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OneXSugar Pro

Source: brand press / retailer

OneXPlayer · Handheld Console

OneXSugar Pro

A foldable Windows handheld with dual screens — gaming form factor on one side, tablet/laptop on the other. AMD Ryzen 7 8840U, 7" + 5" displays. At $1,299 it's the most experimental device on this list. Buy if novel form factors interest you and you can absorb the cost. Practical use case is narrow.

Quick Answer

Is the OneXSugar Pro worth buying in 2026?

The OneXSugar offers a genuinely unique hardware experience with its dual OLEDs and capable Snapdragon chip, making it a dream for DS/3DS emulation. However, the top-heavy design, awkward rear buttons, and unrefined software make it a risky Indiegogo gamble. Wait to see if OneXPl

3.9
out of 5.0
Good
Wait

The OneXSugar offers a genuinely unique hardware experience with its dual OLEDs and capable Snapdragon chip, making it a dream for DS/3DS emulation.

Aggregated from 3 reviews across YouTube, Reddit, and Amazon

+Pros

  • Innovative transforming dual-screen design perfect for DS/3DS emulation
  • Vibrant dual OLED displays
  • Strong emulation performance via the Snapdragon G3 Gen 3 chip
  • Clever magnetic, swappable D-pad
  • High-quality included carrying case

Cons

  • Extremely top-heavy and awkward to hold in vertical/DS mode
  • Poorly placed shoulder and trigger buttons on the back of the device
  • Unrefined prototype build quality with cheap-feeling plastics
  • Battery life struggles to power dual screens at full performance
  • Software setup for emulators is overly complicated and lacks Google Play out of the box

In-depth Review

OneXSugar Pro Review — A wildly innovative but deeply flawed prototype attempts to resurrect the dual-screen handheld era

Read Full Review →

Specifications

cpuAMD Ryzen 7 8840U
gpuAMD Radeon 780M
ram32 GB LPDDR5X
storage1 TB / 2 TB NVMe
displayMain 7" 1080p 120Hz + Secondary 5" 720p
battery60 Wh
weight720 g

Why this exists

A foldable form factor that converts between gaming console (controllers + main screen) and a tablet/laptop hybrid (secondary screen + on-screen keyboard). Genuinely novel hardware engineering. Whether you need it is a different question — for most users, no.

Last updated: April 30, 2026 · By Marcus Chen

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