The MSI Claw 8 EX AI+ costs $1,699 and that is gaming laptop money for a handheld

The first handheld with Intel's Arc G3 Extreme has 12 Xe3 GPU cores, 32GB of LPDDR5X, and an 80Wh battery, but at $500 more than the next most expensive portable gaming PC, MSI is betting on a market segment that may not exist


The MSI Claw 8 EX AI+ costs $1,699 and that is gaming laptop money for a handheld Image by: MSI

TL;DR

MSI’s Claw 8 EX AI+ launches June 23 at $1,699 with Intel Arc G3 Extreme, 32GB RAM, and an 8-inch 120Hz display.

MSI’s Claw 8 EX AI+ will launch on June 23 at $1,699, making it the most expensive handheld gaming PC ever sold at retail. The device is the first to ship with Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme processor, built on the Panther Lake platform with 12 Xe3 GPU cores and a 14-core CPU. It is also $500 more than the Lenovo Legion Go 2, which was already the priciest handheld on the market.

The $1,699 figure comes from listings on Newegg and Best Buy, both of which went live this week. MSI’s own online store lists the same configuration at $1,799. The spec sheet includes 32GB of LPDDR5X memory, a 1TB NVMe SSD, an 8-inch 1920×1200 120Hz IPS touch display, and an 80Wh battery.

The Arc G3 Extreme is Intel’s most powerful handheld chip. Its integrated Arc B390 graphics use the Xe3 architecture with support for hardware ray tracing and XeSS 3, Intel’s AI-powered upscaling technology. Intel claims a 44 per cent generational performance improvement over its Lunar Lake predecessor at 1080p with XeSS enabled.

Early simulations suggest the chip can hold 60 frames per second in Spider-Man 2 at 900p medium settings and above 60fps in Cyberpunk 2077 on the Steam Deck graphics preset, both at a 25-watt power envelope. Those numbers, if they hold in retail units, would represent a genuine leap over current handhelds. Intel has not published independent benchmarks, however, and simulated performance frequently overstates real-world results.

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The hardware surrounding the chip is premium. Hall Effect joysticks and triggers eliminate the stick drift that plagues conventional analogue inputs. Dual Thunderbolt 4 ports allow external GPU docking and high-speed data transfer, and Wi-Fi 7 provides multi-gigabit wireless connectivity.

MSI also touts compatibility with Windows 11’s Xbox Mode, formerly Xbox Full Screen Exclusive, which is designed to reduce input latency and improve frame pacing in handheld form factors. The device ships with a Copilot+ PC designation, though the practical value of that branding for a gaming handheld remains unclear.

The price context matters. Valve raised Steam Deck OLED pricing on May 27, pushing the 512GB model from $549 to $789 and the 1TB model from $649 to $949. The ASUS ROG Ally X launched at $999 and the Lenovo Legion Go 2 starts at $1,199.

The MSI Claw 8 EX AI+ sits $500 above all of them.

Every handheld in the category has gotten more expensive this year, and the reason is the same one driving up prices across consumer electronics. LPDDR5X prices surged 250 per cent in the past year as Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron redirected memory production toward AI data centres. DDR5 prices in some markets have risen over 400 per cent.

The 32GB of LPDDR5X inside the Claw 8 EX costs substantially more today than it would have 18 months ago. But component costs only partially explain a $1,699 price tag.

At that figure, the Claw 8 EX is not competing with other handhelds. It is competing with gaming laptops that offer 15-inch or 16-inch displays, full keyboards, upgradeable storage, dedicated cooling systems, and in many cases more powerful discrete GPUs. A $1,699 gaming laptop from ASUS, Lenovo, or MSI’s own lineup will outperform the Claw 8 EX in every metric except portability.

Apple killed its $599 Mac Mini last month because the DRAM shortage made it impossible to sell at that price point. The entire consumer electronics industry is absorbing higher memory costs. MSI’s problem is different: it is asking buyers to pay a premium for portability at a price where portability competes with performance.

The handheld gaming market has grown rapidly since Valve launched the original Steam Deck at $399 in 2022. That price point proved portable PC gaming could be mainstream. Four years later, the category’s flagship device costs more than four times as much. The technology has improved enormously, but the market MSI is targeting with a $1,699 handheld is a narrow one.

The Claw 8 EX AI+ is available for pre-order now from Newegg, Best Buy, and MSI’s online store, with shipping beginning June 23.

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