
Most gaming handhelds today, from Steam Deck to ROG Ally, are big, loud slabs that look like shrunken consoles. They are great for playing, less great for slipping into a bag without announcing themselves. The category has settled into a familiar silhouette, thick bezels, and aggressive angles that scream gaming from across the room. ONEXSUGAR’s Wallet asks what happens if a handheld tries to look more like something you would quietly carry every day.
The ONEXSUGAR Wallet is a foldable-screen gaming handheld that, when closed, looks like an oversized wallet or clutch, a long, rounded rectangle with almost no visible tech. The name comes from this closed state, where it reads more like a personal object than a console. You can hold or pocket it without broadcasting that you are carrying a gaming PC, treating discretion as a core part of the design rather than an afterthought.
Designer: One-Netbook (via ITHome)

The Wallet uses a clamshell design with a flexible display inside. When you open it, the screen unfolds into a single large canvas, one continuous display bending at the hinge like a foldable phone scaled up to handheld size. That lets ONEXSUGAR keep the closed footprint small while giving games and media more room to breathe when you flip it open, reconciling portability with a genuinely usable screen.



Once open, the Wallet reveals a familiar handheld layout, a central screen flanked by controls on the left and right. Each side has an analog stick, a D-pad or face buttons, and additional inputs and speaker grilles. The controls are baked into the chassis, not detachable, so the whole thing feels like a single, unified object rather than a tablet with clip-on gamepads, which should help with rigidity and ergonomics.


The aesthetic language leans soft and minimal, with heavily rounded corners, smooth surfaces, and almost no branding. Early shots show at least white and dark grey versions, with small gold accents and a subtle logo. It looks more like lifestyle tech than aggressive gamer gear, the kind of device that would not look out of place next to a phone and earbuds on a table, which is an unusual stance for a gaming product.


The wallet-like shape and clamshell closure change the relationship between device and user. Closed, it protects the screen and hides the controls, making it easier to toss into a bag or carry in hand without worrying about sticks catching or buttons being pressed. Opened, and it becomes a full-fledged handheld. That duality could make it more practical for people who want serious gaming hardware that does not dominate their everyday carry.

The ONEXSUGAR Wallet hints at a future where foldable screens reconcile big displays with discreet objects, and where handhelds borrow cues from wallets and clutches instead of only from consoles. It is still a tease rather than a shipping product, but as a piece of industrial design thinking, it suggests that gaming hardware can afford to be softer, quieter, and a bit more playful about how it shows up in the world.
