Enya Just Made a Guitar Anyone Can Play for $199

Most of us have a complicated relationship with music-making. We admire people who can pick up an instrument and just… play. We’ve maybe even tried it ourselves, signed up for guitar lessons that lasted exactly three weeks, or downloaded an app that promised to teach us a song a day. And then we moved on. Enya Music is betting that the gap between “I wish I could play something” and “I’m actually playing something” isn’t about talent. It’s about friction.

The Cyber-G Pocket is their latest argument for that theory. Folded up, it looks like a chunky, pill-shaped Bluetooth speaker, the kind you’d toss in a bag without thinking about it. Open it out, and it unfolds into a compact, geometric guitar silhouette with 14 chord pads along the neck and a silicone strumming surface where the strings would be. No traditional strings, no frets to press down, no painful fingertip calluses during the learning curve. Just tap a pad, flick across the surface, and the Cyber-G Pocket fills in the rest.

Designer: Enya Music

To be clear, this is not a guitar. It’s not trying to be. Enya pitches it as a smart music gadget for casual gatherings, campfires, and spontaneous sing-alongs, and that framing matters. If you go in expecting to learn actual guitar technique, you’ll be disappointed. If you go in expecting to have a genuinely good time making music with friends who have no idea what a G chord is, you’ll probably love it.

The hardware is more considered than it looks. Inside are dual 10-watt full-range drivers covering a frequency range from 40Hz to 20kHz, which is a real, capable speaker for a device this size. The 3,250 mAh battery gives you around eight hours of play, and it fully charges in two hours via USB-C. That same port doubles as a digital audio transfer connection if you want to record directly to your phone or computer. There’s also a 3.5mm jack for routing into an amp or headphones. It folds down to 231 x 73 x 95mm, which is, to be fair, not exactly pocket-sized despite the name, but it’s genuinely compact enough to justify the travel pitch.

The Enya Music app is where the real depth lives. From there, you can access sheet music, adjust chord assignments, choose from over 15 tones ranging from acoustic warmth to synth textures, and switch between Sing & Play mode or Solo mode. The built-in drum and bass function means you can hit the Cyber-G logo button and instantly have a backing rhythm synced to your chord playing. For a room full of people who want to feel like a band for twenty minutes, that’s actually a pretty delightful trick.

Enya isn’t new to this space. They’ve been building accessible smart guitars since 2022 with products like the Nexg, and the Cyber-G line has grown into a whole ecosystem with multiple form factors. The Pocket feels like the most socially oriented version yet, designed less for solo practice and more for pulling people together who would otherwise just scroll their phones.

Starting at $199, it sits in that pricing zone where it’s more than an impulse buy but not so far out of reach that it feels precious. You’d use it, you’d leave it on the coffee table, you’d pull it out when friends came over. That’s kind of the point.

Whether or not it qualifies as a “real” instrument is a question worth skipping entirely. Not everything has to earn its place through traditional definitions. The Cyber-G Pocket is genuinely thoughtful design applied to a very human desire: to make something that sounds like music without needing years of practice to get there. That’s not a consolation prize. For most people, that’s exactly what they actually wanted.