Technology continues to get ever more powerful and ever smaller, but sometimes the ingenuity of the modding community serves up a project that beggars belief. This is one of those occasions. Allow us to introduce you to the VMU-boy, a RetroPie powered console inside a VMU shell with the ability to play a host of retro roms on a tiny LCD screen. You thought the Gameboy Micro was small? Wait till you get a load of this!
The result of some stellar work by Giles Burgess (aka Kite), the VMU-boy is truly a wondrous accomplishment and as the images and video show, the contraption fits easily in the palm of a hand. Whether it's actually practical to play games on a device so small for any length of time without causing long term damage to eyes and hands remains to be seen, but 10 out of 10 must be awarded for effort.
The specs and features of the device are fairly impressive too, as detailed in the forum post over at
sudomod
:
- Pi Zero/W
- 128x128 SPI LCD
- Main PCB with direct Pi soldering
- 850mAh battery (4 hrs or more gameplay!). If I could find a slightly wider battery it might even make it to 900/1000mAh!)
- Safe shutdown!
- Micro USB charging which doubles as USB OTG port (plug in a USB OTG adapter and it will power the USB device and connect it to the Pi)
- Power switch and status LEDs
- Battery voltage monitoring + charging status
- Built in speaker amp
- 'Basic' OSD (need to work on this more, whipped it up very quickly!)
- GPIO buttons built into the PCB
- All inputs available under the 'cap' at the top, including the Pi SD card so it's really easy to work on
- Internal serial port available as a JST header (made it very easy to see my Pi was working after I had removed the HDMI port!)
- Battery connectors (1mm JST) or solder pads. Extra pads allow putting 2x batteries in parrallel (e.g. if you have 2x small batts that will fit)
Interestingly, Kite's post suggests he will be offering the VMU-boy for sale at some point in 2018, and a link to a waiting list has already been added to the post.
Find out more on the VMU-boy, including more details on the creation of the fascinating device by visiting the
sudomod.com forum here
.
Thanks to
@pomegd
on Twitter for sharing this info with us.