Lenovo’s Legion Go 2 Now Comes With SteamOS
The biggest, costliest, and most enticing handheld now has a better OS and price.
The Lenovo Legion Go 2 was large, awkward, and full of odd design choices, like its awkward FPS mouse sensor. And yet, I returned to it again and again in the tail end of 2025 as my constant gaming companion, not the least because it was powerful and sported a beautiful OLED display. At CES 2026, Lenovo announced it will offer its handheld with a better operating system at a slightly cheaper price.
The Legion Go 2 that arrived in 2025 included Windows 11, though it still lacks support for the FSE (full screen experience) featured on the Asus ROG Xbox Ally and Xbox Ally X. Lenovo’s new version of the Legion Go 2 contains the same specs as the top-end version from last year. That includes an AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme processor, 32GB of RAM, and options up to 2TB of storage. The big difference this time around is SteamOS. It’s a Linux-based operating system created by Valve that enables an easy console-like experience.

The Legion Go 2 with SteamOS includes a new Steam button to access your menus. © Kyle Barr / Gizmodo
In Gizmodo’s own tests, we ran the Legion Go 2 with Windows 11 and compared it to the same hardware running Bazzite. That is another Linux-based OS modeled after SteamOS. In benchmarks, we regularly saw higher frames per second on the SteamOS handheld, between two, five, and even 10 fps more in some games. SteamOS won’t provide an easy way to access all your games tied to your Xbox account, but there are several ways to install games from the Epic Games Store and other launchers like GOG.
Lenovo says it plans to launch the revised Legion Go 2 in June with a $1,200 asking price. That’s better than the $1,350 for the Windows 11 version. Lenovo did not say whether it will offer a cheaper SteamOS edition with a less-powerful Ryzen Z2 chip. The Legion Go S from 2025 includes variations with either a less-powerful Ryzen Z2A processor for $650 or a more expensive model with a Ryzen Z1 Extreme. Still, the version of that handheld with SteamOS outperformed the model with Windows 11 in both cases.

The Lenovo Legion 5i could offer an affordable way into the realm of OLED gaming laptops. © Kyle Barr / Gizmodo
Lenovo also plans to ship several cheaper gaming laptops in 2026. This includes devices like the 15-inch Lenovo Legion 5i that packs an OLED display, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060 GPU, and a new Intel Core Ultra 386H processor. That laptop starts at $1,550, though the $2,000 16-inch Legion 7a is also enticing since it has a new AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 CPU and up to 64GB of RAM. With RAM prices being what they are, you can expect higher-end devices to cost more when they hit the scene sometime in April.
Gizmodo is on the ground in Las Vegas all week bringing you everything you need to know about the tech unveiled at CES 2026. You can follow our CES live blog here and find all our coverage here.