Vectrex Vector Overlay Era
The subject rendered as bright vector lines on a black CRT, viewed through a translucent colored plastic screen overlay.

The prompt
Render the source in the visual lineage of the 1982 GCE Vectrex, the vector-display home console with translucent plastic color overlays. Subject built entirely from bright glowing vector strokes against deep matte black: continuous lines, sharp corners, no fills, no raster pixels, only line work with slight CRT bloom and phosphor smear at line ends. Add a single translucent plastic color overlay across the entire image (saturated red, emerald green, deep cobalt blue, or sunlight yellow), which tints the black background to a darker version of itself and shifts the vector lines toward the overlay color while preserving their phosphor brightness at the strokes. Subtle vertical CRT scan ghosting suggested at the edges. Add a faint outer frame implying the vertical CRT bezel of the original cabinet, narrow and rounded. Color palette: black, overlay-tint color, bright glowing strokes in white-pushed-to-overlay-color. Mood: 1982 living room, the only home console that ever shipped a vector display, an extinct branch of media evolution. No legible on-canvas text, no logos, no named hate-symbols, no real-person defamation. Preserve the subject, pose, and composition of the source image exactly, change only the medium and rendering.
What it is doing
The Vectrex was a working alternative timeline where consumer displays were not bitmap rasters. Bitmap won because manufacturing economics chose it, not because it was the right answer for the medium. Every generation forgets that the dominant technology won an economic war, not an aesthetic one, and that there were always other answers running concurrent until they were starved out.
Tuning knobs
- Overlay color: red vs green vs blue vs yellow vs no-overlay
- Vector brightness: soft-phosphor vs hard-laser vs heavy-bloom
- Bezel framing: none vs thin vs full-cabinet-implied
- Line density: sparse-elegant vs dense-busy vs minimal-essential
- Scan ghost: clean vs slight vs heavy-CRT-smear
- Stroke weight: hairline vs medium vs heavy-glow
Style lineage
Learn the visual culture this draws from: RetroRGB.
Related prompts
See all 26 prompts in the Video-Game-Case grammar · Open in the gallery
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