The MSI Claw gaming handheld is ready to battle the Steam Deck

Shawn Knight

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In a nutshell: MSI's handheld gaming PC has landed and is ready to go toe to toe with Valve's venerable Steam Deck. Unveiled earlier this year at CES, the MSI Claw is powered by an Intel Core Ultra processor of your choosing. The handheld ships with a 7-ich FHD (1,920 x 1,080 resolution) touchscreen with 120 Hz refresh rate that covers 100 percent of the sRGB color space, and utilizes Hall Effect triggers and joysticks which should eliminate drift concerns.

Under the hood is a six-cell 53 Wh battery that's reportedly good for up to two hours of full-bore use.

The entry level Claw, which is available to order now over on MSI's website, includes a Core Ultra 5-135H alongside 16 GB of LPDDR5 memory and a 512 GB PCIe Gen 4 SSD, and is priced at $699.

Two higher-spec'd variants are also in the pipeline, including a model with a Core Ultra 7-155H CPU, 16 GB of RAM, and a 512 GB SSD for $749, and another that bumps storage up to 1 TB for $799. Both can be pre-ordered over on Newegg, and show a release date of March 15.

Those who order through Newegg will also receive a free copy of Ubisoft's Skull & Bones and a free month of Xbox Game Pass.

MSI's Claw is the latest in a growing list of handheld gaming systems, bumping shoulders with the Asus ROG Ally, the Lenovo Legion Go, the Steam Deck, and others. These machines owe their existence to the Nintendo Switch, the handheld that Nintendo gambled (and won big) with in 2017.

Nintendo is expected to ship a follow-up to the original Switch in early 2025. The Switch 2 hardware, which has reportedly been ready to go since late 2022, is expected to use a cost-optimized version of Nvidia's Orin built on an 8nm process with some efficiency tweaks from Lovelace. It'll also likely include a larger 8-inch display and as much as 16 GB of RAM (although 12 GB seems far more likely).

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This is gonna sell like 15 units.

Just don't see the point of one of these systems without SteamOS/Proton, windows is just not a user friendly interface and adds a ton of unnecessary overhead on an already tight performance budget.
 
Interested to see how it stacks up against the Ally.

Rumors suggest it doesn’t do too well, which is supported by the lack of bragging over comparisons so far.
 
This is gonna sell like 15 units.

Just don't see the point of one of these systems without SteamOS/Proton, windows is just not a user friendly interface and adds a ton of unnecessary overhead on an already tight performance budget.
SteamOS is not limited to the Deck. MSI may very well install the free SteamOS Linux distro in its Claw. Or can go the another customized Debian route with Steam installed.
 
SteamOS is not limited to the Deck. MSI may very well install the free SteamOS Linux distro in its Claw. Or can go the another customized Debian route with Steam installed.
No but SteamOS is heavily optimised for the SteamDeck, other handhelds simply do not get that level of optimisation.

I would place money this thing does not perform any better yet will cost more money.
 
No but SteamOS is heavily optimised for the SteamDeck, other handhelds simply do not get that level of optimisation.

I would place money this thing does not perform any better yet will cost more money.
Not really. The best thing is the Linux OS can be customized for any given hardware. MSI can equally customize SteamOS or any equivalent to match its own Claw's hardware.

(Disclaimer : I'm a Linux user)
 
I think this might be dead in the water already considering the all intel tech (and considering the chip specs, wouldn't expect amazing battery life), the intel gpu being another point of question vs amd's apu's and obviously the price, which is very high compared to the Lenovo, Asus or Steam Deck
 
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