


These pull sustained power of 9W, 15W, and 25W respectively, and if you plug the device in at Turbo mode, it goes up to 30W. Asus includes three modes in its Armoury Crate utility: Silent, Performance, and Turbo. These power ranges are important because they are what determine the performance (and battery life) you’ll get out of the ROG Ally. That’s when you’re actually using the device, too. The Ryzen Z1 Extreme can operate in a range of 9 watts to 30W of sustained power (it can go higher for brief periods). You’re not getting PS5 levels of performance in the ROG Ally, but it’s a good illustration of the performance on tap. For context, the PS5 has a theoretical performance of 10.3 TFLOPs. It comes with eight Zen 4 cores and 12 RDNA 3 graphics cores, with theoretical performance of 8.6 TFLOPs. Let’s focus a bit more on the heart of the ROG Ally, though: the Ryzen Z1 Extreme APU.

The heart of the Ally Jacob Roach / Digital Trends We don’t have pricing or a release date on that model yet, but for the flagship model at least, Asus is coming out on top in pricing. There is another version of the ROG Ally, one that comes with the base Ryzen Z1 processor and 256GB of storage. AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme (8 Zen 4 cores, 12 RDNA 3 cores, 9W to 30W)ĥ12GB Gen 4×4 NVMe SSD, micro SD slot UHS-IIġ920 x 1080, 120Hz, 500 nits, IPS, 7ms, 10-point touchĢx 1W speakers, Dolby Atmos and Hi-Res Audio supportġx ROG XG Mobile, 1x USB-C (USB 3.2 and DP 1.4 support), 1x 3.5mm audio, 1x micro SD slot
