ONEXPLAYER · X1 Pro
ONEXPLAYER X1 Pro
High-end 3-in-1 hybrid · Active — current flagship X1-series hybrid
The X1 Pro is ONEXPLAYER's flagship hybrid, pairing HX 370 with confirmed OCuLink eGPU support in the same 10.95" 3-in-1 chassis as the original X1. A limited-run Intel Arrow Lake-H "Eva Edition" pushes price to $1,650. It's unambiguously the largest and heaviest device in ONEXPLAYER's range — NotebookCheck calls it "quite heavy as a handheld" — but the connectivity and performance ceiling are class-leading.
Pros
- HX 370 with confirmed OCuLink eGPU support plus 2× USB4
- Sharp 10.95" 2.5K 120 Hz touchscreen at 500 nits
- Genuine 3-in-1 flexibility: tablet, handheld, laptop
Cons
- Largest and heaviest device in the ONEXPLAYER range — "quite heavy as a handheld" per NotebookCheck
- 8840U base-tier pricing is unconfirmed and mostly sold out
- Eva Edition (Intel Arrow Lake-H) is a limited, expensive run at $1,649.99
Also in
Configurations
Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 · 32 GB · 1 TB
Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 · RDNA 3.5 (16 CUs — Radeon 890M @ 2.9 GHz) · 12c / 24t · 30 W sustained TDP · 32 GB · 1 TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe (M.2 2280)
$1,399 current sale (was $1,599 MSRP) $1,399 (as of 29 Jun 2026)
Check price →Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 · 64 GB · 4 TB
Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 · RDNA 3.5 (16 CUs — Radeon 890M @ 2.9 GHz) · 12c / 24t · 30 W sustained TDP · 64 GB · 4 TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe (M.2 2280)
~$1,799 (estimated from store configurator) $1,799 (as of 29 Jun 2026)
Check price →Ryzen 7 8840U · 32 GB · 1–2 TB
Ryzen 7 8840U · RDNA 3 (12 CUs — Radeon 780M) · 8c / 16t · 30 W sustained TDP · 32 GB · 1 TB or 2 TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe (M.2 2280)
~$1,199–$1,399 estimated; exact price unconfirmed, sold out in most configs $1,199 (as of 29 Jun 2026)
Check price →Intel Core Ultra 7 255H · Eva Edition · 64 GB · 2 TB
Core Ultra 7 255H · Intel Arc 140T (Xe2 / Battlemage-class) · ~28–45 W (unconfirmed) TDP · 64 GB · 2 TB
$1,649.99 — limited-edition run via Minixpc $1,650 (as of 29 Jun 2026)
Check price →Display
- Size
- 10.95"
- Panel
- IPS
- Resolution
- 2560 × 1600 (2.5K, 16:10)
- Refresh rate
- 120
- Brightness
- 500 nits
- Touch
- Yes
Controls & input
- Hall-effect sticks
- Yes
- Triggers
- Hall Effect
- Layout
- Detachable side controllers with back buttons; magnetic keyboard sold separately
Battery & power
- Capacity
- 65.5 Wh
Build & ergonomics
- Weight
- 789 g
- Dimensions
- 312 × 131 × 21.2 mm
- Materials
- Aluminum alloy frame + ABS
- Notes
- NotebookCheck: "the largest member of the ONEXPLAYER family" — "quite heavy as a handheld," takes some getting used to
Connectivity & ports
- Ports
- OCuLink + 2× USB4 (Thunderbolt 4 ×2 on the Intel Eva edition)
- USB4 / Thunderbolt
- Yes — 2× USB4 / Thunderbolt 4 on the Intel variant
- External GPU
- OCuLink confirmed by NotebookCheck ("OCUlink to connect an eGPU") plus 2× USB4
- Wi-Fi
- Wi-Fi 6E
- Bluetooth
- 5.3
Reliability & common issues
- Ergonomicslow
Droix (4.6/5): "larger and heavier than other handhelds" listed as a con; NotebookCheck agrees the size takes getting used to
FAQ
How much does the ONEXPLAYER X1 Pro cost?
The ONEXPLAYER X1 Pro starts from $1,199 (as of 29 Jun 2026). Pricing varies by configuration and retailer — check the latest on Amazon.
What operating system does the ONEXPLAYER X1 Pro run?
It runs Windows 11 — full access to every PC storefront and anti-cheat, with more UI friction than SteamOS.
Does the ONEXPLAYER X1 Pro have Hall-effect sticks?
Yes — the ONEXPLAYER X1 Pro uses Hall-effect analog sticks, which use magnets instead of contact potentiometers and don’t develop drift over time.
Sources & data quality
Compiled from manufacturer specs and independent reviews. Last verified 29 Jun 2026. Unknown values are left blank rather than guessed.
Recorded conflicts
- apu (8840U variant): onexplayer.bg's spec page for "X1 Pro" describes the base/entry 8840U variant released first, with LPDDR5-6400 (not 7500) — likely a downclocked RAM config versus the primary HX 370 SKU.


