One of the most nostalgic aspects of old games is the pixel art style. Gaming devices back in the 80s and 90s didn't have the graphic capabilities or the next-gen features of the Xbox Series X and PS5, but they still had their charm. Modern games like Stardew Valley and Cyber Shadow even try to recreate the 8-bit aesthetic with some success. The Game Boy and its various versions are well-known devices that gamers used primarily in the 90s to play video games, but cameras for these devices are mysterious to many.

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Game Boy Camera photographers have found beauty in its pixelized limitations. There is no way to control focus on a Game Boy Camera or the exposure settings. Game Boy Cameras also have a 30 picture limit until the digital cartridge is full. These photographers push the limits of what such a limited camera can achieve by using colorizing adapters to add color, or using homemade techniques to attach more modern lenses as an extension of the Game Boy Camera.

Game Boy Camera photographers have also had to develop other skills to bring ideas to life, like soldering, programming, and learning to use other retro hardware. Their community is growing on Instagram, with each photographer often deciding to emphasize different aspects of Game Boy Camera pictures. While not all of these pictures are colorized, they are faithful adaptions of their subjects, a testament to what greyscale pixel photography can still achieve in an age where colorized fan pixel art is a common hobby.

Surprisingly, Game Boy Cameras are also capable of more than just photography. One inventive gamer used a Game Boy Camera as a webcam with a complicated setup that involved a wireless third-party Super Nintendo controller and Bluetooth. Whether for technical experiments or pure nostalgic interest, gamers are constantly rediscovering the capabilities of old hardware. In an ironic twist, the same technology that makes old devices like the Game Boy Camera obsolete also allow the camera to do more than it ever could on its own.

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