
This Retro Handheld Takes the Best Game Boy Ever and Adds Dual Joysticks
The heyday of the Game Boy peaked with the ultra-portable Game Boy Advance SP. That 'special' clamshell handheld design is once again returning with the dirt-cheap Anbernic RG34XXSP. It should be available to some degree in the U.S. despite tariffs, though now I can only imagine what would make the perfect Game Boy emulator. The RG34XXSP may be a contender, but we're so close to having the perfect device my pockets are opening in anticipation.
These retro handhelds are built for emulation. That means they're running custom software made to recreate a console's hardware in software form. Small devices like the RG34XXSP are better for handheld emulation, from Game Boy through Sega Game Gear, though they're also good enough to run some, but not all Nintendo 64 or Dreamcast titles. What helps in that regard is the device's twin recessed thumbsticks found below the D-pad and face buttons. The device is shipping starting on May 16. If you buy it from Anbernic's website and ship it from the U.S. warehouse, you can get it for $60, not including shipping cost. After five days, that becomes $67.
Last month, Anbernic said it would stop shipping directly to U.S. customers from China, though it will still offer sales from its U.S. warehouse. The RG34XXSP will be available in the U.S. in all four color options—with the best two being a classic GameCube purple and a banana yellow—though you can only get it with the base 64GB storage option. That storage normally comes stocked with pre-loaded emulation software and some games, though it will support an additional microSD card, which you should be able to find for relatively cheap.
Anbernic is one of the most prolific retro handheld makers around, so you may be thinking you've already seen the RG34XXSP before. That's because Anbernic already makes the $65 RG35XXSP, a similar clamshell based on the rock-solid RG35XX. The new device is based on the RG34XX, and it comes with 2GB of RAM compared to 1GB on the older model. The RG34XX supports an H700 quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 processor, the same as the older model. It's enough to play practically all Game Boy and Game Boy Advance games along with most Nintendo DS, though you'll struggle to get the dual display to fit on the miniscule 3.4-inch, 720 x 480 IPS display.
The RG34XXSP is immediately appealing for its price, but it's not perfect. The 3:2 screen aspect ratio is good for Game Boy, but it will make later games played on a 4:3 screen, like most consoles, seem squashed. As noted by Russ Crandall at Retro Game Corps, that's less of a problem on the 3.5-inch RG35XXSP display, but that device doesn't include joysticks. At the very least, the RG34XXSP is slightly slimmer at 2.5cm (just under an inch) compared to the 2.7cm RG35XXSP. That's closer to the Game Boy Advance SP's 0.95 inches. For the sake of pocketability, every millimeter matters.
This handheld isn't perfect for everything, and as we get further and further away from the golden age of handheld gaming that ended with the demise of the Nintendo 3DS eShop, we're still waiting for that 'perfect' handheld. The clamshell design offers the most portable option, and handheld maker Miyoo tried its hand at its own SP-inspired device this year with the Miyoo Flip. Users on Reddit have shared numerous anecdotes about the hinge on the device failing. The company released an updated version that was supposed to address the defects, but as Crandall noted in a recent video, the hinge on those units may also fail after enough times slapping it closed. The issue may be isolated to the dark gray model, but we'll need to wait many months more to see if more issues crop up.
Until somebody decides to make an Analogue Pocket-style SP model that supports both FPGA emulation for playing cartridges alongside emulators, I'll just keep waiting on the perfect retro handheld.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Dan Ives Says Market Is 'Massively Underestimating' This AI Play, Urges Investors To Look Beyong Mag 7
Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below. Dan Ives' new artificial intelligence exchange-traded fund (ETF) holds securities beyond the Magnificent 7 stocks, as he believes in looking past valuations for investments in the technology sector. What Happened: The Dan IVES Wedbush AI Revolution ETF (NYSE:IVES), managed by the Wedbush analyst, started trading on June 4, earlier this month. Ives boasts of the fund by saying that it just doesn't have the top four, five Magnificent 7 names, but stocks which investors wouldn't even thematically consider as an AI name today. "I believe the market is still massively underestimating what the growth is going to look like for the AI revolution in tech," he told CNBC. Trending: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing — According to him, tech trade remains significant even for the investors who missed out on its growth in the past few years. "If you focus just on valuation, you miss every transformational tech stock of the last 20 years," Ives said. Ives says Oracle Corp. (NYSE:ORCL) will be the 'epicenter' of the AI theme, while highlighting other 'AI 30' stocks which are part of his fund. Palantir Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ:PLTR), International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE:IBM), Salesforce Inc. (NYSE:CRM), SoundHound AI Inc. (NASDAQ:SOUN), and Innodata Inc. (NASDAQ:INOD) are a few notable names that are a part of his ETF's 'AI 30' basket. Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT), Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ:NVDA), and Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ:AVGO) are the top three holdings of the IVES It Matters: The 'AI 30' stocks, which are a part of the IVES ETF, hold the AI plays from multiple industries. They include hyperscalers, cybersecurity, consumer platforms, and robotics. According to Ives, the list was compiled from his deep dives into major AI players. The ETF has $183 million in assets under management as of June 17 close. Ives said that the AI space was experiencing a "golden age." The Dan IVES Wedbush AI Revolution ETF has risen by 2.76% since its inception. A comparable index, S&P Kensho Global Artificial Intelligence Enablers, rose 6.08% on a month-to-date basis. Meanwhile, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (NASDAQ:QQQ), which track the S&P 500 index and Nasdaq 100 index, respectively, declined slightly on Wednesday. The SPY was down 0.015% at $597.44, while the QQQ was 0.017% lower at $528.99, according to Benzinga Pro data. Read Next: Invest early in CancerVax's breakthrough tech aiming to disrupt a $231B market. Back a bold new approach to cancer treatment with high-growth potential. If there was a new fund backed by Jeff Bezos offering a 7-9% target yield with monthly dividends would you invest in it? Photo courtesy: Shutterstock This article Dan Ives Says Market Is 'Massively Underestimating' This AI Play, Urges Investors To Look Beyong Mag 7 originally appeared on


Forbes
23 minutes ago
- Forbes
Google's Quiet Confirmation Of The Pixel 10
Google's "Talking Phones Podcast" title card Google is having a little bit of fun in its latest iPhone vs Pixel video. While the Pixel 9 Pro takes pride of place, there's also a surprising cameo for what comes next… the Pixel 10. The Pixel 10 Easter Egg The details come at the end of Google's latest promotional video posted on its Made By Google YouTube channel. In it, an iPhone and a Pixel talk about the recent advances made by Apple's smartphone, with a not at all surprised Pixel noting when that feature arrived on Pixel and Android. These include live translation, hold assistance and call screening arriving four, five and seven years ago respectively., Of course, the capabilities of all these features have improved significantly over the last few years, so there are shades of Oranges to (ahem) Apples here, but it makes Google's point effectively. The story of Android being ahead of iOS is here for all to hear. The little easter egg at the end is part of another story, leading into the next Pixel release. The iPhone quietly asks the Pixel 9 Pro, 'so, what are you working on for Pixel 10… just out of curiosity?' Naming The Pixel 10 It's no secret that Google is working on the next family of Pixel smartphones. Neither is it a secret that we're expecting an entry-level Pixel 10, a premium Pixel 10 Pro, a larger Pixel 10 Pro XL and an innovative Pixel 10 Pro Fold. Yet this is the first time Google has publicly acknowledged that the new handsets will carry the Pixel 10 branding. Although the sharp-eared watchers will note that it was the iPhone confirming the new Pixel 10, not the Pixel 9 Pro. So, did Apple confirm the new name, rather than Google? Google is expected to announce the Pixel 10 family at an upcoming Made By Google event. While dates have not been confirmed, talk within the community picks out Wednesday, Aug. 20 for the launch, and Thursday, Aug 28. for the first handsets to go on sale to the public. Now read how the Pixel 10 will impact every Android smartphone in 2025 and beyond…
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
CoreWeave (CRWV) Jumps 8% on Rosy Growth Prospects
CoreWeave, Inc. (NASDAQ:CRWV) is one of the CoreWeave grew its share prices by 7.99 percent on Friday to hit a new all-time high, as investors continued to load up positions amid rosy growth prospects. At intraday trading, shares of CoreWeave, Inc. (NASDAQ:CRWV) jumped as high as 10 percent to hit $187, before paring gains to finish the day at $170, as investors appeared to have flocked to the booming Artificial Intelligence industry for safety to mitigate risks from the ongoing geopolitical tensions. In recent news, CoreWeave, Inc. (NASDAQ:CRWV) announced a record-breaking performance from using 2,496 of Nvidia Corp.'s latest Grace Blackwell Chips on its AI-optimized cloud platform, making its submission the largest-ever benchmarked under MLPerf. In March this year, CoreWeave, Inc. (NASDAQ:CRWV) bagged an $11.9-billion deal with OpenAI and welcomed it as a new investor through the sale of $350 million CRWV stocks to the latter. Last month, OpenAI upsized the deal with another $4 billion worth of contract. A close-up of a network administrator's hands working on a cloud computing server. Last month, it was tapped by Aston Martin Aramco as its official AI cloud computing partner, where it will provide AI-accelerated engineering opportunities to support car design efficiency. While we acknowledge the potential of CRWV as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.