The OneXFly F1 Pro from OneXPlayer represents a distinct design philosophy in the handheld PC space: prioritize portability and visual quality over raw performance headroom or feature maximalism. The result is a thin-and-light chassis that manages to house the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 and a 7-inch OLED panel running at 144Hz — a combination that would not look out of place on a device costing several hundred dollars more in a thicker shell. The HX 370's Radeon 890M graphics perform well in the 15–25W range that thin-and-light thermal constraints typically impose. For moderately demanding games and the broad middle of the Steam library, the F1 Pro delivers smooth and visually impressive results on its OLED panel. In more demanding AAA titles at maximum settings, the thinner chassis will reach its thermal limits faster than thicker competitors like the AYANEO 3 or Legion Go 2, meaning sustained peak performance is more constrained than the silicon numbers alone suggest. Starting at approximately $1,099 and above depending on configuration, the F1 Pro is not a budget proposition. Buyers are paying primarily for the OLED display, the HX 370 silicon, and the significantly reduced physical footprint compared to equally specified alternatives. OneXPlayer's software ecosystem is less mature than Lenovo's or ASUS's — the firmware and companion application quality lag behind what the larger OEMs deliver, though core Windows functionality is unaffected. For frequent travelers, commuters, or players who genuinely prioritize carrying weight and bag space above all else, the OneXFly F1 Pro is the most capable thin-and-light OLED handheld available. Those priorities require compromise elsewhere, but for the right user, the trade is worth it.
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