



🎸 Small Body, Big Rock Vibes – Own the stage anywhere!
The Ibanez RG MiKro GRGM21 is a 6-string solidbody electric guitar featuring a 22-inch short scale ideal for beginners and pros seeking portability. Equipped with dual humbucking pickups, a poplar body, and a maple neck with rosewood fingerboard, it delivers rich tone and smooth playability in a compact, lightweight design. Perfect for practice, travel, or tight spaces, this guitar combines professional build quality with beginner-friendly features.










| ASIN | B00GXNRAG0 |
| Back Material Type | Maple Wood |
| Best Sellers Rank | #13,182 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #55 in Solid Body Electric Guitars |
| Body Material Type | Poplar |
| Brand Name | Ibanez |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 455 Reviews |
| Fretboard Material Type | Rosewood |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00606559341702 |
| Guitar Bridge System | Hard Tail |
| Guitar Pickup Configuration | H |
| Hand Orientation | Right |
| Included Components | Not Included |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 37.24"L x 15"W x 3.27"H |
| Item Height | 14 inches |
| Item Type Name | Solid-Body Electric Guitar |
| Item Weight | 7.5 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Ibanez |
| Neck Material Type | Maple |
| Number of Strings | 6 |
| Scale Length | 22.0 |
| String Material Type | Nickel |
| Top Material Type | Poplar Wood |
| UPC | 606559341702 606559530908 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1 year limited warranty. |
C**T
The Perfect Starter Guitar!
I had to make some tweaks to it, but for the price, it’s priceless. It stays in tune even though my son plays it really hard, and the intonation isn’t too bad. Also, the shorter 22” scale makes it easier for my 9-year-old to play. Lastly, the action is really good as well, again making it easy for a beginner to play. All in all, it’s a perfect starter guitar for kids.
U**H
This thing is great
I've played the same Fender USA strat since 2011, and I've played it a lot. It's the first thing I would grab if my house was on fire. With that said, I didn't really want anything to replace it, but I wanted something smaller and easier to play in the bedroom and other places that make a smaller form a little more bearable (makes it so much easier to get into those port-o-potties). Anyway, it IS much easier to play in more cramped spaces, BUT, holy crap is this thing fun to play. And it plays GREAT. The feel of it is awesome. The only downsides I have, which aren't enough to care about for me for this guitar, are the neck width (a little small for my hands, but I have big hands), and maybe the dead, bland feel of the wood in this guitar. It's still worth the money, but there's a way that good wood sounds when a guitar vibrates, and this once definitely has zero of that. But that isn't going to affect playability or how it sounds to a degree. And for the money, it's just fine. In fact that's maybe not even fair to gripe about at all with a guitar this cheap. ALL new guitars need a proper setup. It also takes a few hours of playing to get it broken in a little bit. I highly suggest buffing out/polishing the frets (this took the most time, but it made the most difference for me), NEW STRINGS, adjust pickups, adjust truss rod. Besides the fret buffing, bridge pickup being too low, and a little neck relief added, mine was actually in great shape. I also adjusted the bridge saddles a bit to match the radius of the fret board. I am only saying all of the setup stuff because I am seeing a lot of negative comments about this guitar being junk because it plays like crap. It WILL play like crap out of the box. You have to do more than tune it... It's a music instrument. It desperately needs intonation and new strings. Ibanez did this at the factory but that was in China, and it happened many months before it showed up in your hands. It's easy to do, and it will get this guitar up to its potential. I can't believe the build quality of this thing for 150 bucks. I highly recommend it!
J**H
Lefty Mikro Ibanez Gio $199. 4.3/5 stars.
So I got it 1/13/21 which is today. I restrung it with ernie ball regular slinky, tuned it, adjusted the nut and set the bridge. Trust me you will have too or the strings will rattle on the frets! Needs serious adjusting out of the box. the left handed model of the ibanez gio micro guitar is decent. Has dual humbucker pickups with an adjustable nut and 5 way selector. Its very small especially for a small person! I'm 5 foot 5 inches and have small to medium sized hands and this guitar is uncomfortably small. The only reason I bought this is because its the only left handed ibanez I can find on Amazon. I prefer ibanez over any brand its my personal preference. Overall I think I can adapt to the size of the guitar and retrain my fingers to be able to play this guitar but it will take time. I give it a 4.3/5 stars.
C**N
Wow, I am very impressed!
I am giving this 5 stars taking in consideration the price point. I purchased this as a practice guitar. My use case is to have an inexpensive decent playing 3/4 size guitar to practice during the day. It's a great chair or couch guitar, even chairs that have arms. No need to pull out a valuable guitar. I can walk around the house and not bang the headstock or body into doorways and so on. For the price point I can't image something better. Like other reviewers, I found tuning stability to be the only significant issue out of the box. Users can try this: Please see the first pic. Once tuned to pitch, tighten to snug the Phillips head screws. This makes the tuners harder to turn. To restring or do maint. loosen the screws and use string winder or whatever. The idea being to not wear out the bushings by keeping them tight and using a string winder for changing strings. Keep them snug tight for minor tuning adjustments then loosen them when doing extreme tension changes. I also used lubricant on the string trees and nut. Red arrows point these places out in the two pics. I included a 3rd pic of the guitar with two of it's full sized brothers also made by Ibanez for size comparison. Out if the box I didn't do much but I did it in this order, not much different from any other new guitar. - Tightened tuning pegs, the only unique thing needed compared to other new guitars. - Lubricated string trees and nut (D'Addario friction remover is an option) - Tweaked the neck relief, not very functional truss rod, but very little really needed. It came good enough for my use case. - Oiled the fingerboad which was quite dry. (F-One Oil is an option) - Polished the frets which were a bit rough. (MusiNomad has a nice kit as an option) - Raised the string height on a couple strings because I couldn't increase the neck relief. - Checked intonation which was good enough out of the box for my use case. I have long respected Ibanez guitars and even more so now. At this price I am very impressed indeed!
D**A
IT SPARKLES. Also great quality for price.
I'm a beginner with small hands (cannot hold down an F bar on a full size) but now I can play all the bar chords on this guitar! I bought a 3/4 Fender Squier Mini Strat for my first guitar since everyone said to get a Fender Squier and I thought it was okay, but I bought this one afterwards and now I don't pick up my Fender anymore. The sound quality seems much better, stays in tune better, and overall feels and sounds much more legit. It's also slightly heavier than the Fender and the back of the neck is slightly slimmer than the Fender, so the Ibanez feels better in my hands. Also, in case no one tells you: the black night guitar is not solid black, it's glittery. You can see it in some of the customer photos when the light is at the right angle. I usually hate glitter but I like and justify it since it's REALLY subtle and looks like the night sky with stars (hence the name I guess). I also took it to a music shop and paid $25 to get it touched up where needed since I have no idea what I'm doing, and it sounds great. LOCKING TUNERS: If this will be your main guitar then perhaps it would be worth investing in locking tuners to help with the tuning issue, such as Hipshot Grip Lock tuners with 10mm peg holes. Hipshot has a universal mounting plate so screws aren't an issue and you can just drop these right in with no drilling, but otherwise make sure you get one that fits from different brands. Hipshot locking tuners are ~$130 on their website but ~$70-80 on Ebay. Locking tuners also make string changing super easy.
S**R
Good guitar for the money that fills a few niches
I have small hands and several 24.75” scale guitars including an SG and a 24” scale Duo-Sonic. I play for fun and record on a 24 track and in my 70’s. I wanted something in a 22.2” similar to the Byrdlands Nuge plays and the John Lennon 3 pickup Rick he used in early recordings. I got this Ibanez Mikro as a low cost mod platform. It came with level frets all across the neck and smooth fret ends. I’m playing it for a while before deciding if and what to replace. It’s holding tune pretty well but eventually will get roller string trees and locking tuners. The pickups have a bite that I like and sound ok with volume rolled back so I may just leave them. My SG has P90’s so my songs tend to be gnarly. This is a legit first guitar for kids, people with small hands or a travel guitar.
S**T
Poor quality control.
Requires professional setup. Out of the box it is unplayable. One of the saddles would not adjust. On further inspection the screw hole was not threaded. I don’t mean it was stripped. It appears that it was a casting error. My daughter was very disappointed that her Christmas required ordering parts before she could play. Other than that it has a fairly aggressive tone and frets easily. The pickups are surprisingly hot. The finish is nice and the guitar seems to be holding up well. All in all it’s a fair guitar but be aware that there may not be much quality control at the manufacturer.
R**K
What i was hoping for
Pefect!
ترست بايلوت
منذ شهرين
منذ 3 أسابيع