Retro-style video games are making a comeback. Nintendo and Sega are reissuing classic game systems and even long-dormant Atari is coming back to market with a brand new console. On this week鈥檚 State of the Arts, we visit a tech company in Akron that makes its very own nostalgic game console, so small it takes a light touch and real concentration to master.
founder Ken Burns is an '80s kid. He grew up in a time when arcade games like Street Fighter and Pac Man reigned. So when he founded his tech company that specializes in , it鈥檚 only natural that something like the Tiny Arcade was born.
"Basically the idea is it鈥檚 a little arcade cabinet that you build yourself," Burns said at this downtown Akron production facility and offices.
And Burns does mean little. The Tiny Arcade is about 3.5 inches tall and weighs less than two ounces.
The teeny-tiny game console started out as a showcase of what Tiny Circuits' processing chips could do, but Burns says it's turned into a real money maker.
The Portable Arcade
"In the box you get all the components that you need to actually put together the arcade. There鈥檚 an instruction manual in there. And so the case is a laser cut acrylic case and it fits together like a little jigsaw puzzle."
Burns said the kit can be assembled for the first time in around 15 minutes.

"The idea is it鈥檚 a fun little project you can put together. You don鈥檛 have to solder anything. And you can download games free off our website. It comes pre-loaded with some games. Or if you鈥檙e really adventurous, you can create some games for it."
The Tiny Arcade is based on a hardware and software platform called . It鈥檚 completely open source, so anyone is free to tinker with it. Or hack it.
"People can take it, tweak on it, and completely redesign it. We鈥檙e not telling our users this is what you have to do with it. Here鈥檚 all these things you can do. Go at it."
People can use an array of Tiny Circuits鈥 like electronic LEGOs to make a tiny television, a miniature remote controlled airplane, or a wheeled robot that moves along walls on its own.
Burns points to little sensors on wires, he affectionately called "whiskers" that can be swapped in and out to add functions like gyroscopes, altimeters, air quality sensors, remote control and even Bluetooth.
"It鈥檚 really nice to be able to just plug something in and you鈥檙e going. And if you have to change something, just plug a new thing in. And that鈥檚 really our big selling point."
What's in the Box
At the core of all this tech, is the circuit board. Each one is the size of a postage stamp and Tiny Circuits makes them at its production facility. It's housed in one corner of the old Goodrich plant in downtown Akron.
He walks around a loud, buzzing machine busy at work.
"You鈥檙e looking at what鈥檚 known as a pick-and-place machine." It's a behemoth, the size of a small car, working away, building the tiny circuit boards.
"So it鈥檚 basically a big, robotic machine that will pick up the raw components, those are transistors, resistors, capacitors, things like that, and then place them on the circuit board that has wet solder paste."

The components themselves are so tiny you can barely feel them in your hand.
鈥(They) are 1mm by 1/2mm in size."
The boards are assembled, tested, packed and shipped from this facility all over the world through partners like eBay and Amazon.
Staying in The Rubber City
Tiny Circuits has been featured in and had several successful Kickstarter campaigns. So why not move the company to Silicon Valley to become the next 鈥渋t鈥 tech startup?
"Really with what we do, selling online, there鈥檚 no advantage to being somewhere else," Burns said.

He can rent his entire office and production space for just a fraction of what he would pay in the Bay Area.
"(In Silicon Valley) people aren鈥檛 really familiar with production stuff, whereas out here in Ohio it鈥檚 kind of our base. It鈥檚 manufacturing."
Add that to the talented engineering pool from local universities and the low cost of doing business, and he couldn鈥檛 see the company anywhere else.
Note: This article has been updated to correct a spelling error.
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