It's basically a Nintendo Switch Lite running Android. As someone who played with the Switch Lite over the years, however, I believe Ayn's hardware is more superior.

The 5.98-inch 1080p LCD is bigger and sharper. The grips are more comfortable and house useful customizable rear buttons. The D-pad appears to be identical to the PlayStation Vita’s, which is a very good thing.

Up top, there’s a power button, a volume rocker, an exhaust for the fan, and a flap that covers a microSD card slot and a Micro HDMI port. Overall, build quality is impressive. comes in a Super Nintendo-style grey and purple colorway.

The $287 Odin Pro, which has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage.

The $239 non-Pro Odin has the same Snapdragon 845 and 64GB of storage and 4GB of RAM.

The $198 Odin Lite also has 64GB of storage and 4GB of RAM & comes wih newer MediaTek Dimensity D90.

The Odin is equipped with active cooling, making it capable of running the processor at its maximum speed for a longer time, in contrast to thin smartphones which do not have fans and must reduce their performance in order to remain cool.

The Odin is a really great device for streaming games, as long as you’re in Wi-Fi range. It has all the controls you need, and its big 16:9 display is the perfect size and sharpness.

The Pro version has a 6,000mAh battery, which is bigger than any phone, while the regular Odin and Odin Lite’s are a still-pretty-big 5,000mAh. The Odin and Odin Pro support Qualcomm’s Quick Charge up to 4.0+, while Ayn claims the Lite has unspecified “fast charging.”

The Odin’s software is essentially stock Android 10 — the Lite model has Android 11 — with Google services included, as well as an optional launcher. this launcher found useful for system-level features like adjusting fan speed and the LED lights