Ayaneo launched the Pocket Fit in mid-2025 as a Snapdragon-powered Android gaming handheld, and it has now brought that compact form factor and minimalist design over to the Windows gaming handheld world with the Ayaneo Konkr Fit. The new Konkr Fit bumps up the screen size from the 6-incher on the Pocket Fit to a 7-inch, 1080p, 16:9 OLED display, and moves away from the Arm architecture entirely, opting instead for the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 470, which is a 12-core Zen 5 CPU with the 16-CU Radeon 890M iGPU. Ayaneo has also confirmed that the display will be capable of 800 nits of brightness. It has not yet been confirmed, but the Konkr Fit is likely to use the same Hall effect joysticks and triggers as the Pocket Fit. It will seemingly have dual USB-C ports along the top edge. In terms of physical dimensions, it looks almost identical to the ASUS ROG Ally, if not somewhat smaller in terms of the top-to-bottom measurement.

In the announcement video, Ayaneo shows off the TDP configuration overlay, and it seems as though the APU will be able to reach 40 W or go down to as low as 3 W. How it manages to stay cool at those high TDPs is yet to be seen, but Ayaneo did show the gaming handheld running Black Myth: Wukong on the video as well. The battery is slated to be an 80 Wh unit, which should be plenty for the small OLED screen and with the APU restricted to lower power consumption. The diminutive handheld will compete directly with the likes of the ASUS ROG Ally X and the Lenovo Legion Go 2, both of which feature similarly powerful AMD APUs and run on Windows. Pricing and availability have yet to be confirmed, although it’s unlikely to be cheap, given the current trends in PC hardware and pricing.