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BBC Sky at Night Magazine
skyatnightmagazine.com › reviews › dwarflab-dwarf-3
Dwarflab Dwarf 3 smart telescope review | BBC Sky at Night Magazine
November 17, 2025 - The Dwarflab Dwarf 3 smart telescopes is an ultra-portable dual-lens scope with upgraded features. But how impressive is it really?
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AstroForumSpace
astroforumspace.com › home › resources › telescopes › smart telescopes
Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope Review + Tutorial – Wido's AstroForum
It comes with improved optics, a better camera sensor, an updated app, and more. I reached out to Dwarflab, and they kindly sent me an early production unit of the Dwarf 3—big thanks to Jimmy! I want to clarify that I wasn’t paid to write this review, and all opinions and thoughts expressed here are entirely my own.
Discussions

[RANT] I Really Wanted to Love the DWARF 3… But It Might Just Be a Beautiful, Frustrating Brick (for Now)
lol….no offense - but if I could drive up and show you how to operate it, I would. While I understand some of your concerns….some of them, it seems, based on your extensive break down, you expected it to do way more than it’s designed to do, or you didn't read the User Guide at all, becaus I saw no mention or gripe about that. I don’t think I can add anything here to help you change your mind or point you in a different direction, as I am still like….wow to everything you wrote. There are roughly 5300+ members of the official Dwarf 3 FB group, and I’d guess that roughly 95...96% of them are content and more than happy with how it works, functions and the results they get from it. You seem to fall into that 5% (or less) that can’t really find anything Postive about it. You give suggestions and assessments (or gripes?) to things that clearly work just fine for a majority of users. I also notice that the ones who really hate it and just complain, are people who are well into their 70's who think you just press a button and it should work. No....there is more to it, and yes....it has a learning curve. It's not a SEESTAR.... we get it My response isn’t a jab or meant to be an attack, I’m just baffled, perplexed….on how this simple device became so complicated for you, based on your assertion of having 15+ years of Astro experience and assuming you’re tech savvy. LET ME BREAK DOWN WHAT YOU GOT WRONG AS WELL It does NOT have a built in compass, GPS, accelerometer. None of those FEATURES are electronic components in the device - the GPS/Location data comes from your Tablet or Phone...period. you do NOT capture MOON photos in EQ mode. No where in the USER GUIDE does it say to do that, and it actually says DON'T do it. Normal Alt/Az mode.... period. Your issues with M33, were probably a one off issue. You just need to run it up again and if its consistent.....you ask Dwarflab..."hey..something is wrong, can you help me" the "auto detection and visible objects" is a feature that was asked about.....and...is being worked on and eventually tested in the near future. The app is a barebones version of Stellarium....so they can work in alot of key features if they choose to, but it takes time. If you were aware or up to speed via the official FACEBOOK group, you would understand how HARD the DL team works to get new features out, and on the side, will promote Beta testing with both closed and open groups prior to release. Over the course of the last year, the App has gone through SO many improvements. Even recently...they added a slew of updates and changes. User Guide....... you made no mention of instructions, features, etc. the User Guide itself has gone through an extensive overhaul and was posted in Feb of this year. Since then...it's a living document. It gets updates every couple of weeks via specific feedback from the community. You'd be surprised how helpful and detailed it is. your wi-fi/connection issues: sometimes it's not always the Dwarf's problem..... trust me when I say, user error is roughly 7 out of 10 times, based on comments and troubleshooting COMMUNITY driven company. They feed off the feeedback.....the suggestions. You push up a suggestion, they will tell you Yes/No/Maybe.... they will never blow steam up your *** and ignore you. this being your "FIRST-week" experience gives me an indication that not a lot of time was spent reading up on it first, you just turned it on, activated it and went to work....... no prep work. Just wait till you have to start taking "Darks" More on reddit.com
🌐 r/DWARFLAB
41
4
May 14, 2025
DWARF 3
I wonder if this is 3 of an eventual 7 dwarfs? More on reddit.com
🌐 r/dwarfii
24
8
May 11, 2024
Debating between Dwarf 3 and Dwarf Mini for Astrophotography and Birding
Mini is focused on Astro functions only. It has limited to nearly nothing to offer for terrestrial based features. They purposely built it as an Astro only in mind travel companion Dwarf 3 is your jack of all trades. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/DWARFLAB
18
10
December 22, 2025
Info on the Dwarf 3.
Dwarflab in december 2023: "Hey, we have a christmas discount! Go buy our telescope!" Me: *buys telescope Dwarflab in may 2024: "Hey guess what..." Anyway, it looks awesome but I won't be buying it :/ More on reddit.com
🌐 r/DWARFLAB
15
7
May 15, 2024
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Digital Camera World
digitalcameraworld.com › optics › telescopes
DwarfLab Dwarf 3 smart telescope review | Digital Camera World
DwarfLab Dwarf 3 smart telescope review
This small, low-cost, smartphone-controlled smart telescope has a few surprises for photographers of all kinds
Rating: 4 ​
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Astronomy.com
astronomy.com › home › review: dwarflab’s dwarf 3 smart telescope
Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart Telescope
August 1, 2025 - Another significant improvement is the larger, apochromatic objective lens. While I praised the DWARF II in my review, the DWARF 3 takes image quality to new heights with its larger aperture and superior sensor.
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Fstoppers
fstoppers.com › astrophotography › discover-cosmos-review-incredibly-fun-dwarf-3-smart-telescope-689109
Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope Review: Worth the Hype? | Fstoppers
February 23, 2026 - The first thing that impressed me was how quickly it set up. I switched on the telescope and downloaded the Dwarflab app. Connecting my phone to the Dwarf 3 took about one minute, and after that, I downloaded the latest firmware, which again ...
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Universe Today
universetoday.com › articles › review-dwarf-labs-new-dwarf-3-smartscope
Review: Dwarf Lab's New Dwarf 3 Smartscope - Universe Today
June 13, 2025 - What we like: The Dwarf 3 is very portable, and packs a lot in a small package. As I get older, I take a dim view of lugging gear outside, cobbling things together and contorting to view and tend to troubleshooting things in the dark, all for maybe an hour's use.
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Galactic Hunter
galactic-hunter.com › post › dwarf3-review
DwarfLab Dwarf 3 - The Smallest and Most Versatile Smart Telescope - Full review
February 26, 2026 - Dwarflab DWARF 3 is the smallest, lightest, and most portable of all smart telescopes. Not only that, it also is packed with features that make it an awesome all-around smart telescope.
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AstroBackyard
astrobackyard.com › dwarf 3 smart telescope review
Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope Review | Features, Example Images, & Tips
March 6, 2026 - The Dwarf 3 smart telescope is an impressive package that allows you to take incredible astrophotography images without any previous experience.
Find elsewhere
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Space.com
space.com › stargazing › skywatching kit
DWARFLAB DWARF 3 smart telescope review | Space
DWARFLAB DWARF 3 smart telescope review
Operating the Dwarf Lab II is done fully through the Dwarf Lab app on smart devices, so there's no need for on-device buttons. There is just one power button. (Image credit: Kimberley Lane) ... The DWARF 3 is clearly designed to make astrophotography as straightforward and accessible as possible, ... Does this compact and portable smart telescope provide an affordable way for beginners to get started with astroimaging?
Rating: 4 ​
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High Point Scientific
highpointscientific.com › dwarflab-dwarf-iii-smart-telescope
Dwarf 3 Powerful and Portable AI Smart Telescope
DwarfLab DWARF 3 Smart Telescope
The Dwarf 3 is a compact, AI-powered smart telescope that fits in your hand. Use your smartphone to find and image deep-sky objects, birds, or landscapes with ease. The future of portable viewing. Start your AI journey and buy the Dwarf 3 now!
Price   $549.00
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TechRadar
techradar.com › cameras
DwarfLab Dwarf III smart telescope review – small size, big potential | TechRadar
I took the awesome Dwarf III smart telescope on vacation and captured some of my favorite space photos ever
The Dwarf III may be small, but it takes seriously impressive images
Rating: 4.5 ​
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High Point Scientific
highpointscientific.com › astronomy-hub › post › astro-photography-guides › dwarf-3-smart-telescope-full-review
Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope: Full Review | High Point Scientific
March 9, 2026 - Before heading out to put the Dwarf 3 to the test, I followed the instructions on the start up guide and downloaded the Dwarf Lab app. This turned out to be a great idea because the app interface isn’t nearly as neat as the packaging, and many of the functions are hidden within other menus.
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CNET
cnet.com › home › smart home › dwarf 3 review: a $600 smart telescope for astrophotography beginners
Dwarf 3 Review: A $600 Smart Telescope for Astrophotography Beginners - CNET
May 22, 2025 - Sometimes, the Dwarf 3 will get confused when birds cross paths -- but you can quickly reset the tracker to your intended target. Burst Mode isn't much different than Photo Mode, except that it offers a faster way to capture multiple shots in a row. I didn't spend much time in Burst Mode, but it's great for catching stunning images of a bird taking flight. I got a great shot of an eagle in the tree above me. John Carlsen/CNET · When I was reviewing video footage, I initially noticed some stuttering in the video but traced the issue to my ancient laptop, which struggles to display 4K videos from this camera.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/dwarflab › [rant] i really wanted to love the dwarf 3… but it might just be a beautiful, frustrating brick (for now)
r/DWARFLAB on Reddit: [RANT] I Really Wanted to Love the DWARF 3… But It Might Just Be a Beautiful, Frustrating Brick (for Now)
May 14, 2025 -

Hey fellow stargazers,

I wanted to share my honest first-week experience with DWARF 3 – and see if anyone else out there feels the same, or maybe has workarounds I haven’t figured out yet.

Background:

I’ve been into astronomy since I was a teenager, following telescope launches and dream setups for 15+ years. But life (aka school, career, bills) got in the way of actually doing it. I finally pulled the trigger and bought a DWARF 3 while visiting China… then carried it across the Pacific to my home in Canada, convinced this would be the “finally doing the thing” moment.

Spoiler: It wasn’t.

🔭 The Setup: 30 Minutes of Freezing Canadian Wind = “Perfect EQ Calibration”… and Nothing Else.

  • I spent over 30 mins in -3°C wind setting it up, leveling the tripod, carefully adjusting leg height, EQ Mode calibration (which I nailed, thank you).

  • I tried shooting M33. DWARF 3 confidently slewed to… my balcony wall.

  • Tried the Moon. Couldn’t find it.

  • Exited EQ mode. Calibration gone.

  • My biggest achievement? “Perfect EQ calibration.” That’s it.

No auto target detection. No intuitive guidance. No satisfying image. Just cold fingers and a brick staring at bricks.

⚠️ Let’s Talk About the Real Problem

DWARF 3 is cool on paper. Dual lenses, decent filters, compact. But here’s the honest truth:

For anyone who’s not a hardcore astrophotographer… DWARF 3 is way too unintelligent.

I get it’s not a Seestar S50 or a dedicated mount+ZWO rig. But come on. For this price and target market (city folks, hobbyists, beginners), how does it still not know when it’s pointed at a wall? Or what sky is visible? Why do I have to “hope” it’s seeing what I see?

🧠 A Smart Telescope Should Be… Well… Smart

DWARF 3 has a wide-angle lens, a compass, GPS, accelerometer. Why doesn’t it:

  • Auto-detect sky visibility vs obstructions?

  • Warn me when I select a target that’s behind a building?

  • Suggest what IS visible from my actual location and field of view?

  • Auto-optimize settings (exposure, gain, stacking) based on that?

Even the Schedule Shooting feature gives me “invisible” targets… while I’m standing there manually doing everything.

📶 And Don’t Get Me Started on the Signal

I can’t even stay warm while operating this thing. The moment I walk ~3m behind a balcony pillar, the connection drops. So much for remote operation.

🔄 The Irony? DWARF 3 Will Probably Lose Its Best Users

Let’s be honest:

  • Advanced users will eventually outgrow DWARF 3 and move to better rigs.

  • Newbies and dreamers like me? We’re giving up after two cold nights.

And that’s tragic. Because everyone has a starry dream. But only a handful have the time and patience for a 3-hour learning curve just to get one decent photo. If DWARFLAB wants to go mainstream—like Dyson or DJI—it needs to start delivering instant wins.

💡 What I’d Love to See (Tell Me I’m Not Crazy)

  • “Turn me to the sky, I’ll do the rest” mode.

  • Obstruction-aware star maps and scheduling.

  • Smarter target recommendations based on visible sky.

  • One-click stacked photo mode that stuns you in 20 minutes, no skill required.

  • Usable Wi-Fi in urban setups.

I’m not saying this can’t be fixed. DWARF 3 is so close to being great. But software intelligence is what’s missing—and that’s fixable.

📣 TL;DR:

Brought my DWARF 3 from China to Canada. Braved the wind. Got “perfect EQ mode.” Couldn’t find the moon. The telescope aimed at a wall. Still no stacked image.

DWARF 3 is cool, but not smart enough yet. It needs to work better for city users, newbies, and cold fingers.

Dear DWARFLAB devs and leadership: Don’t let this brilliant scope go the way of brilliant hardware with mediocre UX. You got the best programmers and engineers out there at a bargain price, put them to good use & guide your company to greatness.

Anyone else have similar frustrations?

Any hidden tricks to make this thing more “magical”?

Would love to hear your takes. Or your stacked pics. Or even your salty rants.

– A cold Canadian dreamer

Top answer
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lol….no offense - but if I could drive up and show you how to operate it, I would. While I understand some of your concerns….some of them, it seems, based on your extensive break down, you expected it to do way more than it’s designed to do, or you didn't read the User Guide at all, becaus I saw no mention or gripe about that. I don’t think I can add anything here to help you change your mind or point you in a different direction, as I am still like….wow to everything you wrote. There are roughly 5300+ members of the official Dwarf 3 FB group, and I’d guess that roughly 95...96% of them are content and more than happy with how it works, functions and the results they get from it. You seem to fall into that 5% (or less) that can’t really find anything Postive about it. You give suggestions and assessments (or gripes?) to things that clearly work just fine for a majority of users. I also notice that the ones who really hate it and just complain, are people who are well into their 70's who think you just press a button and it should work. No....there is more to it, and yes....it has a learning curve. It's not a SEESTAR.... we get it My response isn’t a jab or meant to be an attack, I’m just baffled, perplexed….on how this simple device became so complicated for you, based on your assertion of having 15+ years of Astro experience and assuming you’re tech savvy. LET ME BREAK DOWN WHAT YOU GOT WRONG AS WELL It does NOT have a built in compass, GPS, accelerometer. None of those FEATURES are electronic components in the device - the GPS/Location data comes from your Tablet or Phone...period. you do NOT capture MOON photos in EQ mode. No where in the USER GUIDE does it say to do that, and it actually says DON'T do it. Normal Alt/Az mode.... period. Your issues with M33, were probably a one off issue. You just need to run it up again and if its consistent.....you ask Dwarflab..."hey..something is wrong, can you help me" the "auto detection and visible objects" is a feature that was asked about.....and...is being worked on and eventually tested in the near future. The app is a barebones version of Stellarium....so they can work in alot of key features if they choose to, but it takes time. If you were aware or up to speed via the official FACEBOOK group, you would understand how HARD the DL team works to get new features out, and on the side, will promote Beta testing with both closed and open groups prior to release. Over the course of the last year, the App has gone through SO many improvements. Even recently...they added a slew of updates and changes. User Guide....... you made no mention of instructions, features, etc. the User Guide itself has gone through an extensive overhaul and was posted in Feb of this year. Since then...it's a living document. It gets updates every couple of weeks via specific feedback from the community. You'd be surprised how helpful and detailed it is. your wi-fi/connection issues: sometimes it's not always the Dwarf's problem..... trust me when I say, user error is roughly 7 out of 10 times, based on comments and troubleshooting COMMUNITY driven company. They feed off the feeedback.....the suggestions. You push up a suggestion, they will tell you Yes/No/Maybe.... they will never blow steam up your *** and ignore you. this being your "FIRST-week" experience gives me an indication that not a lot of time was spent reading up on it first, you just turned it on, activated it and went to work....... no prep work. Just wait till you have to start taking "Darks"
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4
Hi there, I can’t speak to your personal experience with the D3, but I wanted to share mine. I’ve been using the smart scope from a Bortle 7 area, and honestly, it’s been fantastic. I don’t even bother with EQ mode—just running 15-second exposures at 60 gain over 2–3 hour sessions has been enough to produce some great results. I did run into a few issues early on with setup and connectivity, but those were mainly due to my own unfamiliarity with how the unit works (classic “read the manual” problems). After using it for about four months now, I can confidently say I’m loving it. Before this, I used a star tracker with a 135mm lens and DSLR on a tripod to capture celestial objects. But I’ve completely moved on from that setup. The D3 might not be perfect, but for my needs—mainly creating good-looking astro images for social media—it’s easily the best $500 I’ve spent. If you’re still figuring things out, I highly recommend checking out the tutorials on YouTube by Galaxy Art. Ioan does a great job explaining the setup, settings, and offering useful tips and tricks for using the D3 effectively. This is an image of Rosette Nebula I captured with the D3. Happy with the results. Good luck!
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Amazon
amazon.com › DWARFLAB-Dwarf-Smart-Telescope-Auto-Tracking › dp › B0FHP6K4BK
Amazon.com : DWARFLAB Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope - Portable Astrophotography Camera, Capture Astronomy/Wildlife/Panorama, AZ/EQ Mode, Built-in Processing, 4K Auto-Tracking, Ultra-Light 3lb, Ideal for All Ages : Electronics
Amazon.com : DWARFLAB Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope - Portable Astrophotography Camera, Capture Astronomy/Wildlife/Panorama, AZ/EQ Mode, Built-in Processing, 4K Auto-Tracking, Ultra-Light 3lb, Ideal for All Ages : Electronics
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The Gadgeteer
the-gadgeteer.com › home › reviews › dwarflab dwarf 3 smart telescope review – astrophotography made easier
DwarfLab DWARF 3 smart telescope review - Astrophotography made easier - The Gadgeteer
March 20, 2025 - REVIEW – I’ve always had a mild fascination with astronomy, but my interest grew significantly after last year’s total solar eclipse. Capturing images with my iPhone during the eclipse’s totality made me curious about what it would be like to use an actual telescope. Although I’ll have to wait for the total solar eclipse in Indiana in 2044 to find out, I was fortunate enough to get my hands on the DwarfLab DWARF 3 smart telescope.
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New Atlas
newatlas.com › consumer-tech › review-dwarflab-dwarf-iii-smart-telescope
Review: Smart stargazing with a Dwarf III telescope and a phone
February 28, 2025 - After a couple of successful Kickstarters for versions of its book-sized smart telescope, DwarfLab opted to jump straight into production for the Dwarf III. We've recently been out stargazing and wildlife watching with this budget-friendly sky watcher.
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T3
t3.com › active › outdoors › outdoor tech
DwarfLab Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope review: the ultimate grab-and-go rig for stargazers who want to go deeper | T3
DwarfLab Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope review: the ultimate grab-and-go rig for stargazers who want to go deeper
The smallest smart telescope makes astronomy and astrophotography easy while offering advanced image options to keep you interested
Rating: 4 ​
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Cloudy Nights
cloudynights.com › articles › user reviews
The Dwarf 3 Smart Telescope - User Reviews - Cloudy Nights
February 1, 2026 - In summary, there's no denying that this new Dwarf 3 produces! It has acquired the nicest looking result of M45 I've ever seen from any previous (affordable) smart telescope; and in only 6 Min. 15".
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Watchthestars
watchthestars.co.uk › equipment › smart-telescopes › dwarf-3
DwarfLab Dwarf 3 Review & Guide 2026 — UK Smart Telescope
May 13, 2026 - The Dwarf 3 is not ideal if you want eyepiece views (it has none — everything is on your phone screen), or if maximum astrophotography quality is the goal (a dedicated imaging setup at the same price point will outperform it, but will require ...