AMD Radeon 780M RDNA 3 iGPU in the New AOKZOE A1 Pro Handheld Gaming Console Competes Favorably with RTX 2050 and GTX 1650 Ti

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Image: AOKZOE

AOKZOE has unveiled its next flagship gaming handheld which features a powerful AMD Radeon 780M iGPU with 12 compute units and a clock frequency of 2700 MHz. The AOKZOE A1PRO is powered by an AMD Ryzen 7 7840U 8-core/16-thread processor built on the 4nm process that can boost up to 5.1 GHz (3.3 GHz base) and has a combined cache of 24 MB (L2/8 MB, L3/16 MB). AOKZOE has published slides showing the new iGPU competing favorably with a few of NVIDIA’s older budget desktop graphics cards. The AMD 780M RDNA 3 was seen trading blows with an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2050 where it bested in Time Spy, but narrowly lost in Fire Strike. It was bested by the GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, but not by much.

“The A1 Pro is powered by an AMD Radeon780M with RDNA3 architecture, with 12 CUs and 768 SPs. The display frequency of GPU can reach 2700MHz. AMD Radeon780M graphics have performance that compares to graphics cards such as the GTX 1650 TI and RTX2050.”

Image: AOKZOE

Phoenix Rising

The AMD 780M RDNA 3 is only icing on the cake though as the AMD Ryzen 7 7840U has plenty to show off as well. With a TDP of 28 Watts the mobile processor is seen performing well against an Intel i7-12700H and its own AMD predecessors. This is the same processor that AMD recently posted its own internal benchmarks showing it outperforming an Apple M2 and Intel Core i7-1360P.

As if that isn’t enough for a mobile processor, per AMD’s specifications page, it also supports LPDDR5X 7500 Mhz memory up to 256 GB, although the A1 PRO tops at LPDDR5X 6400 MHz up to 64 GB. Supported operating systems include Windows 10/11 64-bit, RHEL x86 64-Bit, and Ubuntu x86 64-Bit.

AOKZOE A1 Pro Specs

The AOKZOE A1 Pro is currently available on Indiegogo with the base model, 32 GB memory, and 512 GB storage going for $799. For $50 more the storage can be upgraded to 1 TB. The 64 GB / 2 TB model is listed for $1,159.

Image: AOKZOE

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Peter Brosdahl
As a child of the 70’s I was part of the many who became enthralled by the video arcade invasion of the 1980’s. Saving money from various odd jobs I purchased my first computer from a friend of my dad, a used Atari 400, around 1982. Eventually it would end up being a lifelong passion of upgrading and modifying equipment that, of course, led into a career in IT support.

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