Let me start by saying, this little dinosaur egg-shaped gadget is *way* more fun than I expected. The first time I turned it on, my bedroom ceiling transformed into a mini planetarium—swirling auroras, twinkling stars (yes, they’re lime green, not white—more on that later), and colors that sync to Bluetooth music. My cat stared at the ceiling for a solid 10 minutes, so that’s a win.
Pros: The projection is surprisingly bright—it lit up my entire 12x12 ft room even with ambient light. The white noise feature is clutch for drowning out noisy neighbors (I used the ‘ocean waves’ setting to pretend I was on vacation). Remote control works from across the room, and the auto-shutoff timer saved me from waking up at 3 AM to a disco party on my ceiling.
Cons: The Bluetooth is flakier than a croissant—connects and disconnects like it’s got commitment issues. Also, the ‘14 colors’ claim? More like 4 primary colors mixing minimally. And yeah, the stars don’t actually move despite the manual promising interstellar choreography. If you’re expecting Hubble Telescope realism, temper those expectations.
Verdict: For $50-ish (wait for a sale!), it’s a whimsical mood-setter—great for kids’ rooms or lazy stargazing dates. Just don’t expect NASA-grade accuracy or reliable Bluetooth karaoke sessions.