We’re Building the Retro Handheld You Actually Own
Quick Octane breakdown
There are a lot of retro handhelds out there. Most of them are fine. You buy one, you play some games, and somewhere in the back of your mind you know that the hardware is a black box, the software is someone else’s fork of someone else’s fork, and when support ends , it ends.
Octane is different.
Octane is an open source retro gaming handheld platform built around a ~$50 single-board computer, a custom Linux OS, and the belief that the best gaming hardware is the kind you understand. Every schematic, every STL file, every line of OctaneOS source code is public on GitHub. You can build one yourself for around $150. You can mod it, improve it, and share what you made with the community.
But it’s not just a DIY device. It’s a platform.
Every Octane runs OctaneOS — a custom Batocera Linux fork built specifically for the hardware. Three play modes are built into the OS: handheld, wired docked with HDMI output, and wireless streaming to the dock over WiFi 6. RetroAchievements are configured out of the box. OTA updates push from GameOctane.com to every Octane in the world. The dock outputs HDMI, component, and composite simultaneously, plug in your CRT, your PVM, and your modern TV at the same time and they all just work. No commercial handheld at any price offers that.
We’re building this in public from day one ,and right now, that means it’s very much a work in progress. No hardware in hand yet. No OS booting yet. Just a spec, a GitHub repo, and a clear picture of where this is going. The wins and the hard days both get documented here. Every problem becomes a guide. Every solution becomes something the next builder doesn’t have to figure out alone.
This is GameOctane. Welcome.
Build It. Play It. Own It.