Sellers circumvent Lenovo’s retro handheld ban with cheap wholesale storefronts — $41 gray-market G02 units pop up on Alibaba following initial storefront purge, systems were pulled from sale amid copyright drama and regional restrictions

Lenovo G02
(Image credit: Lenovo)

What initially seemed like a promising and legitimate foray into the retro gaming handheld market has rapidly evolved into a PR challenge for Lenovo. The company has cracked down on unauthorized Chinese merchants who were illegally selling Lenovo G02 to international buyers, violating the device's regional restrictions. To make matters worse, several unscrupulous sellers were reportedly preloading thousands of pirated games onto the G02.

Lenovo made it abundantly clear to Tom's Hardware that, despite licensing its branding for the G02 retro gaming handhelds, any distribution or sale outside China was strictly prohibited. In recent days, multiple sellers from Chinese e-commerce platforms, including AliExpress and Alibaba, have started selling the G02 globally. The breach not only violated Lenovo’s explicit restrictions but also caused the company potential legal complications, as some G02 units were later found to contain thousands of illicit ROMs.

Lenovo’s swift investigation into the unauthorized sales of its G02 retro gaming handheld has already yielded positive results. The first waves of AliExpress and Alibaba listings for the G02 are no longer available for purchase and effectively halted international purchases that extend beyond the device's intended market.

As soon as one listing is taken down, another sprouts up almost instantaneously. Resellers are persistent in profiting from the G02, so they will do whatever to circumvent Lenovo's crackdown. Shortly after the delistings, another Alibaba merchant had already begun offering the Lenovo G02 for $41.40, albeit with a minimum order quantity of 40 units. The bulk-sale approach will make it difficult for Lenovo and Chinese platforms to track and control the flow of the devices. Bulk sales appeal to international resellers and gray market operators, so who knows how much the Alibaba seller will move before Lenovo pulls the listing.

Needless to say, the G02 has turned into a nightmare for Lenovo. The company will likely have to employ additional resources to police Chinese e-commerce platforms and tighten its distribution channels to prevent the G02 from leaving China.

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Zhiye Liu
News Editor, RAM Reviewer & SSD Technician

Zhiye Liu is a news editor, memory reviewer, and SSD tester at Tom’s Hardware. Although he loves everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM.

  • usertests
    Chances are they were already being sold without such branding before the "Lenovo" unit appeared.
    Reply
  • abufrejoval
    Why don't these companies understand that selling means giving up control?

    Must be some Fruity Cult brain pox pervading originally innocent minds...
    Reply
  • nrdwka
    restricting sales to specific region is completely useless in modern market
    Reply
  • USAFRet
    nrdwka said:
    restricting sales to specific region is completely useless in modern market
    And has been going on forever.

    Different standards. Safety and emissions, just to name 2 considerations.
    Reply
  • hwertz
    Yes. 'Some' are loading it with 1000s of games. I'm REAL sure that 'some' isn't 'all of them' LOL. I seriously doubt anyone sells these supercheap emulators blank, generally besides actually having quite a few games, they boost the numbers by having like 100s of reskins of Mario Bros.

    I'm sure Lenovo realistically knew this would be the case? But if they were naive enough to think 'restricting' sales to China would actually restrict sales to China, maybe they really did think people would buy a blank Lenovo emulator rather than the dozens of others loaded with games? I don't know.
    Reply
  • Co BIY
    hwertz said:
    I'm sure Lenovo realistically knew this would be the case? But if they were naive enough to think 'restricting' sales to China would actually restrict sales to China, maybe they really did think people would buy a blank Lenovo emulator rather than the dozens of others loaded with games? I don't know.

    They are not naive - They are creating "plausible deniability" to preserve access to markets in countries with functioning systems of copyright and trademark while also selling in their home country where those things cannot be enforced against connected companies.
    Reply
  • hwertz
    Co BIY said:
    They are not naive - They are creating "plausible deniability" to preserve access to markets in countries with functioning systems of copyright and trademark while also selling in their home country where those things cannot be enforced against connected companies.
    For real. If someone did a tech comedy blog or like SNL (Saturday Night Live) but with tech stuff, Lenovo's current situation would be comedy gold. "I'm shocked... SHOCKED that this happend. Shocked I tells ya" LOL.
    Reply
  • Pierce2623
    USAFRet said:
    And has been going on forever.

    Different standards. Safety and emissions, just to name 2 considerations.
    Yes, regional restrictions have happened forever, but its kinda silly nowadays . First of all, we now have a totally global shopping market called the internet. Secondly, Lenovo can’t really be held responsible for people reselling the device outside China if Lenovo is only selling it inside China, anyways. They’re overcharging for an rk3326 based device anyways.
    Reply
  • usertests
    hwertz said:
    For real. If someone did a tech comedy blog or like SNL (Saturday Night Live) but with tech stuff, Lenovo's current situation would be comedy gold. "I'm shocked... SHOCKED that this happend. Shocked I tells ya" LOL.
    Don't quit your day job to do tech comedy. You won't be able to afford to tip your RAM supplier.
    Reply
  • StevenMcFlyJr
    tbh, I don't see the big deal. I can do all this on almost any Anbernic.
    Reply