PGYTECH wants RetroVa to turn your iPhone 17 Pro into something you shoot with, not just tap. It’s an iPhone camera grip with camera-like ergonomics, physical controls, and a retro shell that’s clearly meant to scratch the compact camera itch.
The campaign says an optional 2.35x telephoto extender can reach up to 235mm optical on iPhone 17 Pro, a spec that’s designed to make distant subjects look less like smudges than they do with heavy digital zoom.
RetroVa is live on Kickstarter, and a featured bundle shown for an iPhone 17 Pro Max setup lists $184 alongside a higher MSRP. Shipping timing by region isn’t clear in the excerpts provided here, so you’ll want to verify that before you commit.
Real buttons you’ll actually use
A lot of phone grips add bulk, then ask you to pretend it feels like a camera. RetroVa goes harder on muscle memory. PGYTECH positions the layout as camera-inspired, with a dedicated interface that prioritizes fingers over glass.
The campaign also calls out physical controls mapped to core actions like focus and shutter. That matters when you’re trying to grab a shot quickly, or keep framing steady while moving.
The film look, baked in
Hardware is only half the pitch. RetroVa is tied to PGYTECH’s Pro Imaging App, which it frames as a faster path to a film-style result without a long edit later.
The app features manual controls like shutter speed, ISO, and white balance, plus settings meant to tone down the iPhone’s usual sharpening for a more natural finish. It also includes quick additions like watermarks and frames.
What to confirm before backing
Specs don’t tell you how usable a rig feels day to day. Real photo samples will. Watch how the telephoto extender performs in mixed light, and whether it keeps enough sharpness to justify carrying extra glass.
Also double check fit. The campaign messaging highlights iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro models, but the full compatibility list isn’t shown here. Finally, if you’re buying this for serious video workflow, note that the campaign lists limits around external recording, including that 4K60+ ProRes external recording isn’t supported. The Kickstarter deadline is February 28, 2026, so you’ve got time to weigh all of that.
