The Anbernic RG DS now has a new brain. GammaOS has made its way to the handheld, offering a smarter and smoother alternative to the clunky stock operating system it ships with. Built on Android 14 and LineageOS 21, GammaOS does more than tweak it transforms how the device handles everything from multitasking to boot time.
GammaOS upgrade brings more than polish
GammaOS Next, version 1.1.0, is the same core build released for other Anbernic handhelds like the RG405M and RG505. For the RG DS, that means users get access to a better task switcher, an immersive UI mode, and reduced latency across the board. It boots faster, better. It feels more fluid.
More importantly, it addresses core frustrations that early adopters ran into, including screen latency and the much-maligned 40Hz refresh issue. Yes, Anbernic has patched those bugs in their own update, but GammaOS arrives with them fixed out of the gate, and without the stock OS’s baggage.
GammaOS adds key features to the Anbernic RG DS
The new OS doesn’t just patch holes it brings some valuable quality-of-life improvements too. Here’s a quick look at what it offers:
- Global Shader Pipeline for better visual effects
- GammaEQ audio equalizer for sound tweaks
- Deep Sleep mode enabled by default
- Full multitasking (no more paused apps)
- Fixed sleep and screen timing bugs
- Faster boot and load times
That last one especially helps when bouncing between games or apps. The system feels less like a cheap emulation machine and more like a serious handheld console.
Not quite public, yet
At the moment, GammaOS for the Anbernic RG DS isn’t available to everyone. It’s been handed off to creators and reviewers first, likely to test the waters and squash any last-minute quirks. But history says the public build won’t lag far behind.
Why the GammaOS shift matters
The Anbernic RG DS isn’t a bad handheld, but its default software drags it down. GammaOS takes that same hardware and removes the friction no pauses, no weird refresh bugs, and no sluggish transitions. It’s not just a new OS. It’s a proper fix.
And once that public build drops? Expect a lot of users to jump ship. Fast clicks cost trust and GammaOS delivers them.
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