3D Solar System Crystal Ball Lamp,3.15 Inch K9 Crystal Ball Night Light with Wooden Base,16 Colors Changing with Remote Control,3D Planet Laser Engraving Holographic Crystal Ball Light (Solar System)
This item: 3D Solar System Crystal Ball Lamp,3.15 Inch K9 Crystal Ball Night Light with Wooden Base,16 Colors Changing with Remote Control,3D Planet Laser Engraving Holographic Crystal Ball Light (Solar System)
3D Solar System Crystal Ball Lamp,3.15 Inch K9 Crystal Ball Night Light with Wooden Base,16 Colors Changing with Remote Control,3D Planet Laser Engraving Holographic Crystal Ball Light (Solar System)
Share:
Found a lower price? Let us know. Although we can't match every price reported, we'll use your feedback to ensure that our prices remain competitive.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on 鶹. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.
4.0 out of 5 starsA Cosmic Injustice—Pluto Deserved Better
Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2025
Verified Purchase
I was thrilled to receive my illuminated solar system crystal ball nightlight, expecting a breathtaking display of our celestial neighborhood. But upon closer inspection, my excitement turned to devastation—Pluto has been heartlessly excluded.
Imagine this: You’re on the playground, eager to join a game of kickball with your so-called “friends.” You’ve played together for years. You’ve always been a little different, a little smaller, maybe not as fast, but you belong. And then, one day, the self-appointed “cool kids” decide you don’t count anymore. They circle up, whispering behind your back, and when the teams are picked—you’re left out.
That’s what you’ve done to Pluto.
This poor celestial body spent decades orbiting alongside its planetary siblings, minding its own business, only to be kicked to the cold outskirts of irrelevance by those who decided it suddenly didn’t make the cut. And now, this crystal ball—a beacon of light and supposed wonder—perpetuates that injustice.
Do I sleep soundly under its gentle glow? No. I lie awake, haunted by the exclusion of our underdog dwarf planet, thinking of its lonely, icy tears drifting through the Kuiper Belt.
Pluto deserved better. We all deserve better.
Two stars—one for the light, one for the planets you did include. But know this: the weight of Pluto’s absence dims them both.