OneXPlayer is pitching a handheld PC built not just for games, but for local AI workloads that usually strain compact hardware. The company has revealed pricing for the X2 Mini Pro, a premium handheld PC, according to Notebookcheck.
The pitch is unusually aggressive for a handheld: AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 388, up to 64 GB RAM, 118 TOPS of AI performance, OpenClaw support, and optional liquid cooling. That combination pushes the X2 Mini Pro closer to a portable workstation than a simple gaming device.
OneXPlayer X2 Mini Pro pricing breaks cover for an 8.8-inch OLED Ryzen AI handheld
OneXPlayer has disclosed pricing for the X2 Mini Pro, but the supplied source material does not provide enough detail to verify exact dollar amounts, launch-date timing, or specific RAM and storage bundles.
The main confirmed pitch is that the handheld will be available with up to 64 GB RAM and optional liquid cooling. OneXPlayer is positioning that setup for users who want stronger sustained performance than a conventional handheld PC typically offers.
| X2 Mini Pro detail | Confirmed in supplied source material | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Processor | AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 388 | Described as an 8-core, 16-thread chip |
| Memory | Up to 64 GB RAM | Exact commercial bundle details are not specified in the supplied excerpt |
| AI performance | 118 TOPS | Presented as a headline AI-performance figure |
| Cooling | Optional liquid cooling | Final accessory and bundle details need confirmation |
At the center is AMD’s Ryzen AI Max+ 388, described as an 8-core, 16-thread chip. Notebookcheck reports the X2 Mini Pro is being promoted with 118 TOPS of AI performance.
That local AI figure is central to the product’s identity. OneXPlayer says the X2 Mini Pro can run OpenClaw, local AI applications, AI chatbots, and popular games.
For readers following MLXIO’s broader coverage of AI hardware, this sits alongside our reporting on local AI mini PC hardware and OLED handheld gaming devices, though OneXPlayer’s new device is being pitched around its own mix of portability, memory, cooling, and local AI capability.
Ryzen AI Max+ 388 and 64 GB RAM push the X2 Mini Pro beyond standard gaming handheld specs
The X2 Mini Pro’s biggest differentiator is not just the processor. It is the way OneXPlayer pairs the Ryzen AI Max+ 388 with up to 64 GB of RAM and an AI-focused software pitch.
That matters because local AI models and large games both punish compact systems. A handheld that targets AI chatbots and demanding games needs more than a fast chip; it needs enough memory and thermal headroom to avoid becoming a spec-sheet novelty.
The supplied source material does not confirm detailed storage expansion limits, display refresh specifications, controller arrangements, keyboard accessories, or battery-replacement claims. Those details will need to be checked against final product listings or independent reviews.
Even without those specifics, the X2 Mini Pro is clearly being positioned above the standard gaming-handheld category. With local AI support in the pitch, OneXPlayer is presenting it as a device that can move between gaming, AI experimentation, and compact PC-style workloads.
The OpenClaw angle needs careful reading. OneXPlayer is saying the handheld is capable of running OpenClaw and AI chatbots locally, but the supplied source material does not verify detailed claims about one-click model deployment or installation steps.
Optional liquid-cooling signals OneXPlayer is chasing sustained handheld performance
The liquid-cooling option is the clearest sign that OneXPlayer expects the X2 Mini Pro to run workloads that outlast a short benchmark. A compact device built around a high-end Ryzen AI chip has to answer one question quickly: how long can it hold performance before heat forces a retreat?
OneXPlayer’s answer is optional liquid cooling, including compatibility with an external cooling setup. The company is positioning that option as a way to support stronger sustained performance, though independent test data is still needed.
That setup creates an obvious trade-off. At a desk, external cooling could help the X2 Mini Pro behave more like a compact performance PC. Away from a desk, the dock becomes another accessory to carry, connect, and power.
The same tension applies to any docked or accessory-heavy setup. Long sessions may benefit from more desk-oriented hardware, but the best-case experience could become less portable than the handheld form factor suggests.
No independent numbers are available in the supplied material for fan noise, sustained wattage, gaming frame rates, AI workload speed, or real-world thermals. The headline specs are strong, but cooling hardware matters only if it changes behavior under load.
That is the key diagnostic point for buyers. The X2 Mini Pro’s spec sheet says “high-end handheld.” Its sustained performance will decide whether the liquid-cooled model is meaningfully different from the air-cooled one.
X2 Mini Pro launch details to track: availability, benchmarks, and final retail bundles
The next checkpoint is the X2 Mini Pro’s launch, where final pricing, bundle contents, and configuration details should become clearer. OneXPlayer has disclosed pricing, but the supplied source material does not specify shipping windows, regional availability, final retail pricing, or whether every RAM configuration will be available at the same time.
Independent testing will matter more than usual here because the product makes two demanding promises at once: high-end gaming performance and local AI capability in a handheld form factor. Reviewers will need to test battery behavior, thermal limits, AI throughput, and the difference between air cooling and the optional liquid-cooling setup.
Accessory details could also change the real cost. The X2 Mini Pro is being discussed with optional cooling and a broader PC-like usage model, but the supplied material does not fully spell out bundle contents, warranty terms, or import availability.
The practical read: the X2 Mini Pro is aimed at enthusiasts who already know they need more memory and local AI headroom in a portable machine. The watch item now is whether OneXPlayer’s cooling and battery design can make those specs usable outside a launch page.
Key Takeaways
- The X2 Mini Pro pushes handheld PCs toward workstation-class local AI and gaming performance.
- Its Ryzen AI Max+ 388, 118 TOPS claim, and up to 64 GB RAM target users who need more than casual portable gaming.
- Missing confirmed pricing, launch timing, and bundle details mean buyers should wait for final retail specifications.










