We have known for quite some time that Sony may be preparing to launch a next-generation PlayStation 6 handheld system alongside the flagship home console, to possibly deliver a cheaper entry-point in the next generation of consoles. As the home system has yet to be formally announced by Sony, we do not know whether the portable system is indeed in active development or whether the leaked specifications are real. However, with a new hardware leak related to the AMD Zen 6 architecture, we have received the very first indication that previous leaks could indeed be correct.
As reported by Guru3D, a recent Linux kernel patch suggests that the AMD Zen 6 architecture will feature a third CPU core type: a low-power core designed to enhance efficiency in background and idle workloads. This marks the first time these low-power cores are mentioned in an official capacity rather than in unverified leaks.
As such, this is significant for the PlayStation 6 handheld, as it validates the leaked specifications and the claim that it will easily outperform handheld competitors like the Xbox ROG Ally X and even the base PlayStation 5 when running games optimized for the handheld form factor.
Leaked PlayStation 6 Handheld Specifications
| Component | Leaked Specification |
| CPU | AMD Zen 6 (6 Cores total: 4 Zen 6c, 2 Zen 6 LP) |
| GPU | AMD RDNA 5 (16 Compute Units) |
| RAM | 24GB LPDDR5X (Estimate) |
| Storage | M.2 NVMe SSD + MicroSD Express |
As the current generation has highlighted how the Xbox Series S, with its lower specs, RAM especially, can be a limiting factor for developers, many are wondering whether this potential PlayStation 6 handheld will also be a limiting factor for next-gen console gaming. As the RAM difference between the portable and home console is said to be less than 30%, this shouldn't be the case, so the system could rightly be PlayStation's way to "provide game experiences that suit increasingly diverse lifestyles," as SIE President Hideaki Nishino said last week in a special interview with Famitsu.
Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.
