![]() ![]() Hooked to the keypad contacts and controlled by a Mini MEGA 2560 microcontroller, the interface is able to send macros that imitate the keypresses necessary to change frequencies and control the radio’s settings, plus display the results on the yellow OLED screen that seems a dead-ringer for the in-game display. To that end, is spinning up an interface to the stock radio’s keypad using some 7400-series bilateral analog switches. But this is far from just a case mod, since ’s goal is to replace the radio’s original controls with something closer to what’s in the game. The idea is to strip the PCB out of a Baofeng - no worries, the things cost like $25 - and install it in a game-accurate 3D printed case. took one look at that and knew it would be the perfect vessel for a Baofeng UV-5R, the dual-band transceiver that amateur radio operators love to hate. ![]() Take the Nokota Manufacturing radio from Cyberpunk 2077, for instance. Kudos go to those who attempt to recreate these virtual props and bring them into the real world, but our highest praise goes to those who not only make a game-realistic version of a prop, but make it actually work. You’ve got to love the aesthetics of dystopian cyberpunk video games, where all the technology looks like it’s cobbled together from cast-off bits of the old world’s remains. ![]()
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