2025 is shaping up to be the year handheld gaming fans become truly spoiled for choice. In addition to the solid lineup of devices already out there, MSI is launching its Lunar Lake-powered Claw 8 AI+, there’s an intriguing entry from Ayaneo featuring modular controllers, and strong rumors of an officially licensed SteamOS device plus upgraded Legion Go 2 from Lenovo. Now, Atari is entering the ring with a device aimed squarely at retro gaming enthusiasts.

It’s called the Gamestation Go, and it was announced today on X (formerly Twitter) via this reveal trailer:

A joint venture from Atari and MyArcade, the Gamestation Go has two features that immediately distinguish it from both retro-focused handhelds (like the Anbernic RG34XX) and more advanced modern devices like Steam Deck. Yep, a built-in Trak-ball, Paddle, and Keypad.

Theoretically, this means the Gamestation Go should support not just the massive variety of arcade games from Atari’s library, but also all the titles that benefited from Trak-ball (think Centipede, Missile Command), Paddle (Breakout), and Keypad controls (such as Codebreaker and Star Raiders among others). Intellivision support is a given, and I bet we’ll see Jaguar games join the party, too.

The additional hardware opens lots of fun doors for compatibility, but the absence of traditional sticks definitely rules out modern games. That means the horsepower inside the Gamestation Go won’t be too powerful.

It also begs the question: why a 16:9 display?

At CES 2024, Atari actually unveiled an early prototype of this handheld under the name “Gamestation Portable.” That device was supposed to launch in Q4 2024 for $149. The Gamestation Go looks to be the final version and will be previewed in more detail next week. Unfortunately we don’t have a firm launch window or price to share yet. Once CES 2025 kicks off on Monday, hopefully we’ll know all the important speeds and feeds.

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