July 12, 2026

Game Boy vs. Jupiter: blurry beef

Guy took Jupiter photo with Game Boy Camera, giant telescope, publishes tutorial

Retro stunt or telescope cheat? Commenters are fighting over the blurry Jupiter pic

TLDR: Chris Graue used a free 3D-printable adapter to stick a Game Boy Camera onto a huge observatory telescope and photograph Jupiter. Commenters loved the absurdity but argued over whether the real achievement was the retro camera trick or just having access to an enormous telescope in the first place.

The internet should have been united by one thing: a Game Boy Camera aimed at Jupiter. Instead, the comments instantly turned into a mini courtroom drama over the real star of the stunt: the giant telescope. Musician and retro gadget fan Chris Graue used a 3D-printed adapter to connect Nintendo’s famously potato-quality camera to the massive Hooker Telescope at Mount Wilson Observatory, then generously posted the design online so other tinkerers can try it too. Cute, nerdy, wholesome — in theory.

But the crowd had one immediate demand: show us the photo. Multiple commenters were basically pounding the table asking where the Jupiter image was, with one saying it was "one of the 2 pictures this article would need." Another hero dropped a direct link to the actual photo, saving the thread from becoming a full-blown missing-image scandal.

Then came the hot take war. One camp said, yes, this is clever, but let’s not pretend the Game Boy Camera suddenly became a space-age miracle; strap almost anything to a 60-inch observatory telescope and of course you’ll get something. Another commenter went even sharper, arguing an iPhone would have made better use of precious telescope time. That sparked the central vibe of the thread: is this an amazing retro hack, or just a funny low-res flex? Either way, the community seemed to agree on one thing: it’s delightful chaos, and the blurry Jupiter pic is exactly the kind of absurd tech nonsense people love.

Key Points

  • Chris Graue used a Game Boy Camera with telescope equipment to photograph Jupiter.
  • The image was made possible by attaching the camera to the Hooker Telescope at Mount Wilson Observatory.
  • The connection between the camera and telescope used a 3D-printed adapter.
  • Graue released the adapter schematics for free so others can print their own.
  • The article notes that Game Boy Cameras have also been repurposed by modders as mirrorless cameras, webcams, and telephoto lens systems.

Hottest takes

"one of the 2 pictures this article would need" — canthonytucci
"the quality of the photo is what you’d expect from a gameboy camera" — Calvin02
"far more interesting to have an iPhone adapter" — RagnarD
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