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MSI’s AMD Claw A8 finally nears U.S. release after months of global delays

The Claw A8 finally comes to America; gamers celebrate, retailers shrug

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MSI’s handheld roadmap is starting to feel like a bit of a rollercoaster. After months of silence, the AMD-powered Claw A8 – running on the Ryzen Z2 Extreme platform – is finally inching toward a U.S. launch. But for American gamers, this arrival feels long overdue. While the device has been in the hands of players across Asia and Europe since mid-2025, buyers in the States have been stuck waiting with zero explanation, even as MSI hyped the device globally on social media.

This model is a big deal because it marks MSI’s pivot to AMD silicon after initially betting the farm on Intel. The U.S. version is no slouch: it pairs that Z2 Extreme chip with 24GB of fast LPDDR5X RAM, a 1TB SSD, and a solid 8-inch 120Hz screen. On paper, it is one of the most capable handhelds out there. But the rollout? That has been a mess.

It started popping up in China back in July 2025, then hit Europe shortly after

Germany had pre-orders live by August. Meanwhile, the U.S. remained a blank spot on the map. MSI never really said why – maybe supply issues, maybe certification headaches – but the silence has been frustrating. The handheld market moves fast, and arriving six months late is risky.

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Fast forward to January 2026, and we are finally seeing movement. MSI’s own U.S. store has listed the Claw A8 at $1,149. Another major retailer undercut them slightly at $1,099, but good luck actually buying one – it’s listed as out of stock with shipping not expected until the end of the month. Newegg, which had a listing up ages ago, now doesn’t even confirm if stock is coming back. Amazon? It’s a ghost town for the A8; only the older Intel models are there.

The timing puts the Claw A8 in a tough spot

At that price point, it is going head-to-head with the new Intel Lunar Lake handhelds. Enthusiasts who have been watching YouTube reviews from overseas might finally get their chance to buy one, but MSI has its work cut out for it. After such a disjointed, opaque rollout, they need to prove to U.S. buyers that this thing is worth the wait—and the price tag.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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