Miniature GameBoy Takes Technology Too Far

As technology improves, everything keeps getting smaller. Just look at our phones. They used to sit on desks, now they’re on our pockets or on our wrists. How about our TVs? They used to be enormous pieces of furniture, now they are like picture frames hanging on our walls.
As our computational power increases, the hardware used to process it is shrinking. That’s just the way it goes. But the latest example is a bit ridiculous.
The GameBoy was made to be portable. It was small enough to fit in your pocket so you could play Tetris wherever you went. Now someone has made an even smaller version, and this thing is so tiny you can fit 50 of them in your pocket.
It’s called the Arduboy Nano, and I can tell you right now I’m too old to play it. Not because I don’t know how, but because I can barely see the screen without my reading glasses.
Kevin Bates created a small, business-card thing version of the GameBoy in 2014, which inspired the creation of Bates Arduboy, which, according to Gizmodo, is an open-source Arduino-based Game Boy clone with a loyal following of developers who’ve created hundreds of free games for it.
Well, Bates has gone and shrunk his creation again. It’s less than an inch tall and can sit on top of a quarter without touching the sides. It has a 0.49-inch, 2,048-pixel OLED display, a 25 mAh rechargeable battery good for about an hour of gameplay, and an incredibly quiet 15-millimeter speaker, all of which are powered by the same ATmega 32u4 microcontroller as the Arduboy.
I’m not sure who’s gonna play this thing, or who even can. Maybe the Littles. Remember the Littles cartoon? No? God I’m old. Let me go find those reading glasses while you see the tiny GameBoy in action: