List of handheld game consoles

The list of handheld game consoles documents notable handheld game consoles released as commercial products. Handheld game consoles are portable video game consoles with a built-in screen and game controls and the ability to play multiple and separate video games. It does not include PDAs, smartphones, or tablet computers; while those devices are often capable of playing games, they are not generally classified as video game consoles. This is not a complete list; it only lists handheld game consoles with its own Wikipedia article and a source verifying its classification as a handheld console. Currently there are 53 entries in this list, 4 consoles were canceled.[note 1]

List

[edit]
Name Image Notes Release year Units Sold Ref
Microvision (Milton Bradley Company)
  • The very first handheld game console that used interchangeable cartridges.[1]
  • Plays monochrome games from ROM cartridges.[1]
  • Cartridges also contained the individual processor and buttons required to play game.[2]
  • Roughly 10-12 games were released.[2]
  • Considered a commercial failure, but a creative success that paved the way for the Game Boy's later success.[2]
1979[2] [1]
Entex Select-A-Game
  • Dual set of input buttons above and below screen allowed for two player play on same console.[3]
  • Plays monochrome games from ROM cartridges.[3]
  • Only 6 games released.[3]
1981[3] [3]
Entex Adventure Vision 1982[5] 50,000[5] [4]
Palmtex Portable Videogame System
  • Only 3 games released.[6]
  • Plays cartridges containing a colored sprite overlay, using a monochrome LCD on top of the overlay to cover/uncover each sprite during gameplay[6]
1984[6] [6]
Digi Casse
  • Game cartridges contained an LCD
1984 [7]
Epoch Game Pocket Computer Epoch Game Pocket Computer from the front left.
  • Cartridge based handheld, with additional software built in.
  • Monochrome display
  • Battery life of approximately 60+ hours on 4 AA batteries.
1984 [8]
Game Boy (Nintendo) 1989[1] 118,690,000[12] [1]
Atari Lynx
  • First handheld electronic game with a color LCD,[3] 3.5-inch screen.[1]
  • Plays ROM cartridges[13]
  • Hardware revision smaller Atari Lynx II released in 1991.[3]
  • Less than 100 games released.[13]
  • Considered a commercial failure.[3]
1989[1] 500,000[14] [1]
Game Gear 1990[18] 11,000,000[15] [1]
TurboExpress (NEC)
  • Internally similar to NEC's TurboGrafx-16 home console, directly able to play its games.[3]
  • Plays ROM cartridges[1]
  • Technologically advanced for its time, but high price and short battery life plagued its commercial appeal.[1][3]
1990[19] 1,500,000[14] [1]
Gamate (Bit Corporation)
  • Technologically similar to the original Game Boy.[20]
  • Plays monochrome games on large, credit card sized ROM cartridges.[20]
  • Hardware revisions were reported, but they were largely cosmetic and trivial.[20]
  • At least 71 games are known to have been released.[20]
  • No exact sales figures are known, but it is generally considered to be a commercial failure.[20]
1990[20] [20]
Game Master (Hartung) 1990[17] [17]
Watara Supervision
  • Technologically similar to the Game Boy.[17]
  • Screen could be tilted relative to controls via flexible connection.[21]
  • Hardware revision/version that looked very similar to the Game Boy.[17]
  • Plays monochrome games from ROM cartridges.[21]
  • Could link to a television via a link cable.[21]
  • Considered a commercial failure, often cited due to a lack of games.[21][17]
1992[17] [17]
Mega Duck (Welback Holdings) 1993[17] [17]
Sega Nomad
  • Sega's second and last traditional handheld.
  • Played entire Sega Genesis library and its exact ROM cartridges.[1]
  • No games specifically made for it, no compatibility for any other Sega platforms.[3]
  • Suffered from fast battery consumption and launching at a time when Sega trying to support many other platforms concurrently.[17][3]
  • Considered a commercial failure.[17][1]
1995[14] 1,000,000[14] [1]
Design Master Senshi Mangajukuu
  • Bandai's touchscreen handheld game console
1995 [22]
Game.com (Tiger Electronics)
  • First handheld to feature a touchscreen and internet connection.[3]
  • Plays monochrome games from ROM cartridges.[3]
  • Hardware revision Game.com Pocket Pro released in 1998.[3]
  • Considered a commercial failure.[14][3]
1997[3] 300,000[14] [3]
Neo Geo Pocket 1998[24] 2,000,000[14] [1]
WonderSwan (Bandai) 1999[1] 3,500,000[26][27] [1]
Cybiko
  • Combination PDA and handheld game console.[28]
  • Plays digital games via internet download from PC.[28]
  • More than 430 games and applications produced, all free.[29]
  • Hardware revision Cybiko Xtreme released in September 2001.[28]
2000[28] 500,000[30] [31]
Game Boy Advance (Nintendo) 2001[33] 81,500,000[34] [1]
GP32 (Game Park) 2001[3] 32,000[35] [1]
P/ECE (AQUAPLUS)
2001[36]
N-Gage (Nokia) 2003[40][3] 3,000,000[14] [1]
GameKing
  • Series of low end handhelds
2003 [41]
Tapwave Zodiac
  • Combination handheld game console and PDA.[1][3]
  • Features a touchscreen with an included stylus and an MP3 player.[3]
  • Plays digital games via internal memory or SD cards.[3]
  • Received critical acclaim for its concept, but was a commercial failure, especially after Sony's 2004 release of the PlayStation Portable.[1]
2003[1] 200,000[14] [1]
Nintendo DS 2004[1] 154,000,000[44] [1]
PlayStation Portable (Sony)
  • Sony's first traditional entry into the handheld console market.[3]
  • Plays proprietary Universal Media Discs and digital download games via internet.[45]
  • Minor hardware revisions include PSP-2000 in 2007, PSP-3000 in 2008.[3]
  • Major hardware revisions include UMD drive-less PSP Go in 2009, wifi-connection-less PSP E1000 in 2011.[3]
  • Its legacy is mixed; its sales are far more than any other non-Nintendo handheld, but its sales are just over half of its main competitor of the time, the Nintendo DS.[3]
2004 80,000,000[46] [1]
Gizmondo (Tiger Telematics)
  • Plays SD cards.[47]
  • Features camera, GPS, text messaging, and Bluetooth wireless connectivity.[48]
  • Despite features, technologically well behind main competitors of the time of PlayStation Portable and Nintendo DS.[47]
  • Had an alternative "Smart Ads" model released concurrently which sold at almost half the price, but required daily streaming advertisements to be watched on the handheld, well before smartphone games popularized the concept.[48]
  • Considered a severe commercial failure, propelled by a juxtaposition low sales and particularly high promotional spending and investments.[48][1]
2005[1] 25,000[14] [1]
GP2X (GamePark Holdings) 2005[49] >60,000[50] [51]
Dingoo A320 (Dingo Digital Technology) 2009[52] [52]
GP2X Wiz (GamePark Holdings)
  • Open source hardware handheld game console.[53]
  • Successor to the GP2X.[53]
  • Possesses upgrades in screen and button quality, but only minor upgrade in processing power.[53]
  • Plays digital games via internet download, few retail games.[53]
2009[53] [53]
Pandora (OpenPandora) 2010[54] [54]
CAANOO (GamePark Holdings) 2010[48] [48]
Nintendo 3DS 2011[59] 75,000,000[57][60] [1]
PlayStation Vita (Sony)
  • Sony's second handheld console, successor to the PlayStation Portable.[61]
  • Two models launched; a regular one, and one with 3G internet capabilities that was quickly phased out.[61]
  • Minor hardware revisions model "PCH-2000" released in 2013
  • Mixed legacy; was a commercial failure, but retained a cult following, and is cited as influential in the successful PlayStation 4 home console released after it.[61]
2011[61] 16,000,000[61] [61]
Neo Geo X (Tommo)
  • Part of the Neo Geo line, releases are adaptations of past Neo Geo titles.[62]
  • Plays games loaded on SD cards, no digital distribution.[62]
  • Contains HDMI, A/V and control docking ports for connecting to a television.[62]
  • The publishing and distribution was licensed to Tommo from SNK Playmore.[62]
  • Considered a commercial failure for both parties; SNK ordered a halt on production after consumer complaints on quality, which in turn hurt Tommo financially. Both parties threatened legal action.[63]
2012[64] [63]
Game Gadget
  • Plays a number of licensed Sega games
  • Linux based handheld
2012 ~20,000[65]
GCW Zero (Game Consoles Worldwide) 2013[67] [67]
Nvidia Shield Portable 2012[70] [68]
GPD XD (GamePad Digital) 2015 [71]
Arduboy
  • Open source hardware based on the Arduino hardware platform
  • The original version was 1.6 mm thick, with the height and width of a credit card
  • Games published on Arduboy Arcade are free, open source and available to be edited
  • 'Arduboy FX', an upgraded version, includes a flash memory chip that stores over 250 games on the device itself
2016 [72]
GPD Win (GamePad Digital) 2016[74] [74]
Nintendo Switch
  • Can be played as a handheld or on a television when put into docking station.[1]
  • The individual Joy-Con controllers can attach to the main unit or be used separately.[75]
  • Touchscreen display with 720p resolution, up to 1080p when docked via HDMI port.[76]
  • Hardware revision in the handheld-only Nintendo Switch Lite in 2019, larger OLED screen model in 2021.[77]
  • Considered a commercial success; passing 125 million sold by 2023.[78]
Evercade (Blaze Entertainment)
  • Plays officially licensed collections of emulated retro video games.[79]
  • Design similar to original Game Boy Advance, has ability to connect to television with additional HDMI accessory.[80]
  • Games released through curated collections of games compiled onto a game cartridge.[79]
  • Supported by companies such as Atari, Namco, and Interplay.[79][80]
2020[81] [79]
Analogue Pocket (Analogue)
  • Plays original game cartridge for Game Boy, Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance, Game Gear, Neo Geo Pocket, Neo Geo Pocket Color and Atari Lynx games.
  • Has a 3.5" 1600x1440, 615 ppi Display.
  • Designed with Analogue OS, an database based operating system
  • Features Save States with original game cartridges.
2021 [82]
Ayaneo
  • Handheld Windows gaming PC using AMD Ryzen processors
  • Various models include Aya Neo (2021), Ayaneo Next (2022) and Ayaneo Air/Ayaneo Air Pro (2022).
2021 [83][84][85]
Steam Deck (Valve Corporation) Steam Deck console.
  • A handheld console that plays most games in the Steam library.[86]
  • Ability to run games from other game stores as well - (Epic Games Store, uPlay, etc.)[86]
  • Comes in 3 models; one LCD and two OLED models, all with different storage capacities.[87]
  • Has 7 inch, 800p touchscreen.[86]
  • Ability to hook up to PC monitor or television.[86]
2022[88] ≈3,000,000 as of 2023[89] [90][91]
Thumby (TinyCircuits) Thumby
  • Very small formfactor handheld measuring 1.2 by 0.7 by 0.3 inches (30.5 mm × 17.8 mm × 7.6 mm).
  • Has a 0.38 by 0.27 inches (9.7 mm × 6.9 mm) black and white OLED display.
  • Can be mounted on a keychain.
  • Can play multiplayer games with a link cable.
2022 [92]
Playdate (Panic)
  • Has physical appearance of the original Game Boy with a crank (used as controller input) attached to right side.[93]
  • Has a 2.7-inch black and white display.[93]
  • New games released once per week.[94]
  • Initial purchase of unit give user access to the first "season" of games (24 total.)[94]
2022 [93]
Ayaneo 2

(Ayaneo)

2022 [95][96]
ROG Ally (Asus) ROG Ally console 2023[97] [97]
TECNO Pocket Go (Tecno Mobile)
  • Handheld Windows gaming PC using AMD Ryzen 7 processor
  • Uses Windows 11 operating system

Canceled

[edit]

This is a list of notable canceled handheld game consoles.

Name Image Notes Anticipated year of release Ref
Red Jade
  • GBA competitor
  • 3D capable
2002 [98]
MoMA Eve Steam Deck console.
  • X86 based handheld
  • Capable of hybrid operation
  • Used two hot swappable lithium-ion batteries.
~2005 [99]
XGP Steam Deck console.
  • Successor to the GP32
  • 3D capable
~2007 [100]
Jungle (console) Steam Deck console.
  • MMO oriented handheld
  • Clamshell design
2011 [101]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ This number is always up to date by this script.

References

[edit]
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  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak "In Pictures: 3 decades of hand-held game systems". www.pcworld.idg.com.au. Archived from the original on January 2, 2022. Retrieved September 29, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d Mallory, Jordan (January 11, 2019). "2 Rare Video Game Consoles You've Probably Never Heard Of".
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