Best Handheld Gaming PC Under $500

The handhelds that genuinely start at $500 or less in 2026 — led by the $399 Steam Deck LCD, still the best-value way into PC handheld gaming.

By FinalBoss Hardware TeamHow we research & verifyLast verified Mon Jun 29 2026 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Handheld gaming PC pricing crept upward through 2025 and into 2026 — most of the field now starts between $600 and $1,150. But a few genuinely good devices still land at or under $500, and the cheapest of them is also one of the best. As of this compilation, three handhelds in our database start at $500 or less: the Steam Deck LCD at $399, and the Lenovo Legion Go S (SteamOS) and original ASUS ROG Ally at $499 each.

What to look for at this price

SteamOS punches above its price. Two of the three picks here run SteamOS, and it's a real advantage at the budget end: a console-style interface, strong battery efficiency, and — on the Legion Go S — measurably better performance than the identical hardware running Windows. If you don't specifically need Windows, SteamOS is the easier, longer-lasting experience.

Hall Effect vs. potentiometer sticks matters more at the budget end. The original ROG Ally uses potentiometer sticks, and stick drift is one of the most-cited complaints against it. The Legion Go S uses genuine Hall-effect sticks and triggers, which resist that kind of wear-related drift by design. (The Steam Deck's sticks are potentiometer too, but it's rarely singled out for drift the way the Ally is.)

Check what "$499" actually gets you. The Ally's $499 price is for the base Ryzen Z1 configuration, not the faster Z1 Extreme (which starts at $699). The Legion Go S's $499 tier is likewise the entry point of a range that goes up from there — read the configuration details on each product page before you buy.

Which should you buy?

For most people, the Steam Deck LCD at $399 is the answer: it's the cheapest option, the software is the most mature in the category, and the trackpads and gyro give it input flexibility the others can't match. It's the handheld we'd hand a first-time buyer without hesitation.

Step up to the Legion Go S (SteamOS) if you want a bigger 8-inch 120 Hz screen and Hall-effect sticks and can stretch to $499. And choose the ROG Ally (2023) only if you specifically want Windows at this price — just go in aware of the SD-card and stick-drift issues that follow this model, and budget for the possibility of a repair down the line.

  1. 1
    Valve Steam Deck (LCD)

    from $399

    SteamOS7" LCD669 g40 Wh

    The best handheld under $500, full stop. At $399 the 256 GB LCD is still sold by Valve, runs the mature SteamOS software, and pairs dual haptic trackpads and gyro with a 7-inch 60 Hz screen. You give up the OLED model's brighter panel and bigger battery, but nothing else here matches its price-to-polish.

  2. 2
    Lenovo Legion Go S (SteamOS)

    from $499

    SteamOS8" IPS736 g55.5 Wh

    The step-up SteamOS pick if you want a bigger, faster screen. At $499 it brings genuine Hall-effect sticks and triggers and an 8-inch 120 Hz display, and — per Notebookcheck's testing — runs markedly more efficiently than the same chassis on Windows.

  3. 3
    ASUS ROG Ally (2023)

    from $499

    Windows 117" IPS608 g40 Wh

    The budget Windows option: the base Ryzen Z1 configuration starts at $499 with a 1080p 120 Hz FreeSync display and Hall Effect triggers. It's discontinued and carries two well-documented issues — a heat-adjacent SD card reader prone to failure, and potentiometer stick drift — so buy with eyes open.

FAQ

What's the best handheld gaming PC under $500?

The $399 Steam Deck LCD. It's the cheapest device here, and its mature SteamOS software, trackpads and gyro make it the most polished sub-$500 handheld you can buy. If you'd rather have a bigger, faster screen and Hall-effect sticks, the $499 Lenovo Legion Go S (SteamOS) is the step up.

Is the Steam Deck LCD still worth buying in 2026?

Yes — at $399 it remains the best-value entry into PC handheld gaming. It's the same core experience as the pricier OLED model, minus the brighter OLED panel, the slightly larger battery and a bit of extra performance headroom. For most first-time buyers on a budget, the LCD is the smart pick.

Is the original ROG Ally worth buying at $499 in 2026?

With caveats. It's discontinued, and the two most-cited hardware issues — an SD card reader positioned near heat that has damaged cards for some owners, and drift-prone potentiometer sticks — are real, documented problems rather than rare edge cases. If you can live with those risks, the base Z1 configuration at $499 is still a capable 1080p 120 Hz Windows handheld.