Conclusions

In the past, we’ve had two very distinct markets at play: handheld consoles with a dedicated ecosystem for gaming, and smartphones for making calls and doing everything online. Trying to bridge the gap between these two markets typically involves starting with one specific device and working towards the middle: the ASUS ROG Phone II starts with the concept of a phone and works towards a dedicated gaming console.

Is this direction the correct way to go? Handheld consoles work great because the hardware is cheap, the gaming titles are dedicated and optimized, and communities build around them. Smartphones work great because of the wealth of apps built for them integrate a lot of device features and enable both a strong workflow and social media integration. Smartphones don’t work great because the game model is substantially different, and handheld consoles don’t do workflow because the app ecosystem isn’t geared that way. It’s a catch-22 either way.

What ASUS wants to do with the ROG Phone II is build one of the best gaming experiences on Android. If we leave handheld consoles to the side for the moment, and imagine what we want out of smartphone gaming on Android, and the ASUS hits a lot of boxes: a high performance SoC with an tuned OS and high performance mode, strong front facing speakers, a high resolution high refresh-rate display, a long life battery, and accessories to help enable a better user experience. Ultimately, ASUS pitches the ROG Phone II as a gaming platform first, that just happens to take phone calls.

But the crux of it all, for me, is that it all comes down to whether gaming on Android is even a thing worth considering. If that is a thing, then ASUS has produced a great solution for it.

Let me put this into two boxes:

At $899, ASUS has created an impressive flagship smartphone that has a long list of bonus features. Dual front facing speakers, 120 Hz display, 6000 mAh battery, high performance, Wi-Gig, the list goes on: all a user has to put up with is a slightly heavier-than-normal device, that just happens to be a phone as well.

At $899, ASUS has created an expensive handheld console. There’s nothing this device can run that a standard flagship smartphone can’t, and at the end of the day our traditional view of a gaming console revolves around unique experiences. What gaming ASUS does enable is some of the best on the Android market, but it’s expensive when compared to something like the Switch.

Would I recommend the ROG Phone II? It’s a lot of hardware as a smartphone. But even though gaming is the focus of the device, I don’t know anyone who buys a smartphone specifically with gaming in mind. For that, handheld consoles do the job.

Daylight Photography Hands-On
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  • asfletch - Tuesday, October 1, 2019 - link

    IKR? Those things were great on the Mega Drive - remember waiting for codes to be published in gaming magazines...gawd I feel old.
  • Flunk - Monday, September 30, 2019 - link

    No hard controls, same hardware as everyone else. This is a cynical marketing exercise, like "gaming" chairs.
  • asfletch - Tuesday, October 1, 2019 - link

    Umm...what about the L and R buttons on the side and the snap-on joypads?
  • s.yu - Tuesday, October 1, 2019 - link

    GSMA's review is more comprehensive.
    It became clear that they really put a lot of work into this small volume device, if this is a "cynical marketing exercise" then what isn't?
  • iranterres - Monday, September 30, 2019 - link

    If you want a true gaming phone, an Android won't be for sure, an iPhone 8 runs circles around it and it's almost half the price.
  • Wardrive86 - Monday, September 30, 2019 - link

    😂 You do notice the Iphone 8 is more towards the bottom of the benchmark charts?
  • Sharma_Ji - Monday, September 30, 2019 - link

    I heard somewhere iPhone doesn't have headphone jack and it takes ages to charge that 3hr. Gaming battery with that 5W charger.
  • hemedans - Thursday, October 3, 2019 - link

    And can it run dolphin, Citra, ps2 emulator, psp emulator etc?
  • Notmyusualid - Sunday, October 6, 2019 - link

    @ iranterres - are you high, or something?
  • mrochester - Tuesday, October 1, 2019 - link

    1) hideous 2) android.

    The two reasons no one should but this phone.

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