ASUS ROG Ally (2023) vs MSI Claw A1M

Both are discontinued first-generation handhelds with well-documented reliability problems: the original Ally suffered a heat-damaged SD-card reader and drift-prone potentiometer sticks, while the Claw A1M's Intel Meteor Lake chip ran hot, its 53 Wh battery gave only around two hours of gaming, and its launch firmware was rocky. The Claw A1M does ship with genuine Hall-effect sticks and Thunderbolt 4/Wi-Fi 7, which the original Ally lacks.

Spec comparison

SpecASUS ROG Ally (2023)MSI Claw A1M
Starting price$499$700
OSWindows 11Windows 11
Screen size7"7"
PanelIPSIPS
Refresh rate120 Hz120 Hz
Resolution1920 × 1080 (16:9)1920 × 1080
Weight608 g675 g
Battery40 Wh53 Wh
APURyzen Z1Core Ultra 5 135H
Max TDP30 W35 W
Hall-effect sticksNoYes
GyroYes

ASUS ROG Ally (2023)

Pros

  • Sharp 1080p 120 Hz FreeSync Premium display
  • Z1 Extreme (RDNA 3, 12 CUs) is genuinely fast at 30 W
  • Hall Effect triggers; ROG XG Mobile eGPU option

Cons

  • SD card reader failures — a widely reported, high-severity defect
  • Potentiometer sticks drift; poor repairability
  • Small 40 Wh battery; Windows suspend/Armoury Crate issues

MSI Claw A1M

Pros

  • Hall-effect sticks and triggers from launch
  • Thunderbolt 4 / USB4 and Wi-Fi 7
  • Now very cheap on clearance

Cons

  • Meteor Lake thermal/power issues widely reported
  • Poor ~2 hr battery from the 53 Wh cell
  • Glitchy driver/firmware situation at launch

Who should buy which

Buy the original Ally, used and discounted, if you want AMD RDNA 3 performance and don't mind sourcing a Hall-effect stick upgrade to fix the drift-prone sticks.

Buy the Claw A1M, used and discounted, if you want factory Hall-effect sticks and Thunderbolt 4/Wi-Fi 7, and can tolerate its worse thermal throttling and shorter battery life.

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