Gaming Wall Art
Products in this collection
Caribou Gaming Controller Cozy Living Room
Golden Retriever Dog VR Headset Rainbow Rollercoaster
Golden Retriever VR Headset Pixel Gaming World
English Bulldog VR Gaming Controller Cozy Room
English Bulldog Gaming VR Headset Cozy Room
English Bulldog Gaming VR Headset Tech Setup
Golden Retriever Wearing VR Headset Tech Expo
Maine Coon Cat Wearing VR Headset Gaming
Maine Coon Cat Gaming in Outer Space
Cartoon Moose Gaming In Cozy Living Room
Moose Playing Video Games Living Room
Cartoon Moose Gaming in Cozy Living Room
Moose Gamer Sitting In Cozy Gaming Room
Ocelot Gaming Controller Home Theater Room
Ocelot Gaming Controller Cozy Living Room
Ocelot Playing Video Game Controller Cozy Room
Ocelot Gaming Controller Home Theater Room
Pixel Art Astronaut Spaceship Cockpit Mars View
Space Fighter Cockpit Explosion Battle Scene
About Gaming
This is the corner of the shop I get most attached to. Gaming wall art covers the stuff people actually grew up with: glowing arcade cabinets, pixel sprites lined up like a high-score screen, neon controller silhouettes, retro consoles, and big cinematic scenes pulled from the worlds players spend hundreds of hours in. Some prints lean cozy and nostalgic, all warm CRT glow and 8-bit shapes. Others go loud, with synthwave grids, level-up icons, and that purple-and-cyan light you only ever see at 2am with a headset on.
I sell these mostly to people building a setup. A battlestation behind a desk, a basement den with the good chair, a kid's room that finally gets to look like the games on the shelf. The art reads from across the room and still holds up when you are sitting close on a long session. If you want a single hero piece over the monitor, the big horizontal scenes do the job. If you want a grid of smaller frames, the icon and sprite designs were drawn to sit in rows.
How a controller print actually looks on the wall
Dark gaming designs hit hardest on canvas. We stretch it over a real wood frame, so the deep blacks and neon edges sit a little proud of the wall and catch the light from your screen. Brighter pixel-style pieces work great as an unframed poster if you want to swap things around as your setup changes, and the poster behind glass gives the cleaner look people like for a shared living room. A 20x16 canvas runs $69; posters start at $29. Sizes go from 16x12 up to 40x30, so you can do one statement panel or a wall of smaller ones.
Everything prints with eco-friendly ink and ships flat in a fitted box rather than rolled in a tube, which keeps the corners sharp and the colors clean out of the wrapping. If gaming runs into your other interests, plenty of buyers pair these with Nature & Landscapes for a calmer wall nearby, or grab a creature print from Animals for a kid's room that mixes both. Pick the world you keep coming back to and put it where you can see it.