AMD reportedly pauses Ryzen Z1 drivers for gaming handhelds

Reports suggest AMD Ryzen Z1 handheld driver updates have stalled across devices like the Legion Go and ROG Ally. The post AMD reportedly pauses Ryzen Z1 drivers for gaming handhelds appeared first on Digital Trends.

AMD reportedly pauses Ryzen Z1 drivers for gaming handhelds

Owners of handheld gaming PCs powered by AMD’s Ryzen Z1 chips may have reason to feel uneasy. What started as a support message regarding the Lenovo Legion Go has quickly turned into a broader concern that driver updates for the Ryzen Z1 and Z1 Extreme platform may have slowed or even paused across multiple devices.

A Legion Go sits on a table with its controllers dethatched.Giovanni Colantonio / Digital Trends

The situation first came to light when Lenovo Korea reportedly informed customers that the original Legion Go would not receive further BIOS or driver updates. Instead, users were advised to rely on Windows Update and generic AMD drivers, where compatible. Now, additional reports suggest the issue may extend to ASUS’s popular ROG Ally, another flagship Ryzen Z1 Extreme handheld. According to user reports, the device appears to be stuck on graphics drivers dating back to August 2025, with no newer releases despite several major game launches since then.

Is handheld driver support quietly stalling?

This detail matters because the ROG Ally and Legion Go are the two most recognizable Windows gaming handhelds powered by AMD’s custom Z1 silicon. If both devices are relying on older drivers, it suggests the slowdown could be happening at the platform level rather than being isolated to a single manufacturer.

Starfield running on the Asus ROG Ally.Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Adding to the confusion, Lenovo forum posts also warn users not to install Legion Go S drivers on the original Legion Go. Interestingly, the Legion Go S uses the Z2 Go chip based on the older Zen 3 architecture, while the Z1 Extreme, whose updates now appear to have stalled, is built on the newer Zen 4 architecture. The generational mismatch makes cross-installation risky and further limits options for affected users.

Driver updates play a crucial role in handheld gaming performance. They often bring game-specific optimizations, power management refinements, and bug fixes tailored to each device’s thermal and battery constraints. Without consistent updates, handheld PCs risk gradually falling behind newer games and evolving Windows builds. For handheld gamers, the uncertainty is the biggest concern. While nothing has been officially confirmed by AMD yet, with both Legion Go and ROG Ally owners noticing stalled updates, the conversation around long-term handheld support is clearly gaining momentum.