Xbox itself has made a big deal out of its “Play Anywhere” initiative, and in my experience, it’s become one of the best conveniences of playing games across its ecosystem. All first-party Xbox games and a wide range of third-party titles are included in the list of Xbox Play Anywhere games – meaning you can play these games across Xbox Series consoles and Windows PCs if you own them; no need to buy them twice as long as they’re on the same Xbox-Microsoft account. Additionally, your saves are compatible cross-platform and exist in the cloud so you don’t need to do anything special to pick up where you leave off.
This is important to remember in light of the launch of the Asus ROG Xbox Ally and Ally X – the new PC gaming handhelds that sport the platform’s branding. Despite how Microsoft loves to boast in its “This is an Xbox” ads for the handhelds, these are not Xbox systems. The system boots through a modified version of the Xbox app for PC, and has some quality-of-life features other PC handhelds don’t have.
However, you are not playing Xbox versions of these games, you are playing the PC versions. Not every game you own on Xbox is going to be available on the ROG Xbox Ally (because again, it is not an Xbox). However, those that are will be conveniently placed under “My Library” on the Xbox Ally, so at least you don’t need to do any extra digging to figure out what’s playable.