The pace of technological progression is relentless. Valve’s Steam Deck has just celebrated its first birthday but as fantastic as the device is in so many ways, there are concerns about how well the latest games will run on it as we finally emerge from the cross-gen malaise. Enter AMD’s Ryzen 7 6800U, a processor that out-specs the Deck’s Van Gogh processor in almost every dimension. It’s designed for laptops, but seems to work well in a handheld form-factor too. The AyaNeo 2 and the AyaNeo Geek are the latest portable PCs to arrive at Digital Foundry and thanks to the 6800U, the performance is simply phenomenal – but it comes at a cost: battery life.

Putting aside power draw for a moment, AyaNeo’s two handhelds are powerhouses, capable of excellent results at both 720p and 1080p – so fine for both mobile and docked play. This won’t be news for those who’ve seen what the Ryzen 7 6800U can do when integrated into a laptop, but somehow, AyaNeo delivers equally gripping results from its handhelds. When challenged with the games that pushed Deck hard, AyaNeo pulls comfortably ahead. Doom Eternal at 1080p60, Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered with ray tracing (!), Fortnite with the full UE5 feature set, A Plague Tale Requiem looking beautiful at a locked 30fps… these handhelds are capable of great things.

AyaNeo 2/Geek Steam Deck
Main Processor Ryzen 7 6800U Custom AMD ‘Van Gogh’
CPU Zen3+, Eight Cores, 16 Threads, Max 4.7GHz Zen2, Four Cores, Eight Threads, Max 3.6GHz
GPU RDNA2, 12 Compute Units, Max 2.2GHz RDNA2, 8 Compute Units, Max 1.6GHz
Peak GPU Compute 3.38TF 1.64TF
Memory 16/32GB LPDDR5 6400MT/s 16GB LPDDR5 5500MT/s
Display 1920×1200, 1280×800 (optional on Geek only) – 60Hz IPS 1200×800 – 60Hz IPS
Battery 50.25WHr 40WHr
Default OS Windows 11 SteamOS
I/O Three USB-C, MicroSD, Headphone Jack One USB-C, MicroSD, Headphone Jack

Let’s put the core tech into perspective before we talk about the quality of the handheld itself. Stack up the 6800U’s specs against the Steam Deck’s custom processor and we’re looking at a night-and-day difference. The Valve handheld uses a quad-core Zen 2 CPU cluster, while the 6800U actually has eight cores on a revised architecture and with higher potential boost clocks. The GPU side of the equation is also much improved: the eight RDNA2 compute units in the Deck give way to 12 of them in the 6800U with a max clock of 2.2GHz up against the 1.6GHz in the Valve handheld.