And now, like the proverbial man in a Gloria Gaynor song, Ouya is back— I can’t decide whether it’s time to change the locks or not. But the Ouya’s aesthetics were never really the problem.

The most modest of upgrades

The “problem” with phone hardware is it iterates so damn fast. The Ouya, which at its core is just an Android phone without the phone bits, was outpaced before it even released. th an aging Tegra 3 processor propping the whole device up, it’s no wonder the Ouya stutters lags on relatively simple games. t’s put it this way: the phone in my pocket right this moment is a more powerful device than the Ouya— my phone can also pair with a controller pump video out to a TV through HDMI. My phone is a better Ouya than the Ouya. So you might’ve expected Ouya to drastically upgrade its central hardware when the new version came out. That’s not the case. The new Ouya touts three big changes: 16GB of storage instead of the original’s 8GB, better -Fi capability, an improved controller. A storage upgrade is nothing to get excited about, the other changes are so vague it’s hard to know how they’ll pan out. I’m hoping that better -Fi capability indicates Ouya changed the way they manufacture the device—many suspected that the thick metal sides of the Ouya interfered with -Fi Bluetooth reception, causing the controller to lose signal. There was a marked improvement in the original Ouya controller’s performance after turning the system on its side, where the plastic top interfered with reception less. As for the controller, Ouya just says the joysticks, buttons, lag are all improved. won’t know until we hold it put it through its paces, though. After all, fool me once… Hopefully we can get hs-on time with the new system in the near future. As soon as that happens, we’ll be sure to bring you our reevaluation of the Ouya hardware. Until then, our opinion remains “buyer beware.”