abxylute 3D One brings glasses-free native 3D to handheld gaming
Explore abxylute 3D One, a portable gaming PC with an 11-inch parallax-barrier display, eye tracking, and Intel Core Ultra 7 for native glasses-free 3D gaming.
Explore abxylute 3D One, a portable gaming PC with an 11-inch parallax-barrier display, eye tracking, and Intel Core Ultra 7 for native glasses-free 3D gaming.
© abxylute
abxylute has unveiled 3D One, billed as the first and currently the only portable gaming PC capable of running modern titles in native 3D without any glasses. The device pairs an 11-inch parallax-barrier display with next‑generation eye tracking and Intel’s Core Ultra 7 258V processor, which supplies the muscle for demanding, multi‑stream 3D rendering on the move.
The company says delivering full-fledged 3D in games on the go is exceptionally challenging: each scene has to be broken into multiple perspectives in fractions of a second and then reassembled without lag. According to CEO Donald Zhang, the mix of modern panels, powerful AI accelerators, and accessible content now makes high‑quality glasses‑free 3D feasible. The pitch sounds ambitious, but the direction tracks with where handheld graphics have been heading.
The headline feature of 3D One is native 3D rendering that pulls depth information directly from the game engine rather than relying on third‑party mods. Every component of the scene—backgrounds, characters, effects, the interface—is rendered separately. That approach reduces latency, cuts down on double images, and aims for that vivid pop‑out effect. By the end of November, more than 50 optimized games on Steam are slated to be available, with the catalog set to grow.
The device also supports instant 2D‑to‑3D conversion. With a single tap, films, streaming video, older games, or even photos can be turned into stereoscopic images. Players can mix modes, keeping 3D for action-heavy moments and switching back to 2D in menus or calmer scenes—an option that should make the transition feel more natural.
Hardware-wise, the build targets 3D workloads. The 11‑inch 2K screen is tuned for depth and comfort, while eye tracking with a ±20° range widens the viewing sweet spot. The Core Ultra 7 258V delivers up to 115 TOPS of AI performance for depth analysis. The unit also includes Hall‑effect sticks and triggers, a touchpad, rear buttons, and supports multiple setups: as a tablet, a handheld, or a mini‑PC paired with a stand and keyboard. On paper, the spec sheet looks purpose‑built for its 3D brief.
The Kickstarter preorder price is $1,499. The first 80 units are scheduled to ship in December, with the rest following in February.