OneXPlayer has stirred excitement among gaming enthusiasts by releasing a teaser video on YouTube for their upcoming handheld gaming device, the Onexfly F1 Pro. This new gadget will include AMD’s Ryzen AI 9 HX 370, belonging to the Ryzen AI 300 family, known as Strix Point. The Onexfly F1 Pro is a sleek 7-inch handheld that was showcased playing Black Myth: Wukong, delivering a smooth performance between 50 and 60 frames per second.
One of the standout features of this device is its state-of-the-art HDR-supported 7-inch OLED display, boasting a 144 Hz refresh rate. It tips the scales at 598 grams and is equipped with Harman Kardon speakers for premium audio quality. The star of the show, however, is the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 CPU. This powerhouse packs four Zen 5 cores, eight Zen 5c cores, and AMD’s cutting-edge Radeon 890M integrated graphics with 16 Compute Units, channeling the RDNA 3.5 architecture. These impressive specs place the Onexfly F1 Pro in a strong position to rival other portables like the Steam Deck OLED, ROG Ally X, and Lenovo’s Legion Go.
In their demonstration, OneXPlayer ran a benchmark with Black Myth: Wukong using 1080p resolution and low-quality settings, paired with 65% upscaling, translating to an effective internal rendering resolution of 1248 x 702. In these conditions, the AI 9 HX 370 managed an average of 58 frames per second. During the test, the device’s power consumption was capped at 15 watts.
The Onexfly F1 Pro marks a significant milestone for OneXPlayer, as it’s their first model to feature both an OLED display and AMD’s latest Zen 5-based mobile CPUs. Until now, the company has relied on Intel or earlier AMD processors and LCD screens. This makes the F1 Pro one of the first handhelds powered by Zen 5 to enter the scene, sharing the spotlight with the GPT Pocket 4, which also uses the Ryzen AI HX 370.
In contrast to the Pocket 4, which is more of a hybrid 2-in-1 design with a keyboard and a flipping screen, the F1 Pro stays true to handheld gaming roots with its traditional grips and controls. The OneXPlayer teaser effectively illustrates the suitability of the AI 9 HX 370 for handhelds, showing it can handle demanding AAA games even at a moderate 15W Thermal Design Power, thereby conserving battery life. Since AMD’s next-gen handheld-focused Z-series CPUs have yet to launch, handheld manufacturers are adapting by using the Ryzen AI 300 series chips made for laptops.
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