Acer’s Predator Atlas 8 Is the First Gaming Handheld With a Metal Fan

Handheld gaming PCs have come a long way in a short time, but two problems follow every device in the category. Performance peaks early in a session and then quietly retreats as thermals climb, and battery life forces a trade-off that no amount of power management has fully resolved. The Steam Deck addressed portability. The ROG Ally pushed performance. Both still leave room for something that takes thermal management seriously at the hardware level.

Acer’s answer is the Predator Atlas 8, a Windows 11 handheld announced at Computex 2026 and built directly from the same engineering philosophy behind the Predator laptop line. Rather than adapting a tablet platform, Acer treated the Atlas 8 as a PC that happens to be handheld, pulling familiar solutions into a smaller chassis. It arrives in North America, EMEA, and Australia in October 2026.

Designer: Acer

The cooling system is the headline. The Predator AeroBlade fan, a fixture in Predator laptops, makes its handheld debut here and brings a genuine first with it: the first metal fan in any gaming handheld. At 89 blades and just 0.1mm of thickness, it delivers up to a 10% increase in airflow compared to a plastic equivalent. A second plastic fan works alongside it, with Vortex Flow tuning directing air through angled internal channels so heat exits faster.

The display is a 16:10, 8-inch WUXGA panel running at 120Hz with Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) support and 500 nits of peak brightness. Corning Gorilla Glass Victus with DXC covers glare and scratch resistance for outdoor play. Audio runs through dual 2 W speakers with DTS:X Ultra, and dual microphones backed by Acer PurifiedVoice AI noise reduction keep voice chat clean even when the game gets loud.

The top configuration pairs the Intel Arc G3 Extreme processor with Intel Arc B390 graphics, adding ray tracing support and Intel XeSS 3 AI-powered upscaling to sustain high frame rates during heavy GPU workloads. Paired with an 80Wh battery and Intel Endurance Gaming, which balances frame rate against power draw dynamically, the Atlas 8 makes a credible case for longer sessions away from a wall without sacrificing visual quality.

The trigger system earns its own mention. A physical switch on each trigger toggles between two distinct response modes on the fly. Micro-switch mode provides an instant click suited to first-person shooters, while Hall-effect analog mode gives racing games and flight simulators the full pressure range they need. Switching between the two mid-session takes a moment, not a menu.

PredatorSense makes its handheld debut here, too. The app, which has been a cornerstone of Predator laptops for years, now sits behind a dedicated button on the device, bringing live system monitoring, performance modes, RGB lighting, and gameplay settings into one fast-access dashboard. XBOX Mode and an included XBOX Game Pass subscription reduce the friction of getting into a library of hundreds of titles from the first boot.

Memory reaches up to 24 GB of LPDDR5x, storage goes up to 1 TB via PCIe Gen 4, and the Atlas 8 weighs under 810 g with the larger battery. Dual Thunderbolt 4 ports, Intel Killer Wi-Fi 7, and Bluetooth 5.4 round out the connectivity. Pricing hasn’t been confirmed, but for a handheld that’s drawing from a decade of Predator laptop engineering, October 2026 can’t come fast enough.