After being originally announced in 2016 and experiencing a few delays along the road, including a switch to a new AMD V1000 processor, Smach's new Smach Z handheld PC is finally ready to hit shelves at the end of the year for $699 for the base configuration (we've got more detailed pricing below). Smach had the device on the show floor at E3, so we played a few games and took a closer look at the hardware.

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The Smach Z comes armed with AMD's Ryzen Embedded V105B processor, which we've covered in depth here. The chip's Zen cores and Vega integrated graphics engine powers the 6" 1080p touchscreen, meaning the handheld PC supports standard Radeon graphics drivers and FreeSync.

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

During gameplay, we noticed quite a bit of heat emanating from the fan ports, but that's to be expected with this class of processor packed into such a small device. The Ryzen Embedded V105B has a configurable TDP rating that spans from 12W to 25W, but to conserve battery life, the processor runs at 15W. That restricts performance, as we cover below, but the company is also developing a powered dock that will allow the processor to run at 25W.

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

Battery life is a big concern with small devices packing this much processing power, but the company says the Smach Z will run for six hours on battery and only takes a half hour to charge to 80% (an hour and a half for a full charge). You can also stream to two 4K monitors simultaneously courtesy of the Display Port 1.2 and USB-C ports, but that's going to be quite a stretch for gaming if you want respectable frame rates.

The handheld’s design takes inspiration from Valve’s Steam controller. There are two touchpads on the top. On the left side, there’s a single control stick below the pad, and there are A, B, X, and Y buttons on the right. In theory, you’ll be able to twist the covers off of the pads and add accessories, though Smach hasn’t committed to what those will be or when they will launch, but suggested analog sticks or directional pads. There are also shoulder buttons on the top and paddles on the back.

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I found the pads to be far less accurate than the stick, and luckily, you can customize every button except the power button if you don’t want to rely on them. That customization will be in its Smach Control Center app.

Some of the re-mapping I saw on the show-floor was clever. In Doom, melee attacks and weapon switching were mapped the paddles, and shooting on the shoulder buttons, so I almost never had to move my fingers off of the touchpads except to jump.

Playing games on the handheld was a bit of a mixed bag in a very short period of hands-on play. The Ryzen Embedded V1605B struggled to hit 30 frames per second while fighting a dragon in Monster Hunter World. It hovered around 17 frames per second, and the game stuttered. Because we were just handed demos units with the games on them, we didn’t get to dig into the settings.

It did better on the 2016 version of Doom, staying just over 30 fps, but while there was some combat, it wasn’t the most intense part of the game. Where the Smach showed more might was the lighter, eSports-focused title, Rocket League, in which the game was generally playing around 50 fps. Hopefully, if we bumped the settings down, we’d hit 60 fps consistently.

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Smach plans to integrate optimized game profiles with custom settings for major titles in its software utility, so it's possible the profiles could help improve performance.



The physical unit is a bit heavy when playing. It’s about 600 grams (1.3 pounds). For reference, a Nintendo Switch with controllers is about 398 grams (0.9 pounds) with Joy-Con controllers attached.



(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

Smach Z is in manufacturing now, and the company has opened pre-orders. The base configuration comes with a 64GB M.2 NVMe SSD and 4GB of SODIMM DDR4 memory for $699, with many configurable options. You'll have to pay an extra $99 over the regular price for a copy of Windows 10 IOT, though you can score the device with Linux without paying an up-charge. You can add a camera and beef up the device all the way up to a 256GB SSD and 16GB of memory for $1,299.

Smach also says the device has two separate motherboards, with one housing the processor and RAM, and another the rest of the components. That will allow you to swap out the processor for a newer, faster model in the future, provided you're handy with a screwdriver. If not, Smach will offer a tech support option to handle the upgrade for you.



The company says the Smach Z is in manufacturing and will ship at the end of the year.

