time that'd be incredibly dope. A semi big change we've already seen is them bring Battle Net into the fold for new releases and start to open up Xbox Cloud Saves to steam for single player games.
@DalamarX They don't need to. That's the thing, this will still be a windows OEM. Hardware sales will impact ASUS, and what Microsoft overall will care about is making the Windows license more attractive to gamers and OEMs (which for Microsoft as the dominant OS for PC gaming it really just means not losing market share to the likes of SteamOS or anything). Most likely the software innovations made on the ASUS will be in a later update shipped across the board and future windows gaming handhelds (and maybe even PCs) will ship with whatever work Microsoft is doing to optimize gaming on the ASUS device. Heck, I could even see an Xbox guide button become standard where the copilot button is on "copilot+" PCs. Microsoft is already selling the idea that a Windows gaming PC is an Xbox. This just sounds like them doing more to justify the claim.
@GeorgeKal Which I never understood why they didn't make Xbox Play Anywhere titles on console match the PC store cut as an added incentive. Like in my head the business move would be lowering the cut on PC and consoles to 20% and then lowering it further to 15% for Xbox Play Anywhere. That'd be fairer all around without losing too much ground and giving another reason for devs to want to use Xbox Play Anywhere. I also just don't see a reason for Microsoft to try and match Epic. Both are trying to pull devs over from Steam, but we all know it's not as simple as offering cut that much lower. That said it is another case of competition benefiting those being competed for (in this case developers instead of gamers). Microsoft and Epic want as much support for their PC storefronts as Steam gets, so they're doing more to make devs happy. That in of itself is great. The Xbox app on PC and MS store need to do far, FAR more to attract devs and gamers, but offering better rates certainly isn't bad.
@TheGiraffe no the next ecosystem is windows and cloud. Everything is being folded into windows. The next handheld will be windows. The next console is going to be a prebuilt PC.
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