• FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This article would be more useful to me (I’m saying to me, not in general, perhaps it’s useful for many and I’m strange) if it had suggestions for which retro handhelds are really good. I don’t particularly enjoy watching YouTube reviews of products. I don’t particularly enjoy watching gamers on YouTube, either. I’d rather read something quickly. Do you happen to have a good article on decent handhelds? I’ve been saving up for a Steam Deck, but if there are any interesting retro handhelds out there, I’d check them out (but no YouTube, please).

    • kratoz29@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I also hate YT reviews and prefer written reviews any day, but with these Chinese handleds you really need to make your choice smartly, I mean, it is not like you could go at your nearest Walmart and look it and touch it and try it out.

      In the best of the cases you can buy one overpriced at eBay or Amazon for a quickly experience, normal case scenario you buy it straight from China web page or AliExpress and deal with the longest shipping methods, and in the worst case deal with ugly warranty process if all go wrong (which can happen, so buy smart and use PayPal or something to protect yourself).

      I recommend you RetroGameCorps YT channel since he’s the best one when we are talking at reviews of this niche gaming sector.

      He goes from all the relevant aspects of the handheld such as touch and feel, power/performance, battery life, “pocket ability” and portability, comparison with relevant models, height, weight, emulation showcase, you name it.

      He also divides his videos on parts so you can quickly select what is relevant for you.

      There are other great handhelds reviewers, but no one can beat RGC!

      • FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The thing about me is: If making my choice smartly requires watching YouTube stuff, I decide to not make a choice and live with not deciding.

      • kratoz29@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I recommend what I have, Miyoo Mini (hard to get but there is a plus model which is easier to get) RG351v (old model, but still works well for a wide range of games, same as Miyoo actually being PS1 the top).

        Devices that I don’t have but I wanna get:

        Retroid Pocket 3 Plus (plays nice with PSP, N64 and Dreamcast).

        Odin Pro (same as RP3+ and some GCN, Wii, and PS2).

        Steam Deck (you lose portability but runs all above perfectly if not almost perfectly plus PC gaming on the go and some light emulation of PS3 and 360).

        • Hiru@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Thanks for the complete answer pal! I’d be actually really interested in playing PS2 games, so I’m taking a look into the Odin Pro. The Steam Deck is beyond my budget for retro gaming, but as you just said it is more of a portable PC than a gaming device.

          • kratoz29@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Be aware that maybe I am not very updated, Odin Pro was the best thing ever that is not the Steam Deck last time I checked and this market moves fast (albeit it doesn’t feel like it) so as I commented before, RetroGameCorps is the best source to keep you informed about this amazing niche gaming sector.

            Even when I might sound contradictory I still think Odin Pro might be the best choice for PS2 with a tight budget… But it is not perfect, if you want perfection Steam Deck is the way to go.

            You could also reuse your own hardware if you happen to have a competent phone, just buy a telescopic controller and then you can try PS2 games in your Android device, not the best in the world, but you might get a better idea of how this is done.

            Odin Pro I think it has a SD 845 and runs on Android, so it is basically that, a phone with a controller attached lol.

          • FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            PS2 games are super hard to emulate. That’s the shan-gree-lah of emulation. If the product mentioned can emulate PS2 games, I guess it can emulate just about anything.