If you want the best gaming handheld UK 2026 has to offer and you only have one device’s worth of budget, buy the Valve Steam Deck OLED at £649 from the official Steam store (last checked: 2026-06-12): it remains the most polished all-rounder, even after Valve’s late-May 2026 price rise. That is the short answer. The longer answer depends on whether you live in the Xbox Game Pass world, want Nintendo’s exclusives, or simply want to spend as little as possible, and this guide names a specific model and a real UK price for each of those readers. Valve confirmed the new pricing on the Steam Deck store page, and the rest of the field has shifted hard in the past year, so several older “best handheld” lists are now quoting models you can no longer sensibly buy.
Key facts
- Best overall: Valve Steam Deck OLED, £649 (512GB) / £779 (1TB) direct from the Steam store (last checked: 2026-06-12).
- Best value: Nintendo Switch 2 Mario Kart World bundle at £429.99, or the SteamOS Lenovo Legion Go S from around £459 for PC handheld gaming.
- Best for Game Pass and Windows: Asus ROG Xbox Ally X at £799.99, built with Microsoft around the full-screen Xbox experience.
- Best for Nintendo exclusives: Nintendo Switch 2 at £395.99 (console only), the only device that plays Mario Kart World and Zelda.
- Steam Deck OLED prices rose by roughly a third in late May 2026; date-stamp every price before you buy.
The best gaming handheld UK 2026 shortlist at a glance
The handheld market splits into three camps: SteamOS machines that behave like a games console, Windows 11 machines that run anything you can install on a PC, and Nintendo’s closed platform with its own exclusives. The right pick is whichever camp matches the library you already own. We have grounded every recommendation below in published manufacturer specifications and current UK retail pricing rather than lab benchmarks, and we flag where a model has been superseded so you do not buy last year’s hardware by mistake. If you are weighing a handheld against a phone for portable play, our separate look at the best gaming phone UK 2026 picks worth buying is a useful companion.
| Model | Chip | Screen | OS | UK price (last checked 2026-06-12) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Valve Steam Deck OLED | AMD custom (Zen 2 / RDNA 2) | 7.4in OLED HDR, 90Hz | SteamOS | £649 (512GB) / £779 (1TB) |
| Asus ROG Xbox Ally | AMD Ryzen Z2 A | 7in 1080p IPS, 120Hz | Windows 11 | £499.99 |
| Asus ROG Xbox Ally X | AMD Ryzen AI Z2 Extreme | 7in 1080p IPS, 120Hz | Windows 11 | £799.99 |
| Lenovo Legion Go S (SteamOS) | AMD Ryzen Z2 Go | 8in 1920×1200, 120Hz | SteamOS | from £459 |
| Lenovo Legion Go (original) | AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme | 8.8in 2560×1600, 144Hz | Windows 11 | £649.99 |
| Nintendo Switch 2 | Custom Nvidia (T239) | 7.9in LCD HDR, up to 120Hz | Nintendo | £395.99 (console only) |
| MSI Claw 8 AI+ | Intel Core Ultra 7 258V | 8in 1920×1200, 120Hz | Windows 11 | £879 |
Best overall: Valve Steam Deck OLED
The Steam Deck OLED is still the handheld we point most UK buyers towards. Its 7.4in HDR OLED panel runs at 90Hz, the SteamOS interface is built for a controller rather than bolted onto a desktop, and Valve’s per-game “Verified” ratings tell you at a glance whether a title will run well before you spend a penny. None of that is new, but a year on, nothing else matches the software polish. The catch is price: Valve raised UK pricing in late May 2026, so the 512GB model now sits at £649 and the 1TB model at £779 direct from the Steam store (last checked: 2026-06-12). That is a meaningful jump from its launch figure, and it narrows the gap to more powerful Windows handhelds.
What you are paying for is the experience, not the raw frame rate. The Steam Deck’s custom AMD chip is older than the silicon in the latest Windows rivals, so it will not push the highest settings in 2026’s most demanding releases. In practice that matters less than the spec sheet suggests, because SteamOS is tuned to the hardware and the OLED screen flatters lower resolutions. If you already own a large Steam library, this is the device that turns it portable with the least friction. We covered the case for it in detail in our look at whether the Steam Deck OLED is still the handheld to buy in 2026, and the price rise does not change that verdict for library-first buyers.

One more thing worth knowing: Valve has publicly confirmed that a true Steam Deck successor is in development, with no date, specifications or price attached. That is not a reason to wait, because “in development” at Valve can mean years, but it is a reason not to buy the 1TB model purely as a long-term investment. For most people the 512GB Steam Deck OLED at £649 is the sweet spot, paired with a cheap microSD card for extra storage.
A year on from launch, nothing else matches the Steam Deck OLED’s software polish, and that is exactly what makes it the safe pick.
Best for Game Pass and Windows: Asus ROG Xbox Ally X
This is where the field changed most in the past year. The original Asus ROG Ally and Ally X have been wound down at UK retail and replaced by the ROG Xbox Ally and ROG Xbox Ally X, which Asus co-developed with Microsoft and put on sale on 16 October 2025. The headline feature is a full-screen Xbox experience that boots straight into a console-style interface instead of dumping you on the Windows 11 desktop, which has historically been the weak point of every Windows handheld. If your gaming life runs through Xbox Game Pass, this is the device built for you.

The ROG Xbox Ally X is the one to buy if you want headroom: it pairs an AMD Ryzen AI Z2 Extreme with 24GB of LPDDR5X memory and a 1TB SSD, and lists at £799.99 from Currys and Amazon UK (last checked: 2026-06-12), with Currys the more reliable for stock in our checks. The cheaper standard ROG Xbox Ally uses a Ryzen Z2 A with 16GB of RAM and a 512GB drive at £499.99, and Amazon UK has been discounting it close to £400. Both run a 7in 1080p screen at 120Hz. If you want a single device that plays Game Pass titles, your existing Steam library, the Epic Games Store and emulators all at once, a Windows handheld is the only camp that does it, and this is the most coherent Windows handheld yet. Our Xbox Game Pass June 2026 guide to what UK players should actually play is a good place to fill the library, and the Xbox Games Showcase 2026 roundup covers what is coming next.
Best big-screen Windows handheld: Lenovo Legion Go and Legion Go S
Lenovo plays a different game. The original Legion Go is still on sale at £649.99 from Amazon UK and stands out for its enormous 8.8in 2560×1600 144Hz screen and detachable controllers, one of which doubles as a vertical mouse for shooters. It is the most flexible handheld here for people who want to dock it and treat it as a small PC. The newer Legion Go 2 sits above it as a 144Hz OLED flagship from around £899, which is firmly enthusiast territory.

The more interesting Lenovo for most readers is the Legion Go S, the first non-Valve handheld to ship with SteamOS officially. It uses an AMD Ryzen Z2 Go chip behind an 8in 1920×1200 120Hz screen, has fixed rather than detachable controllers, and lists from around £459, with sale prices dipping under £430 (last checked: 2026-06-12). That makes it the cheapest route into the SteamOS experience if you do not want a Steam Deck, and a genuinely strong value pick. There is also a Windows 11 version of the Go S at roughly £549 if you specifically need Windows software, sold through Lenovo UK and Currys.
Best for Nintendo exclusives: Nintendo Switch 2
No PC handheld can play Mario Kart World, the latest Zelda or a new Pokemon, and that single fact keeps the Nintendo Switch 2 on this list. It is a closed platform with its own library, a 7.9in LCD HDR screen that supports up to 120Hz handheld and up to 4K when docked, and a custom Nvidia chip. The console-only price is £395.99 from the My Nintendo Store and Currys, while the Mario Kart World bundle at £429.99, sometimes promoted nearer £409, is the better buy because it folds in a flagship game (last checked: 2026-06-12).

There is a timing wrinkle. Nintendo has announced a Switch 2 price rise scheduled for September 2026 without confirming the new figure, so if you want one, buying before then protects you from an increase of unknown size. We unpicked the value question in our piece on whether the Nintendo Switch 2 is worth buying in the UK in 2026, and once you own one, our guide to the best Switch 2 accessories by use case covers what to add. The Switch 2 is not the most powerful handheld, but it is the only one that runs Nintendo’s first-party games, and for many UK families that is the entire decision.
Where MSI Claw fits, and how we picked
MSI’s Claw line has matured into a credible Windows alternative. The Claw 8 AI+ uses an Intel Core Ultra 7 258V with Intel Arc graphics, a 1TB drive and 32GB of RAM, and sells for £879 at Currys (last checked: 2026-06-12). MSI has since added an AMD-powered Claw A8 with a Ryzen Z2 Extreme at around £849.98 through Scan UK, so the old shorthand that “MSI means Intel” no longer holds. The Claw 8 AI+ is a strong machine, but at £879 it costs more than the ROG Xbox Ally X while lacking the co-developed Xbox interface, which is why it sits as an alternative rather than our Windows pick. A newer Claw 8 EX AI+ launches globally on 23 June 2026, but with no confirmed UK price we are not quoting one.

Our picks are built from three things: the manufacturer’s published specifications, current UK retail pricing from named retailers, and how coherent each device is to actually live with. We do not run hardware benchmarks in-house, so we do not quote frame rates we have not measured; where performance matters we describe it in plain terms grounded in the chip and screen on the spec sheet. We weight software experience heavily, because a handheld you fight with is a handheld you stop using, and that is the single biggest reason the Steam Deck and the new Xbox Ally rank where they do. If you also play on a desktop, our Gothic 1 Remake PC performance review shows how the same games scale up, and PlayStation owners eyeing portable VR should read our PSVR2 on PC setup guide for the UK.
Where to buy or check next in the UK
Prices move quickly on handhelds, so confirm the figure on the retailer’s own page before you commit. These are the specific UK checks worth making, all last checked on 2026-06-12:
- Steam store (Valve direct): Steam Deck OLED at £649 (512GB) and £779 (1TB). Valve sells direct in the UK; Amazon UK also stocks it.
- Currys: ROG Xbox Ally X at £799.99 and MSI Claw 8 AI+ at £879; the most reliable UK retailer for Ally X stock in our checks.
- Amazon UK: standard ROG Xbox Ally at £499.99 and frequently discounted toward £400, plus the original Lenovo Legion Go at £649.99.
- My Nintendo Store and GAME: Switch 2 console at £395.99 and the Mario Kart World bundle at £429.99, occasionally promoted nearer £409.
- Lenovo UK: Legion Go S SteamOS edition from around £459, with the Windows 11 version near £549.
- Argos: a useful cross-check for ROG Xbox Ally stock and click-and-collect availability.
Our verdict
The overall winner is the Valve Steam Deck OLED at £649. Even after its late-May 2026 price rise it offers the most refined handheld experience in the UK, and for anyone who already owns a Steam library it is the obvious buy. If you live in Xbox Game Pass, the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X at £799.99 is the better device thanks to its co-developed full-screen Xbox interface, and the cheaper £499.99 standard Ally is the value Windows pick. For Nintendo’s exclusives there is no alternative to the Switch 2, best bought as the £429.99 Mario Kart World bundle and ideally before the September 2026 price rise. And if outright value is the priority, the SteamOS Lenovo Legion Go S from £459 is the cheapest credible way into PC handheld gaming. Buy the device that matches the library you already own, and you will not regret it.

















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