Bug zappers haven’t had a design moment yet. They’ve existed in more or less the same form for decades, somewhere between forgettable and mildly unpleasant to look at. Most of them get tucked into corners or mounted out of sight, which is exactly where most people prefer them. They do the job, roughly speaking, but nobody’s ever been genuinely excited to reach for one.
Brightbeam Solutions seems to have taken that as a challenge. Bug Saber is the brand’s attempt at rethinking what a bug zapper can feel like, not just what it can do. The concept is simple enough: take pest control, which has always been a thankless task, and design it to be something you’d actually want to pick up. Nobody in the category had really tried.
Designer: Jonathan Barraclough
Click Here to Buy Now: $24. Hurry, only a few left!
The design makes that clear immediately. Bug Saber is built around a high-voltage zapping grid framed by a glowing LED ring, mounted on a lightsaber-style hilt with a distinctly mechanical character. It doesn’t look like anything from a hardware store, and that’s entirely the point. The aesthetic borrows from sci-fi gadget culture rather than home appliance conventions, and it’s surprisingly hard to ignore when it’s nearby.
Switch it on, and everything shifts. The LED ring glows, saber-style sound effects kick in, and insects are naturally drawn toward the light. When one gets close enough, the 4,000V high-voltage grid takes care of it instantly, with no waiting and no cleanup. The entire sequence takes only seconds, and the combination of light, sound, and immediate result makes each instance feel surprisingly satisfying.
That satisfaction makes sense in practice. Picture a summer evening on the back porch, a fly that’s made itself at home, and the usual frustration of swatting blindly at the air. With Bug Saber in hand, you’re in control rather than reacting. The act feels deliberate in a way that pest control rarely does, which is a strange thing to say and yet completely accurate.
Not every situation calls for hands-on use, though. Bug Saber can sit on its vertical stand with the illuminated ring running on its own, drawing in insects without you having to do anything. This works especially well at night, when flying pests are most active, and you’d rather not be involved. It handles things quietly in the background, whether you’re inside or out on the patio.
Bug Saber is built around three core components: the Bug Saber Head, which houses the ring and zapping grid; an entry-level hilt for those starting fresh; and the vertical stand. People who already own a compatible saber-style hilt, the kind used in cosplay or collecting communities, can swap in the head directly, converting their existing setup into a functional bug-control device without needing anything else.
What makes Bug Saber work so well is how the experience reinforces itself over time. The glow, the sound, and the instant result work together to create something that feels rewarding rather than routine. You pick it up the first time because there’s a fly in the room. The second time, you reach for it a little more quickly than strictly necessary.
There’s a broader shift in product design, one where objects that used to be purely functional are being reconsidered as things worth looking at. Routers, speakers, and kitchen appliances have all gone through some version of this. Bug Saber brings that same sensibility to a category that’s rarely had it, which on paper sounds like a stretch and in practice feels entirely overdue.
The strangest thing about Bug Saber might also be the most telling. A bug zapper with a sci-fi hilt, a glowing LED ring, and sound effects that respond to movement really shouldn’t feel like a natural addition to a patio or living room shelf, and yet here we are, genuinely glad that someone decided this particular category was finally worth a proper redesign.
Click Here to Buy Now: $24. Hurry, only a few left!







