That wall most self-taught players hit — fretting hand locked in, picking hand freelancing — kills more acoustic ambitions than broken strings ever will. Litejam thinks colored lights can fix it. The company’s Neo Acoustic A1, a carbon-fiber acoustic-electric with 132 RGB LEDs embedded in the fretboard, is heading to Kickstarter, with a $0.99 VIP reservation window now open for the first 500 backers who want a jump on the discounted launch price.
Color-Coded Fingers Meet Fingerpicking Modes
The A1 maps every finger to a color on the fretboard, then extends that logic into picking-hand guidance most smart guitars skip entirely.
The system is straightforward:
- Red lights mark your first finger
- Green for the second
- Blue for third
- Yellow for fourth
- White for open strings
- Unlit frets mean don’t touch
No squinting at chord diagrams propped on a music stand — the fretboard becomes the diagram in real time.
Where the A1 separates itself from the Yousician-plus-cheap-guitar setup is fingerpicking. Litejam built dedicated modes for PIMA and PAMI patterns — classical shorthand for thumb-index-middle-ring sequencing — along with alternating bass visualization and a Smart Bass Mode that tracks thumb movement independently. A Fingerpicking Builder reportedly lets you design and save custom patterns. Bold claims, though independent testing hasn’t happened yet.

The A1 ships in five colorways — Black, Taupe Gray, Lime Mist, Waterfall, and Powder Pink — on a carbon-fiber composite body with 21 frets and a 4000mAh internal battery. Core specs include:
- 132 RGB LED fretboard dots
- Bluetooth app connectivity
- USB-C charging
- A piezo pickup with onboard EQ
- Built-in reverb, delay and chorus effects
- An endpin output jack
- An approximately 1.8 kg body
Battery runtime has not yet been disclosed.
The Crowdfunding Reality Check
A seven-figure Kickstarter history offers real reassurance, though early backers are still buying a promise.
A track record worth noting: Litejam’s RGB24 electric raised over $1 million on Kickstarter and reached more than 5,000 players worldwide. The $0.99 non-refundable VIP reservation secures roughly a $200 discount off the planned $499 MSRP, bringing the early backer price to around $299. To be clear — you’re not buying a guitar at checkout. You’re buying a slot.
Litejam frames the distinction between its two guitars plainly: “RGB24 helps you learn guitar. Neo Acoustic A1 helps you learn songs.”
No independent reviews exist yet, and Litejam hasn’t disclosed LED latency, exact battery runtime, or how the app performs offline.
For the self-taught player stuck on fingerpicking like it’s a final boss with no checkpoint, $299 is a reasonable early bet — if the hardware and app both deliver. At the full $499 MSRP, that question gets considerably harder to answer without a review unit and some honest third-party data.




























