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5) Sega Game Gear

Segaโs answer to the handheld market was the Game Gear, an 8-bit system with a color display, released in North America and Europe in 1991. It featured a full-color, backlit screen, a powerful CPU, and a landscape form factor, making it one of the most technologically superior handhelds released during the early 1990s. It featured over 350 games in its library, which are excellent additions to existing franchises, including several Sonic titles. While it suffered from a short battery life, causing gamers to go through AA batteries like they were going out of style, it offered an entertaining, portable gaming experience beloved by those who had the opportunity to play it.
4) Sony PlayStation Portable

When Sony entered the handheld market in 2005, it did so with the PlayStation Portable. The console was meant to compete with the Nintendo DS, and it featured significantly better hardware, sound, and graphics capabilities. It also boasted a 4.3โ backlit, widescreen TFT LCD, which made it a standout at the time. The PSP had more memory, better storage options, could play movies, and its games were comparable to those released on the PlayStation 2 and 3. While some didnโt appreciate its proprietary Universal Media Disc format, these offered superior storage, allowing for larger games, though with longer load times. Sony continued improving the handheld, releasing several models over the years.
3) Valve Steam Deck

Steam is filled with more games than anyone can play in a lifetime, but they were limited to laptop and desktop computers for a long time. That changed with the release of Valveโs first handheld, the Valve Steam Deck, in 2022. Unlike traditional handheld consoles, the Steam Deck is, first and foremost, a computer. It runs SteamOS, a Linux-based operating system, and itโs loaded with powerful hardware. This allows the Steam Deck to run anything available on Steam, and one of its best benefits is the library: any games you own on Steam are available. There is a dock you can buy to use on an external monitor, but at its core, the Steam Deck is a handheld system.











