ASUS ROG Ally (2023) vs ASUS ROG Ally X

The Ally X is ASUS's fix-everything follow-up to the original Ally: the same Ryzen Z1 Extreme, but with a doubled 80 Wh battery, 24 GB of faster RAM, a 1 TB SSD, USB4/Thunderbolt, and a resolved SD-card-reader defect that plagued the 2023 model. The original Ally is now discontinued and worth considering only used, at a steep discount, given its documented SD-reader failures and stick drift.

Spec comparison

SpecASUS ROG Ally (2023)ASUS ROG Ally X
Starting price$499$799
OSWindows 11Windows 11
Screen size7"7"
PanelIPSIPS
Refresh rate120 Hz120 Hz
Resolution1920 × 1080 (16:9)1920 × 1080 (16:9)
Weight608 g685 g
Battery40 Wh80 Wh
APURyzen Z1Ryzen Z1 Extreme
Max TDP30 W30 W
Hall-effect sticksNoNo
GyroYesYes

ASUS ROG Ally (2023)

Pros

  • Sharp 1080p 120 Hz FreeSync Premium display
  • Z1 Extreme (RDNA 3, 12 CUs) is genuinely fast at 30 W
  • Hall Effect triggers; ROG XG Mobile eGPU option

Cons

  • SD card reader failures — a widely reported, high-severity defect
  • Potentiometer sticks drift; poor repairability
  • Small 40 Wh battery; Windows suspend/Armoury Crate issues

ASUS ROG Ally X

Pros

  • Large 80 Wh battery — roughly double the original
  • 24 GB LPDDR5x, 1 TB M.2 2280, USB4/Thunderbolt
  • Improved grips; gen-1 SD-reader defect resolved

Cons

  • Still potentiometer sticks (Hall triggers only)
  • Windows suspend/resume friction persists
  • Heavier (685 g) and pricier than rivals

Who should buy which

Buy the original Ally only used and heavily discounted — its SD-card-reader defect and 40 Wh battery are real, widely reported drawbacks.

Buy the Ally X for a doubled battery, resolved SD-reader issue, USB4/eGPU support and better ergonomics — it's the complete ROG Ally.

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