
Acer spent CES 2026 showing off monitors, laptops, and other hardware in Las Vegas. What it didn’t show was just as telling. There was no sign of the Nitro Blaze handheld gaming PCs it has teased for more than a year.
If you’re waiting for the Acer Nitro Blaze handheld release date before you buy your next portable, you’re still stuck in limbo. Acer says the handheld category remains in its US plans, but the company hasn’t set local launch timing, and it’s prioritizing core products while tariff driven costs remain uncertain.
Acer’s roadmap still has blanks
Acer first signaled its handheld ambitions with a Nitro Blaze 7 prototype shown at IFA 2024. At CES 2025, it widened the lineup with Nitro Blaze 8 and Nitro Blaze 11, including an unusually large 11-inch model that looked designed to stand apart from smaller rivals.
At CES 2026, that whole thread went quiet. Acer’s message is that handhelds haven’t been dropped, but US launch plans are still to be determined while it navigates tariffs and focuses on categories it already sells at scale.
The market got tougher fast
Even without tariff noise, handheld gaming PCs are a hard space to break into. Steam Deck has become the default pick for many buyers, and newer Windows handhelds like Xbox Ally X and Legion Go 2 already command attention.
The supply side makes the timing even trickier. Rising memory costs and a GPU shortage have made PC hardware bets feel riskier in 2026, especially for a niche device that still has to prove demand. For Acer, committing to production and pricing before the numbers settle could backfire, hence their apprehension.
What you should do instead
If you need a handheld soon, plan around what’s available now, not what might ship later. Acer hasn’t shared a US window, and the CES 2026 no show suggests the company is still deciding when, or whether, the moment is right.
If Nitro Blaze returns, the biggest questions won’t be about screen size. Watch for pricing, regional availability, and a clear reason to pick it over established options. Until Acer puts dates behind its plans, assume delays are on the table and treat any future demo as just that, a demo.
