As a gamer, your playroom might be stocked with an Xbox One, a PS4 and maybe even a few classic consoles like a GameCube, a Sega Dreamcast, and even a Colecovision. On top of that, you might own a fully loaded Maingear Shift gaming desktop with a sweet auto-paint finish.

But all those toys and the almost unlimited video-gaming possibilities they offer don’t hold a jewel-encrusted joystick to the coolness of owning a free-standing arcade game.

Reddit user scoodidabop understands this, building custom arcade cabinets that play a variety of old-school and modern video games at Paradox Arcade Systems in Houston. The user showed off his recent passion project in the DIY community: a NASA-inspired arcade cabinet that won first place in the custom arcade category at the Houston Arcade & Pinball Expo this past weekend.

Scoodidabop used maple furniture plywood to construct the cabinet and designed the control panel graphics to give the game station, which he calls the NASA Amusement Station, a spaceship feel. He then outfitted it with a PC that runs a game emulator. The cost? Just north of $2,500 (although scoodidabop said he still has some more parts to add).

Here’s what the cabinet looks like lit up.

And here are a couple Houston Arcade & Pinball Expo attendees playing the classic arcade game Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time on the NASA Amusement Station over the weekend.

A few keen-eyed users on the thread did have a question about one detail in the cabinet’s design: Why use the NASA logo from the Christopher Nolan movie Interstellar and a retired logo from the space agency on the arcade cabinet?

In fact, scoodidabop kept the Interstellar references coming with the names of two of the film’s spacecrafts—Ares and Hermes—emblazoned on the station’s control panel.