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ASUS ROG Ally 7" 120Hz Gaming Handheld - AMD Z1 Extreme Processor - 512GB - White - PRE ORDER!
Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $599.99 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $23.28 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $149.58 | |
| | ||
| Total | $772.85 | |
Learn more
Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $599.99 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $23.28 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $149.58 | |
| | ||
| Total | $772.85 | |
Purchase options and add-ons
- Amazing graphics: AMD Radeon RDNA3 graphics (4GB VRAM, 12 compute units)
- Ample storage: A 512GB NVMe PCIe 4 M.2 SSD gives you room to store your favorite games and keep load times snappy. Easily upgrade and replace with another M.2 2230 SSD with a single pop-open screw. Insert a UHS-II MicroSD card into the built-in slot for even more storage and playing options
- Stunningly beautiful visuals: No tearing, no stuttering, and games are crisp and clear on the ROG Ally's 7-inch 1080p, full HD touchscreen display with a smooth 120hz refresh rate and AMD FreeSync premium.
- Blazing fast memory: Swap through your applications and have multiple tabs running with 16GB LPDDR5 6400 RAM.
Frequently bought together

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Climate Pledge FriendlyProducts with trusted sustainability certification(s). Learn morePRODUCT CERTIFICATION (1)

Carbonfree Certified determine the carbon footprint of the product, and associated carbon emissions are offset with reduction projects.
JSAUX ModCase for ROG Ally with Detachable Front Shell, Protective Case, Metal Bracket and Strap Compatible with ASUS ROG Ally Accessories Basic Set-White PC0109JSAUX$17.11 shippingGet it as soon as Wednesday, Aug 28
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Product information
| Controller Type | Button Control |
|---|---|
| Item Weight | 1.1 Pounds |
| Screen Size | 7 Inches |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Hardware Interface | Bluetooth |
| Number of Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Battery Life | 1 days |
| Battery Description | Lithium-Ion |
| Display Type | LCD |
| Material | Aluminum |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 512 GB |
| Form Factor | Handheld |
| UPC | 197105131057 |
| ASIN | B0C52RFZXB |
| Release date | August 10, 2023 |
| Customer Reviews |
4.0 out of 5 stars |
| Best Sellers Rank | #26,533 in Electronics (See Top 100 in Electronics) #691 in Kids' Electronics #2,130 in Video Game Consoles & Accessories #6,124 in Games & Accessories |
| Product Dimensions | 1 x 1 x 1 inches; 1.1 Pounds |
| Type of item | Toy |
| Language | Portuguese Brazilian |
| Item model number | ASUS ROG Ally 7 |
| Item Weight | 1.1 pounds |
| Manufacturer | ASUS |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Date First Available | May 12, 2023 |
Warranty & Support
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Product Description
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WARNING ASUS ROG ALLY WATCH THIS BEFORE You BUY
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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Be aware
That got me running.
First off this is an EX model. It has the right number of cores and windows identifies the name of the processor correctly.
I ran Netflix and Hulu, they ran fine.
I really don't care that much about edge performance. 30fps is just fine, but I do want resolution. So far, the two games I have run have worked beautifully...except...
Sometimes the right stick works as a mouse... sometimes it does what I expect the stick to do in a game, and I'm not sure when the shift happens.
[Edit: figured it out. I thought it would shift by app but I can't get that to work. There is a front panel button that brings up a menu that allows you to switch.]
So, if you get one of these, it would be helpful if you had some arrangement to connect two european style pins (4mm in diameter, about, and maybe 18mm center to center) to an outlet of your choice. Conversely, if you had a 75-100 watt power supply or [don't do this it is a joke maybe], if you want to live dangerously, an old appliance cord and electrical tape) you can get up and running. You don't need a voltage converter, just a connection. [I guess this is because Brazil uses a range of voltages.]
The ROG screen works like a windows touch screen. The fingerprint reader in the power button is brilliant, you click it and it knows you are you, immediately.
It suffers the usual disease of windows hides information from you, but that is a windows issue.
I've used it for a couple hours, just found drips and trying to get FFXIV running [got it], and the fan never came on. I have gigabit internet and my download ran up to 100mb/sec in parts, 30 mb/sec in others. That is a a lot of data to handle. With 16mb of memory and 16 cores, it is likely that the scheduler will never steal your processor...all that stuff means your experience will be smoother....and that is what I'm seeing.
[I found that if I put it in economy the frame rate dropped to 17 or so and games looked jerky when just looking around, but no heat was noticeable. If I turned it to turbo it managed frame rates from 50 to a reported 100. The device got slightly warm. The power brick gets much warmer when the battery is charging.]
So the only downsides are euro plug and that it does not quite know what it wants to be.
The star was for not making it clear what plug it had. The indication was that it was an international model from a Brazilian Portugese area, I believe they use US plugs. The round pins were a shock. [Only because I stayed in hotels in Brazil and didn't notice the plug issues, and I went there almost 30 years ago. They do not, in fact, use US plugs, nor do they have a Standard country-wide voltage, but the same plugs are used for all voltages. Astounding.]
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2024
That got me running.
First off this is an EX model. It has the right number of cores and windows identifies the name of the processor correctly.
I ran Netflix and Hulu, they ran fine.
I really don't care that much about edge performance. 30fps is just fine, but I do want resolution. So far, the two games I have run have worked beautifully...except...
Sometimes the right stick works as a mouse... sometimes it does what I expect the stick to do in a game, and I'm not sure when the shift happens.
[Edit: figured it out. I thought it would shift by app but I can't get that to work. There is a front panel button that brings up a menu that allows you to switch.]
So, if you get one of these, it would be helpful if you had some arrangement to connect two european style pins (4mm in diameter, about, and maybe 18mm center to center) to an outlet of your choice. Conversely, if you had a 75-100 watt power supply or [don't do this it is a joke maybe], if you want to live dangerously, an old appliance cord and electrical tape) you can get up and running. You don't need a voltage converter, just a connection. [I guess this is because Brazil uses a range of voltages.]
The ROG screen works like a windows touch screen. The fingerprint reader in the power button is brilliant, you click it and it knows you are you, immediately.
It suffers the usual disease of windows hides information from you, but that is a windows issue.
I've used it for a couple hours, just found drips and trying to get FFXIV running [got it], and the fan never came on. I have gigabit internet and my download ran up to 100mb/sec in parts, 30 mb/sec in others. That is a a lot of data to handle. With 16mb of memory and 16 cores, it is likely that the scheduler will never steal your processor...all that stuff means your experience will be smoother....and that is what I'm seeing.
[I found that if I put it in economy the frame rate dropped to 17 or so and games looked jerky when just looking around, but no heat was noticeable. If I turned it to turbo it managed frame rates from 50 to a reported 100. The device got slightly warm. The power brick gets much warmer when the battery is charging.]
So the only downsides are euro plug and that it does not quite know what it wants to be.
The star was for not making it clear what plug it had. The indication was that it was an international model from a Brazilian Portugese area, I believe they use US plugs. The round pins were a shock. [Only because I stayed in hotels in Brazil and didn't notice the plug issues, and I went there almost 30 years ago. They do not, in fact, use US plugs, nor do they have a Standard country-wide voltage, but the same plugs are used for all voltages. Astounding.]
Top reviews from other countries
At this point, the software has gained enough maturity to be usable. There are plenty of accessories to choose from. I am glad I picked my unit on rebate.
A must have for a serious PC gamer on the road.







































