The Retroid Pocket Mini screen may not be the 1280 x 960 as advertised, and now, it appears that the Retroid Pocket Classic will use the same display. But there’s a bit of a twist.
Despite being advertised as a 1280 x 960 screen with a 4:3 aspect ratio, YveltalGriffin over on BitBuilt went into the device to confirm that it’s actually using the same screen as the secondary screen on the LG Wing mobile phablet.
The LG Wing’s secondary screen is the same one found in the AYANEO Pocket DMG and the upcoming Retroid Pocket Classic. Its screen has a 31:27 aspect ratio, which works out to 101/3:9. It’s nearly a perfect match to the Game Boy and Game Boy Color’s 10:9 ratio.
The Plot Thickens
YveltalGriffin was initially trying to source the panel used in the Mini out of curiosity but realized there were no known panels or screens that fit the description Retroid was offering for the RP Mini.
By utilizing Batocera, they were able to see the controller being used for the screen. Research showed a multitude of panels that were intended for the LG Wing’s secondary screen. As such, the Wing’s second screen is a 3.92-inch 1240 x 1080 panel.
To verify this, they opened the device and confirmed that the screen being used in the Retroid Pocket Mini was the same screen found in the LG Wing.
Taking the full width, 1240, and using that to create a 4:3 ratio gives the Mini a “native” resolution of 1240 x 930 — close to the 928p initially reported when this whole ordeal kicked off. The device then reportedly uses that same area and scales the resolution up to report as being 1280 x 960.
In the end, that’s likely the reason the Retroid Pocket Mini screen cannot be fixed. The screen found in the device was never able to achieve 960p in the first place. The hardware was simply never capable of doing so.
Retroid Is in a Pickle
This news comes after a tumultuous past few weeks for the company. As we initially reported, the screen was said to not be fixable on the Retroid Discord early last week. Days later, Retroid refused returns recanting reports related to issues found in the Pocket Mini’s screen. After fan outrage, Retroid then announced that it would offer $10 off the Flip 2 and Classic to any Mini buyers and also offered returns, but those were limited to just 200 Pocket Mini owners.
Unhappy fans quickly began voicing their concerns, resulting in Retroid announcing that they would be fronting an immediate $1 million initiative towards a custom-made screen without any issues. The company said that its CEO had to mortgage his own property in order to get a bank loan for the initiative.
This news comes after Retroid had gained some grace with the previous announcement detailed above. How this will affect the company moving forward remains to be seen.
A small selection of users have used this situation to justify attacking, berating, or harassing the Retroid team themselves. The company should be held responsible for these various issues, which is most certainly true, but it does not mean it’s okay to target the team and their families with malicious attacks.
The company, surely, will respond in time, and as consumers, we should make the decision then whether we will continue to support them and their business any further.
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They should’ve just reported the screen’s actual resolution. Sure, it’s not 4:3, but 1240 x 1080 is nothing to laugh at.