Gaming handhelds have become surprisingly expensive. Between premium models like the Steam Deck, ASUS ROG Ally, and Lenovo Legion Go, getting a portable gaming machine often means spending hundreds of dollars before you’ve even bought a game.
Acer’s latest idea takes a very different approach. Announced alongside a flood of new products, the Nitro Blaze Link is a handheld gaming device that doesn’t actually run games itself. Instead, it streams them from a compatible gaming laptop, turning your Predator or Nitro notebook into a personal gaming server. If that sounds familiar, that’s because the concept isn’t entirely new. Tools like Steam Link, Moonlight, and Parsec have been doing similar things for years. What Acer is betting on is convenience.
A gaming handheld without the expensive bits
The logic behind the Nitro Blaze Link is fairly straightforward. If your gaming laptop is already doing all the heavy lifting, why pay for another processor, graphics chip, storage drive, and cooling system inside a handheld? By stripping away all that, Acer can theoretically deliver a handheld gaming experience at a fraction of the cost of traditional gaming portables. The company has priced the Nitro Blaze Link at $180, making it dramatically cheaper than a Steam Deck or ROG Ally.
The appeal is easy to understand. Instead of balancing a gaming laptop on your lap, you could kick back on the couch and keep playing on a dedicated handheld with built-in controls and a larger display than most smartphones. It’s a clever idea, but one that comes with a giant asterisk.
The entire experience depends on your network
Unlike a Steam Deck, which runs games locally, the Nitro Blaze Link lives and dies by the quality of your wireless connection. Acer says the device uses Wi-Fi 6 technologies designed to improve efficiency and reduce congestion, but streaming is still streaming. Network hiccups, latency spikes, router limitations, and crowded home networks can all affect the experience. Even the host laptop’s performance is part of the equation.

Then there’s compatibility. Acer’s wording suggests the Blaze Link is designed around Predator and Nitro gaming laptops, though the company stops short of explicitly saying it won’t work elsewhere. That’s likely to raise questions from PC gamers who already have powerful systems outside Acer’s ecosystem. In some ways, the Nitro Blaze Link feels like a handheld built for people who already own a gaming laptop but don’t want to buy a second gaming machine. For $180, that’s an intriguing proposition. Whether gamers embrace it may depend on a simple question: Is a cheaper handheld worth the trade-off of always needing another computer for the actual gaming?
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