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5%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
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11[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cyberneticeyes2s_326.jpg]]
12[[caption-width-right:350:Whirr. [[note]]Clockwise from top left: ''Film/StarTrekFirstContact'', ''Franchise/MassEffect'', ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'', ''Videogame/DeusExHumanRevolution''.[[/note]]]]
13
14->''Our eyes had been removed, the sockets scrubbed and packed with far more efficient sensory devices, wired back into our visual cortices. Our eyeballs waited back at the shuttle, floating in jars like grotesque delicacies.''
15-->-- ''Literature/DiamondDogs''
16
17[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Eyes made from electronics]]. Prevalent in {{Cyberpunk}} and PostCyberpunk works, occasionally crops up in ScienceFiction works that don't focus as much on {{transhuman}}ism.
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19Normally the eye is some kind of upgrade or {{super sense|s}}. It may have a superzoom, infrared or perhaps digitised vision. This is quite common with the {{Cyborg}} hero whose powers are his cybernetic upgrades. In {{First Person Shooter}}s and other games controlled in first-person perspective, cybernetic eyes may be [[DiegeticInterface the reason you see the usual]] VideoGameInterfaceElements.
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21It can also be a [[ArtificialLimbs prosthetic replacement for lost eyes]]. These are commonly found in stories set in the far future with widely available technology. In reality, artificial sight technology is already pretty advanced, so as writers catch up with science we should be seeing crude-but-workable Electronic Eyes in about TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture.
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23Sometimes the eye is very visually distinct. Bizarre irises or unusual pupils mark the individual. Working on the principle of the eyes being the window to the soul, these TechnicolorEyes can be a small but direct method of demonstrating the fact that an otherwise normal-looking individual is at least partially cybernetic. In the case of prosthetic eyes they also work as a scar signifier. Since the eyes are taken as so much more personal they can be a much smaller effect for greater emotional impact. And, of course, it can also [[RedRightHand show how evil]] [[CyberneticsEatYourSoul a person is]].
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25If only [[FashionableAsymmetry one eye]] is cybernetic, it is a form of EyepatchOfPower. If it can send images to its owner while detached, it functions as an EyeSpy. Compare with GlowingMechanicalEyes in which case robotic eyes are usually able to produce light.
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27See also the supertropes {{Cyborg}} and EyeTropes. When the person with these eyes dies, expect to see EyeLightsOut. See GlassEye or MagicEye for the fantasy version of this.
28
29----
30!!Examples:
31[[foldercontrol]]
32
33[[folder:Advertising]]
34* Verizon's advertisements for the Droid X show this happening (for some reason) as the user watches the built in Blockbuster-on-demand feature.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
38* Inaho from ''Anime/AldnoahZero'' has one in season two after his is [[spoiler:shot out by Slaine at the end of season one]]. It looks almost identical to his real one, but it's quickly revealed that it goes far beyond just a regular eye.
39* ''Anime/CowboyBebop'': Spike Spiegel's right eye is artificial, as shown in a flashback in "Sympathy for the Devil". It functions practically identically to a natural eye, with no nifty technological tricks. The only sign of its falseness is the fact that it's a slightly different shade of brown than his real eye.
40** One particular fan-theory assumes that his false eye has some form of enhanced capabilities, to explain both his ImprobableAimingSkills while [[FiringOneHanded firing his pistol with one hand]].
41* In ''Manga/Cyborg009'', 003's SuperSenses come from her being turned into a {{Cyborg}}. Her electronic eyes are shown in quite the detail in the 2012 movie.
42* Bandou of ''Manga/ElfenLied'' gets these after Lucy [[EyeScream destroys his original eyes]]. Notably, they're actually a little ''less'' functional than a normal human eye (they tint everything yellow and make things a bit blurry), but Bandou's not going to complain when the alternative was blindness.
43* In ''Franchise/GhostInTheShell'' (all versions), one of the main characters, Batou, has very obvious artificial eyes. In ''Anime/GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex'' they are referred to as "ranger eyes", after the eyes used by the ranger unit he belonged to when he was in the military. Not much is revealed of their capabilities. These eyes look opaque and are unmoving, and there is no eyelid present, so they always look exactly the same.
44** They are shown to include night vision, a powerful zoom, limited ability to detect thermoptic camouflage and, in the final episode of ''2nd Gig'', [[spoiler:a visual TrustPassword when a corrupt official is silly enough to send Rangers after a former Ranger]].
45** In ''Stand Alone Complex'', Borma has a similar pair of eyes, except that they are red. Nothing known about their capabilities. Saito's left eye is his cybernetic "Hawkeye", which has a super powerful scoping ability, and he can access satellites to zoom in on his targets to help with his sniping. When not used, it remains closed, looking akin to an eye patch.
46*** In the ''Stand Alone Complex'' version, these are implied to be fairly common, though with less conspicuous versions than Batou and Borma. The Major (being a full body cyborg) has them, as does the minister in the very first episode.
47* ''Manga/GokuMidnightEye'' stars private investigator Goku Furinji, whose sacrificed left eye is replaced by a mysterious benefactor with an electronic one that obeys his mental commands, providing (among other things) x-ray vision, night vision, targeting, thermal vision, GPS, visual chemical analysis and protection from hypnosis, and can also access and command virtually anything on the planet or in orbit controlled by computer, all of which leaves his cyberpunk noir future in his hands. And of the two toys he was given, this one wasn't even the magical one.
48* ''Literature/LegendOfTheGalacticHeroes'' has Paul von Oberstein, who was born blind until he got a pair of rather creepy prosthetic eyes.
49* ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha'':
50** The Combat {{Cyborg}}s introduced in ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaStrikers''. Their eyes are among the many body parts replaced with cybernetic implants. Close-ups of their eyes reveal camera lenses that rotate when they're using their SuperSenses.
51** [[spoiler:Nanoha]] ends up getting her right eye replaced with a cybernetic implant in the epilogue of ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaDetonation'' after the original is blinded from an explosion. It's unknown if it grants her any enhanced sight, though it is visually identical to the original (or at least similar enough that no {{Muggle|s}} on Earth would be able to tell the difference).
52* All the Hooba siblings from ''Manga/PrincessResurrection'' have these, though they are androids, not cyborgs.
53* In ''Manga/TalesOfWeddingRings'', the {{Magitek}} RobotGirl Amber has mechanical eyes resembling sunken concentric diamonds. They can produce light for others to see by and fire lasers, amongst other things.
54* ''Anime/UsagichanDeCue'': After his first fight against Inaba, Dekao plummets off the school's rooftop. He reappears on the public beach rebuilt with a camera-like right eye, plus rocket fists and shoulder-mounted missiles. During his last appearance, the audience is shown a view through this eye as it targets Inaba and Koshka.
55* ''Anime/YureiDeco'' has a downplayed example: Practically all citizens of Tom Sawyer Island have electronic implants in their eyes that allow them to interact with the island's AugmentedReality systems (those without implants instead wear glasses). Main character Berry has a glitchy implant in her right eye, which allows her to see glitches in the system the system administrators and enterprising hackers cover up for everyone else.
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Comic Books]]
59* Police Captain Wiggins in ''ComicBook/{{Grendel}}: Devil's Legacy'' has a cybernetic eye. We never see how this works in detail, but the eye can be attuned to a person's physiology to function as a lie detector (much the same way as a real lie detector works). It's quite useful in questioning suspects. However, he apparently prefers to rely on his intelligence and intuition rather than his built-in lie detector. He's probably aware that a good liar can beat a lie detector.
60* ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' has bionic eyes, given to him during the "City of the Damned" story arc after his real ones are ripped out of their sockets by a zombie version of himself from the future. Dredd notes that the new eyes give him 20:20 '''night''' vision, enhanced clarity over distance, and a 50% reduction in blinking time. He praises the efficiency of his new eyes after he gets them and says that his one regret is that he never got them sooner. Truth be told, though, you'll probably be hard-pressed to ever find another Dredd story where any of these improved eye functions become useful to him. He's a crack marksman regardless, but it's unclear how much of this is simply due to Dredd's skills with the Lawgiver or his superhuman eyesight. Probably both. However, in the ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'' story ''The Dead Man'', [[spoiler:one of the earliest tip-offs to the reader revealing that the titular disfigured character is actually Dredd is the fact that his eyes "don't look natural"]]. It also crops up in another story, where a group of perps use an {{EMP}} device. Unsurprisingly, Dredd is BlindWithoutEm.
61* [[BigBad Haazen]] from ''ComicBook/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'' has one mechanical eye that is visibly artificial and [[RedEyesTakeWarning glows bright red]]. His other eye seems to be simply an empty socket, leading one to wonder [[FridgeLogic why he didn't get it replaced, too]].[[note]]Oh, it's [[TheDarkSide not]] [[EyesAlwaysShut empty]].[[/note]]
62* Mr. Marsh of ''ComicBook/NoHero'' has computers in his head, as is revealed by his glowing eyes.
63* When the Forgotten Heroes make a guest appearance in ''ComicBook/ResurrectionMan'', Silver Age spelunker Cave Carson has a cybernetic eye, a high-tech version of EyepatchAfterTimeskip which is never explained. This was the inspiration for the Creator/YoungAnimal title ''ComicBook/CaveCarsonHasACyberneticEye''.
64* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': H'Elgn is able to design an electronic eye to replace one of the Daxamite's missing eyes. It doesn't have the [[SuperSenses potential]] [[EyeBeams powers]] of a natural Daxamite eye (Daxamites are descended from [[ComicBook/{{Superman}} Kryptonian]] colonists), but it allows her to see.
65* ''ComicBook/XMen'': After [[EyeScream losing her original eyes]] to her opponent Slaymaster, [[Characters/MarvelComicsPsylocke Psylocke]] has them replaced by Spiral with bionic ones that instantly adjusted to light -- and broadcast everything to Mojoworld. She loses those (having them replaced with normal eyes) and Kwannon gains them when they have their [[FreakyFridayFlip body swap]].
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:Fan Works]]
69* In ''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/26203810/ 14,000,606]]'', after Peter Parker loses his left eye and arm due to him being the one to destroy Thanos with the Snap rather than Tony (as happened in ''Film/AvengersEndgame''), Thor gives Peter his own artificial eye as a 'reward' for the two of them being the ones to vanquish Thanos (Thor plans to get a new eye from Rocket later).
70* ''Fanfic/BoldoresAndBoomsticks'': Watts uses his cybernetics expertise to replace the eye Tyrian lost to Whisper's Psycho Cut.
71* ''Fanfic/TheGunslingerHeroFlintlock'': Izumi has one to replace her lost right eye, with it granting her a plethora of enhancements, including but not limited to: a built-in HeadsUpDisplay,, the ability to hack into electronics, biometric scanner, access to her armory, and so on. Her original cybernetic eye was damaged at the USJ and she received an upgraded one after. Her original organic eye was lost in an event not yet revealed.
72* In ''Fanfic/IfIOnlyHadAHeart'', Izuku replaces the eye he lost in a villain attack with a cybernetic replacement of his own design. In addition to restoring his depth perception, it's equipped with telescopic and thermal vision and is a miniature supercomputer that allows him to connect to the internet. He hopes to eventually be able to use it to directly interface with other pieces of technology to remotely control them. It's also removable, allowing Izuku to use CT scans without a hitch and monitor his nerves to prevent damage. He also has a camera function installed so that he can record what he sees, uploading it to a computer via a USB drive in his prosthetic arm.
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Film -- Animated]]
76* John Silver from ''WesternAnimation/TreasurePlanet'' has a cybernetic eye instead of an eye patch. It's generally yellow, but [[RedEyesTakeWarning turns red when he's angry]].
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
80* ''Film/AvengersInfinityWar'': [[spoiler:After Thor lost his right eye in ''Film/ThorRagnarok'', Rocket Racoon gives him a cybernetic eye as a replacement, albeit one with a mismatched color.]]
81* ''Film/TheBatman2022''. Batman has a pair of contact lenses that can act as hi-definition cameras, even being able to record sound. [[EyeSpy He lends them to Selina Kyle]] so he can see through her eyes and get [[FacialRecognitionSoftware facial recognition data]] on the customers in [[BadGuyBar -44 Below]].
82%%* The Cyclopes in ''Film/TheCityOfLostChildren''.
83* In ''Film/CubeZero'', the villains' leader Jax lost one of his eyes due a mechanical mishap and had it replaced with a robotic one. However, it's only a RedRightHand and he never uses it for superhuman feats.
84* The character Roddy from ''Film/Deathwatch1980'' has voluntarily had cameras and transmitters implanted behind his eyes, allowing everything he sees to be recorded without the giveaway presence of a camera.
85* The protagonist of ''Film/{{Doomsday}}'' loses one eye in the opening of the film, and has it replaced with a cybernetic one that can be popped out and used as a remote camera.
86* ''Film/{{Dredd}}'': The Clan Techie has cybernetic eyes he uses when he's working with computers. The area around them looks pretty badly irritated, and to make matters worse it's later shown that Ma-Ma [[EyeScream gouged his eyes out]] with her thumbs before the surgery.
87* ''Film/GhostInTheShell2017'': After his eyes get damaged in a bomb explosion, Batou gets the familiar eyes we know from the anime, rejecting the more discreet versions used by the Major as he's MarriedToTheJob, and so doesn't see the point in fitting in with society.
88* In the Film/JamesBond film ''Film/NoTimeToDie'', cybernetic eyes have apparently become common for one-eyed people. Spectre leader Blofeld uses his and its network to [[MightAsWellNotBeInPrisonAtAll run his organization from his cell]] via his one-eyed henchman Primo/"Cyclops" (as Bond nicknames him). Blofeld's is later taken away by Q so that he can analyze images from the eye's network, and [[spoiler:Primo's eye kills him when Bond fries it with his {{EMP}} watch in the FinalBattle.]]
89* In ''Film/RepoTheGeneticOpera'', Blind Mag was born blind but given the ability to see by [=GeneCo=] at the price of having to sing for the [=GeneCo=] Opera. [[spoiler:Eventually she is marked for repossession, but before it can happen, she removes the eyes herself at the end of her final performance for [=GeneCo=], and is killed for her defiance.]]
90* ''Franchise/RoboCop'' says that his eyes are "the best money can buy"; they are somehow superior to human vision, despite having visibly poor screen-resolution RoboCam. However, the built-in HUD featuring target identification, police database interface, system status readouts, and recording capability is a considerable upgrade over the original human eyes. (It's not in his faceplate: the readouts persist even after he's taken it off.)
91* In the ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' films after ''[[Film/StarTrekGenerations Generations]]'', Geordi [=LaForge=] replaces his VISOR with streamlined ocular implants.[[note]][=LeVar=] Burton did not like wearing the VISOR prop, which was very tight and gave him excruciating headaches.[[/note]] From what we see in ''[[Film/StarTrekFirstContact First Contact]]'', the implants are far superior to the VISOR, as he is actually able to see people in normal colors, as opposed to rainbow shapes. It is unknown if he can still [[LivingLieDetector tell when people are lying]]. Given that during the TV series, Geordi specifically declined ocular implants because they'd give him inferior vision to his VISOR, most likely the ones developed by the time of ''First Contact'' could see everything his VISOR could and more.
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Literature]]
95* In ''Literature/TheCompanyNovels'', Mrs. Corvey, who appears in the novellas set in the Victorian era, started life in poverty and lost her eyesight working as a child in a pin factory. She was working as a child prostitute when approached by a member of the Company's front organization the Gentleman's Speculative Society. In exchange for working for them, she was promised and given a better life and had her nonfunctional eyes replaced with electronic once which allow her to see perfectly and have telescopic functions and night vision built in.
96* In the ''Cyborg'' novels by Creator/MartinCaidin, Steve Austin's bionic eye is played much more realistically than in the subsequent TV series. The book Austin's artificial eye does not allow him to see again; instead, it's merely a miniature (but still highly sophisticated) camera with 20x zoom and infra-red capability, capable of taking up to 30 exposures before the film(!) in it has to be changed.
97* The ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' universe has "Tleilaxu eyes": metal eyes that the Bene Tleilax claim improve on the originals. The Duncan Idaho ghola Hayt was given them by his Tleilaxu creators. They are sometime bought to replace the eyes lost due to attacks by stone burners (indeed, when a stone burner goes off in ''Dune Messiah'', someone comments, "The Tleilaxu will sell many eyes here"). Some Fremen believe that they enslave their user.
98* ''Literature/{{Gearbreakers}}'': [[{{Cyborg}} Sona Steelcrest]] has an artificial left eye.
99* In ''Literature/TheHeroesOfOlympus'', Orion is depicted as having cybernetic eyes replacing [[ShownTheirWork the ones he lost]] and went to Hephaestus to get replaced.
100* ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' gets one after the second book in the series. It includes nifty features like a zoom function and night vision, but because the input doesn't ''quite'' match the remaining organic eye there's always a sense of something off. She ponders if having the other eye replaced would change that but isn't interested experimenting to find out. It does help her out during [[spoiler:the duel with Denver Summervale]], as she's able to zoom in on his face and watch for twitches.
101* In the ''Literature/MaximumRide'' series, this is how [[DemolitionsExpert Iggy]] was blinded -- the {{Mad Scientist}}s at the School were trying to [[PlayingWithSyringes replace his eyes with robotic eyes]] and massively screwed up.
102* In the world of ''Literature/PosterGirl'', the tyrannical Delegation demanded that every citizen receive an Insight eye implant, a glowing circle around their iris able to display various kinds of media and information and also used to constantly monitor the actions of each and every citizen, rewarding or punishing them for just about everything they did. Ironically, after the Delegation was overthrown by a rebellion, only their old loyalists and supporters kept their Insights, while everyone else had theirs removed [[spoiler:(or so they think)]].
103* In ''Literature/QuantumGravity'', Lila Black has had her eyes replaced, [[{{Cyborg}} along with many other body parts]]. They are perfect mirrors because of this, which pushes her into the UncannyValley for some characters.
104* ''Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures'': Lady Sallivera Darktail's right eye is a prosthetic thanks to her ex-husband's abuse. She can make it look like a natural eye of any color, but halfway through "Captive" she turns off the camouflage so that it looks like a black camera lens, to signify that she's no longer going to act like it didn't happen.
105* This is common in the ''Literature/RevelationSpaceSeries''. The Ultranauts (crews of the starships) frequently adopt these, with their quality varying greatly. [[{{Jerkass}} Dan Sylveste]] has artificial eyes which were locally made on a planet with little advanced technology, so his vision is ''terrible'', like a public CCTV feed. Captain John Brannigan has red, multifaceted cameras where his eyes should be, though by that point he looks more machine than a man.
106* In ''Literature/SpeakerForTheDead'', Olhado lost his sight when he was young. Technology was advanced enough to replace his eyes with metal ones, which allowed him to videotape everything he saw and play it back in slow motion. However, he only used one functional replacement; he gave up binocular vision to have one of the eyes be a jack that he could use to upload the video of his father's abuse of his siblings. Olhado, by the way, is supposed to be a nickname for "The Guy with the Eyes"; his actual name is Lauro Sulémão Ribeira von Hesse.
107* Cyber eyes are a pretty common implant in the ''Literature/SprawlTrilogy'', both for correcting bad vision and for vanity. Simstim stars always have them as they're used for the 'stim visual feed.
108* One character in the ''Literature/TimeWars'' books loses an eye and gets a bionic replacement.
109* On the cover of the fourth book of the ''Literature/{{Uglies}}'' trilogy, ''Extras''; the characters have "eyescreens", which are like permanent internet interfaces embedded in the eye that can be shut off at will.
110[[/folder]]
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112[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
113* In ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'', Centipede soldiers and agents are given a single bionic eye, allowing them to [[XRayVision see through walls when their eyes are shut]] and receive incoming orders as text. It also allows the person in control to watch what they see and [[YouHaveFailedMe terminate them if they fail]], [[CyanidePill are captured]], [[ExplosiveLeash or try to rebel]].
114* In ''Series/BabylonFive'', G'Kar gets a replacement eye for the one he [[EyeScream loses]] during his captivity on Centauri Prime. Unfortunately, the only iris color that was in stock was blue, which is completely mismatched with the deep red color of his remaining eye. It works through a wireless connection between the prosthetic eye and an implant in the vision center of his brain, which (as Dr. Franklin explains) may get a little disorienting when he takes the eye out for regular cleaning. G'Kar actually thinks this is cool and has fun [[EyeSpy leaving his eye in rooms as a hidden camera]].
115%%* ''Series/BlackMirror'' uses this in a couple of episodes.
116* ''Series/TheBookOfBobaFett''. Boba tells a member of the cyborg youth gang he's recruited to keep an eye on the Pyke Syndicate... and then realizes that he has a cybernetic eye. Boba apologizes, meaning it as an expression. The young man is not offended and laughs it off, saying not to worry because he's proud of his eye and spent a lot of money on it.
117* In ''Series/CenturyCity'', a hopeful baseball player has a bionic eye and has to appeal in court in order for him to play on the grounds that bionics give an unfair advantage to a player.
118* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
119** Davros, creator of the Daleks, has a cybernetic blue eye [[ThirdEye in his forehead]] in place of his real sunken eyes.
120** The Captain in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS16E2ThePiratePlanet The Pirate Planet]]" has a bionic headset which includes a fluorescent eyepiece as a high-tech [[DressedToPlunder pirate eyepatch]].
121** Tricky, the supposed android from "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS33E10JourneyToTheCentreOfTheTARDIS Journey to the Center of the TARDIS]]", is actually just a human cyborg with prosthetic replacements for his eyes.
122* In ''Series/{{Gamesmaster}}'', the Gamesmaster (played by Creator/PatrickMoore) is a cyborg with a removable camera-like attachement over one eye, as a riff on Sir Patrick's real life HighClassGlass.
123* In ''Series/OrphanBlack'', [[spoiler:Rachel]] gets one of these to replace her left eye after [[EyeScream a pencil gets shot into it]].
124* The "Bionic Eye" was first introduced in ''Series/TheSixMillionDollarMan''. Not only could Steve Austin see perfectly with it, but it had a 20x zoom lens and infra-red capability, and was coordinated with his bionic arm to give him pin-point hand-eye coordination and accuracy, even making him an unbeatable tennis-player.
125** ''Series/TheBionicWoman'' also had a bionic ear, which allowed her to hear voices from a full mile away.
126** In the TV movie ''The Return of the Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman'', Steve Austin's long-lost son also gets a bionic eye. This eye doesn't have a zoom lens or infrared vision; instead, it has a [[EyeBeams laser]].
127** The short-lived ''Series/BionicWoman'' remake identifies a problem with this trope when it's pointed out to Jaime Sommers that her employers can [[BigBrotherIsWatchingYou see everything that she sees.]]
128--->'''Sarah Corvus:''' [[AllMenArePerverts Those Berkut guys look at you in the shower you know.]]
129* The Silicates of ''Series/SpaceAboveAndBeyond'' have eyes that look like targeting reticules -- however, the Silicates are all robots, just [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots realistic-looking ones]].
130* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
131** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'': Geordi La Forge usually has a visor, but future or alternate versions of him have high-tech prosthetic eyes; sometimes brown like the actor, sometimes not. The "prime" Geordi finally gets them in ''Film/StarTrekFirstContact'' (see Film).
132** The Borg are equipped with ocular implants. Most drones have cybernetic hardware covering (or replacing) one eye (or, occasionally, both). [[Series/StarTrekVoyager Seven of Nine]]'s eyes look normal, but she retains the ability to see things normal humans cannot.[[note]]She had a Borg ocular implant in place of one eye, which was replaced with [[https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Ocular_implant?file=Ocular_implant.jpg a more "normal-looking" version]] by ''Voyager'''s EMH.[[/note]]
133** ''Series/StarTrekPicard'':
134*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekPicardS1E02MapsAndLegends Maps and Legends]]", the rims of F8's irises and pupils suddenly glow when he turns rogue.
135*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekPicardS1E06TheImpossibleBox The Impossible Box]]", we get a brief glimpse of what the world looks like through Hugh's eyes, and his field of vision is peppered with [[https://twitter.com/TrekCore/status/1234274723241943042 green Borg symbols]].
136*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekPicardS1E08BrokenPieces Broken Pieces]]", [[spoiler:Seven of Nine]]'s eyes light up with green Borg graphics when she becomes the Artifact's Queen.
137*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekPicardS1E10EtInArcadiaEgoPart2 Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2]]", Saga's memories are stored in her optical processors, but because her eye is damaged, some of the data has been corrupted.
138* Hawkeye from ''Series/{{Terrahawks}}'' has computer-enhanced vision due to a childhood accident, hence his nickname.
139[[/folder]]
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141[[folder:Music]]
142* The narrator of Music/JonathanCoulton's "The Future Soon" imagines meeting the girl he has a crush on in the future: "I'll see her standing by the monorail / She'll look the same except for bionic eyes / She lost the real ones in the Robot Wars..."
143[[/folder]]
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145[[folder:Music Videos]]
146* Nigel Stanford has these in [[https://youtube.com/watch?v=bAdqazixuRY&si=EnSIkaIECMiOmarE&t=225 Automatica]].
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
150* This is present in ''TabletopGame/{{Cyberpunk}} 2020'', too. No brands mentioned in the main rulebook, but one piece of artwork features two eyes with ''Nikkor''[[note]]The brand used by the (RealLife) Nikon company for its lenses[[/note]] on them, and one caption mentions Kiroshis as the brand one lady uses.
151* This is common in the ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' game 'verse, to the point where there are several brands, with Zeiss[[note]]A RealLife [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Zeiss_AG company]] known for making camera lenses, rifle scopes, and other optical equipment[[/note]] being the state of the art for cyber-eyes.
152* The ''Net Profits Catalog'' in the ''Toonpunk 2020½'' setting for ''TabletopGame/{{Toon}}'' offers laser eyes and x-ray eyes. They can be bought singly, so presumably a character could have one of each...
153* Among the many cybernetic implants that the Imperium uses in ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', "augmetic optics" are quite common. ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' features an electronic-eyed soldier who's a valuable reconnaissance asset as his range of vision extends across the electromagnetic spectrum.
154** Ocular augments in the Imperium can range from the comparatively cheap (yet still far beyond anything available yet in RealLife) kind mentioned above to implants that are nearly indistinguishable at first glance from natural eyes.
155** Particularly notable is Commissar Yarrick's "Baleful Eye", which [[EyeBeams shoots lasers]]. Why did he get an eye that shoot lasers? Because [[AscendedMeme Yarrick once heard a rumor that]] [[MemeticBadass he could kill you by glaring]].
156** Artificial eyes are surprisingly common in [[OurOrcsAreDifferent ork]] society; this is mainly due to either the [[MadDoctor local painboy]] deciding to replace some unfortunate ork boy's eye in the middle of stitching their arm back on, the [[MadScientist local mekboy]] accidently cobbling together a surplus of them while hammering together a new shoota, the ork boy actually wanting the crude implant in his skull because ork eyes are notoriously bad at seeing [[ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy (hence the ork's infamous terrible accuracy)]] or most likely a [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs combination of all three]].
157[[/folder]]
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159[[folder:Theme Parks]]
160* The ''[[Ride/Terminator23DBattleAcrossTime Terminator]]'' ride at Ride/UniversalStudios has a fake ad for cybernetic enhancements which shows a basketball player with artificial eyes that aid in his targeting. He sinks the perfect shot. And then his eyes glow red...
161[[/folder]]
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163[[folder:Video Games]]
164* The protagonists of ''VideoGame/AITheSomniumFiles'' and its [[VideoGame/AITheSomniumFilesNirvanaInitiative sequel]] all possess an artificial "AI-Ball" in place of their left eye that comes with X-ray and infrared sensors, the ability to take and receive phone calls, a wireless hacking tool, AR projection, and an onboard AI program to manage it all. When "in use" the only thing that outwardly gives them away as artificial is that the user's eyes do not match color. That's right -- a [[JustifiedTrope justification]] for heterochromia, out of all things. The sequel reveals that if a new ABIS agent has two functioning eyes such as Ryuki, they must have one surgically removed to house their "AI-Ball" partner.
165* ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'': Ryan Flores lost one of his eyes in a past incident, the injury that struck him wasn't too severe and he soon got treatment via a cybernetic replacement with bioskin, making it indistinguishable from the original that he previously had.
166* In ''VideoGame/CivilizationBeyondEarth'', all leaders, such as [[http://www.gamereactor.dk/media/21/krigerigskecivilization_1242104b.jpg?sid=e3cc6088e80a78d186b916ec8cce82b4 Vadim Kozlov]], have their eyes replaced by glowing, golden electronic ones when they have high [[{{Cyborg}} Supremacy]] affinity, with it being more noticeable for some than others. The effect is more than a little unsettling and badass at the same time.
167* In the Japanese campaign of ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert3'', a cutscene [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ackerman.jpg reveals]] that [[spoiler:President Howard T. Ackerman]]'s eyes are actually cameras.
168* Psybe from ''VideoGame/CosmicStarHeroine'' has a large chunk of his head replaced with cybernetics, including a large red orb that substitutes his left eye. There's also a minor NPC in API headquarters who was left blind as her cybernetic eyes were downloading an update... and then crashed.
169* [[MadScientist Dr. N. Gin]] of the ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot'' series has a mechanical eye as part of the life support system in his head ''crafted from a still-live rocket''. In some games, it looks more like a MadEye, [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} which also fits]].
170* Pretty much every character in ''VideoGame/Cyberpunk2077'' has a pair of these. You can tell which ones either by an unusually colored iris (like a purple or a red one), or when they glow blue when the character is using the net. Special mentions go to River, who has a very crude-looking prosthetic eye and the girl group Us Cracks, who are sponsored by a brand called "Kiroshi Optics", so they sport exotic-looking eye cyberware. Kiroshi is even noted in-universe as providing the best optical implants. Early on, V is even shocked that Viktor got his hands on one, let alone installing it while still in debt. It ends up providing your HUD, including map, weapons, and target scanning.
171* In ''VideoGame/DeadSpace3'', [[DistaffCounterpart Ellie Langford]] gets a [[http://deadspace.wikia.com/wiki/Log:I_For_an_Eye replacement]] for the right eye that was cut out with a screwdriver in ''VideoGame/DeadSpace2''. It's [[http://img2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20130321033818/deadspace/images/a/a9/DS3-Ellie-Profile_2.png noticeable as green, unlike her blue natural eye]].
172* The ''Franchise/DeusExUniverse'' features these.
173** One of the characters in ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' {{lampshade|Hanging}}s the fact that JC [[SunglassesAtNight wears his glasses everywhere]], and he responds by saying "My vision is augmented." Apart from a retina implant which allows seeing in dark areas, you can find an augmentation which allows you to see in infrared, and even through walls.
174*** ''VideoGame/TwentyTwentySeven'' features these as an augmentation upgrade.
175** ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'' features [[http://deusex.wikia.com/wiki/Mechanical_augmentation?file=RetinalProsthesis.png these]]. You can upgrade them to allow you to see through walls, tell when an enemy will stop looking for you, and keep you safe from flashbangs.
176*** Also included are a pair of delightful built-in sunglasses.
177* In ''VideoGame/DirtyBomb'', Proxy gets one of these from Redeye after one of her eyes gets shot through by Aimee.
178* Markov of ''VideoGame/{{Evolve}}'' has one of these, as well as metal plating that covers part of his head.
179* The Courier from ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' has the option to get these by means of the Optics Enhancer, an implant surgically placed within your eye that boosts your perception stat by one. One of the game's many mods, Project Nevada, expands upon this by offering Bionic Eyes that give the player night, thermal, and electro-magnetic vision.
180* Used to avoid an ArtifactTitle for the ''Franchise/JamesBond'' game ''VideoGame/GoldenEyeRogueAgent''. [=GoldenEye=] has a cybernetic eye upgraded with powers over the course of the game, with powers like [[XRayVision seeing through walls]] and hacking electronics.
181* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':
182** The Illusive Man's eyes are notable for being obviously artificial. The tie-in comic, ''Mass Effect: Evolution'', reveals where he got them: [[spoiler:a Reaper artifact on Shanxi]]. Notably, only ''one'' character ever mentions the Illusive Man's unusual eyes: Joker, in an off-hand remark about TIM's "freaky eyes" in ''VideoGame/MassEffect3''. [[spoiler:These are most likely the vector through which the Reapers were able to indoctrinate him.]]
183** The protagonist, Commander Shepard, is also mentioned as having implants to aid with targeting and so forth (along with various other body modifications) following ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'' when they were [[WeCanRebuildHim rebuilt]]. KickTheDog enough with Renegade actions and they glitch out and become a case of RedEyesTakeWarning.
184** Zaeed Massani is a more subdued example -- he has a cybernetic prosthetic eye to replace the one he (probably) lost when [[spoiler:he was shot in the head]]. Said prosthesis is grey, while his real eye is green.
185* ''Franchise/MegaMan'':
186** In ''VideoGame/MegaMan8'', Robot Master eyes are shown to work similar to LCD screens, although due to the vastly inferior animation it appears more as the eyes being a blank white until the rest fades in. The [[ComicBook/MegaManArchieComics comics]] do this too, with inactive robots having blank eyes, and the eyes of forcibly shut down robots tending to glitch and display weirdly before going blank.
187*** Turbo Man, Astro Man, Galaxy Man, and Bounce Man have LED screen eyes.
188** In ''VideoGame/MegaManXCommandMission'', while [[VideoGame/MegaManX X]] is a robot, and thus obviously has electronic eyes, a close-up on his eye shows up all kinds of little circuitry doodads visible on the iris.
189** This is also true in ''VideoGame/MegaManX8'', where X's irises are drawn like camera shutters. Strangely, the other robot characters have normal-looking eyes. Maybe it has something to do with him being an older model?
190* ''Franchise/MortalKombat'':
191** Kano has a cybernetic eye grafted to the right side of his face as part of his metal plate after he lost his real eye in a battle with Jax. In some games, it can emit EyeBeams.
192** By the time of ''VideoGame/MortalKombat11'', one of Frost's introductions shows that she has LED-ringed cameras for eyes after she collaborates with Kronika, who turns Frost into a highly advanced version of a Cyber Lin Kuei. It shows just how much of her humanity she's discarded.
193* Ads for these can be found in the first few levels of ''VideoGame/PerfectDark Zero'' -- and, as it turns out, [[StarterVillain Killian]] has them.
194* ''VideoGame/{{Rimworld}}'' has bionic eyes that give pawns ''better'' vision than normal.
195* Major "EZ" Wheeler, the main character of ''VideoGame/RTXRedRock'', lost his left eye during combat and had it replaced with an artificial one that allows him to see in four different vision modes.
196* Peacock, from ''VideoGame/{{Skullgirls}}'', possesses an unusual version of these. Her eyes (on her face) are cartoony-looking BlackBeadEyes, but in reality, they're just empty sockets. Instead, she has three large artificial eyes [[EyesDoNotBelongThere attached to each of her]] [[ArtificialLimbs mechanical arms]]. She takes this further with the ability to summon an indefinite amount of these eyes; they are all free-floating and she can see out of every single one, giving her a massive field of vision. On top of that, they can all [[BeamSpam shoot lasers]].
197* ''VideoGame/SpaceStation13'' features various forms of this trope, their nature depending on the codebase.
198** The research department on /TG/Station and similar can develop and create eye implants that can grant perks such as x-ray vision and the ability to see the security status of anyone nearby but can malfunction catastrophically when exposed to an EMP.
199** Robotics on Goonstation and similar has standard cybernetic eyes that function like perfectly normal, mundane biological eyes, meant for restoring vision to those who have lost their original eye. There are also various prosthetic eyes that more in-line with other versions of this trope and can allow people to see through walls, determine the exact composition of chemical mixes, indicate the health of people in sight, or even [[EyeBeams shoot lasers]]!
200* In ''Franchise/StarCraft'', ghosts can get an upgrade called "Ocular Implants", increasing their sight radius. It is actually quite useful as it allows the ghost to call in nuke strikes from outside the blast radius.
201* An NPC in ''[[VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic]]'', Gadon Thek, apparently has a pair of these, although they don't look too different from normal eyes. You can even ask him about his "freaky eyes".
202* Juri Han in ''VideoGame/StreetFighterIV'' had her eye gouged out by Shadoloo, and S.I.N. replaced it with a cybernetic one, which contains a miniature Feng Shui Engine that stores energy and powers her moves. In ''VideoGame/StreetFighterV'', M. Bison [[EyeScream rips out her eye]] to study it, so she goes back to the abandoned S.I.N. lab to find a replacement. Her "new" eye is a prototype, and unlike the one in ''IV'' that was designed to look like a human eye, this one looks like a robotic eye.
203* In ''[[VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosForNintendo3DSAndWiiU Super Smash Bros. 4]]'', the original VideoGame/{{Mega Man|Classic}}'s eyes behave like the above examples for ''[=MM8=]'' and the Archie comics. In his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aX2KNyaoNV4 reveal trailer]], they're LCD screens that are shown to flicker on after he powers up and then flash erratically after he's sustained damage.
204* ''VideoGame/SystemShock'' doesn't make a big deal of it (when the Hacker wakes up from cryogenic suspension at the beginning of the game's intro sequence, his eyes look normal), but given that Hacker can literally turn on eyes in the back of his head and has an option for enabling night vision, his vision is clearly more cybernetic than it used to be.
205** The remake never shows the Hacker's face, but makes it clear that he's plugging all the fancy upgrades into his body (or just putting them on, like the boots), while also clarifying that your in-game view, with HUD, map and target crosshair, are part of his cybernetic vision.
206** ''VideoGame/SystemShock2'''s protagonist appears to have these as part of his cybernetic enhancements.
207* Rhys, one of the two protagonists of ''VideoGame/TalesFromTheBorderlands'', has an Echo implant in his left eye, distinguishable from his natural brown by its bright blue color. It allows him to scan objects and people to find out more information about them, and glows when he does so. In the present time his implant is yellow due to the fact that [[spoiler:in the final episode, he tears out the chip in the eye through its pupil to get rid of the Handsome Jack AI]].
208* ''VideoGame/TheiaTheCrimsonEclipse'': In the second half of the game, Seth replaces his left eye with the Falcon Eye, which is a machine that can detect the line-of-sight of guards during stealth missions.
209* Garrett from ''VideoGame/{{Thief}}'' has a prominent {{Steampunk}} [[http://thief.wikia.com/wiki/Mechanical_Eye prosthetic eye]] from the second game onward. It allows him to zoom in, as well as see through a special remote camera that can be tossed around corners. In one cutscene, it is shown that the eye apparently requires regular removal and maintenance, at least refilling with some fluid.
210** In the StealthSequel ''VideoGame/Thief2014'', [[LegacyCharacter Garrett]] finds [[http://thiefgame.wikia.com/wiki/Mechanical_Eye the same eye]] hundreds of years later.
211* The Engineer of ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'' can equip an accessory called "The Googly Gazer," which has alternate styles to make it look like either a regular GlassEye or an electronic one. He also has Special Eyes, which look like glowing goggles with expressive metal eyelids.
212** It's also possible to replace Demoman's EyepatchOfPower with a bionic eye.
213* Princess Julia, one of the protagonists of ''VideoGame/TribesVengeance'', had her natural, grayish-brown eyes replaced with golden-irised electronic prosthetics in order to have HeadsUpDisplay output without wearing a FOV-constricting helmet.
214* Quite a bit of the eye customization options in ''VideoGame/XenobladeChroniclesX'' can give your PlayerCharacter this look. [[spoiler:This could be seen as foreshadowing for the true nature of your character, as well as the rest of humanity in NLA.]]
215[[/folder]]
216
217[[folder:Web Comics]]
218* In ''Webcomic/AgentsOfTheRealm'', Folami has a {{Magitek}} golden left eye.
219* Kimiko in ''Webcomic/DresdenCodak'' acquires one of these after the Hob storyline.
220* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'': The Corbettite monk/cook/general Vadaxxus has a red-glass-and-brass prosthetic eye. Spark-minion/grad student Miss Baumhund has a device strapped over one eye, though it's not entirely clear if it's a replacement or just an enhancement of some sort.
221* Dabbler from ''Webcomic/GrrlPower'', a succubus who is a JackOfAllTrades including being a technological expert, has an electronic prosthetic eye after [[EyeScream losing the real one in a swordfight]]. The eye is capable of some features like video recording and the like. It never falls out unintentionally during the course of the story, but it is loose enough that Dabbler ''pulls it out of her socket'' during dinner with her coworkers.
222* This pops up in a few places on ''Webcomic/LastRes0rt'':
223** Some of the children in Gabriel's care on the White Diamond Crisis have bionic eyes (implied to be part of the 'infection' aboard the ship), giving them a heterochomatic appearance.
224** Daisy's cybernetics end up inflamed under stress, revealing a network of circuits not otherwise visible in her eyes and elsewhere.
225* Berc of ''Webcomic/{{Magience}}'' has a prosthetic eye. He sometimes removes it and plays with it, which discomfits other characters.
226* ''Webcomic/ManlyGuysDoingManlyThings'': Jet, the main character's brother, is a SuperSoldier from a nondescript spacefuture, and has a yellow eye with crosshairs instead of a pupil. It's eventually revealed that the military put it inside Jet to be used to take photos of strategic locations/targets. Jet mostly uses it to take photos of his velociraptors being cute.
227* Both Michael and Vendetta in ''Webcomic/{{Pilot}}'' have these. Michael's look normal, though he can cause them to turn black with white pupils for police interrogations. Vendetta's, however, are [[MonochromaticEyes all white]] for reasons unknown.
228* Robert of ''Webcomic/{{SSDD}}'' has some with [[http://www.poisonedminds.com/d/20110621.html special features]]. Unfortunately, they are a [[BlackEyesOfEvil little unsettling to look at]].
229** The black-eyes thing has now been averted. It turns out that his eyes always had the ability to change their appearance to perfectly mimic natural eyes; the surgeon who installed them just forgot to turn on that functionality. As a bonus, he can now actively change their appearance just by thinking about it.
230* Schtein of ''Webcomic/StringTheory2009'' has replacement eyes after an accident. Unfortunately, they only work in black and white, which causes a problem later.
231[[/folder]]
232
233[[folder:Web Original]]
234* In ''Literature/AvalonsReign'', [=OSIs=] are devices that are implanted inside a person's eyes, giving them access to AugmentedReality features such as a HeadsUpDisplay.
235* Talies from ''Webcomic/TheMotleyTwo'' has an electronic left eye, his real eye lost in some NoodleIncident. It's black, with a white pupil.
236* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'': [[RetiredBadass Maria Calavera]] has had a pair since losing her eyes decades ago, [[spoiler:which were [[MagicalEye Silver]]]]. Unlike most examples, they're actually quite clunky, looking more like a pair of over-sized high-tech goggles, and cast everything she sees in a bluish tint; she also has to have them taken in for maintenance every few years, or they start breaking down and malfunctioning.
237[[/folder]]
238
239[[folder:Western Animation]]
240* In ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfTheGalaxyRangers'', MadScientist Lazarus Slade has a cybernetic eye that shoots [[EyeBeams laser blasts]].
241* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'', all robot characters have square pupils instead of round ones.
242** In the episode "A Head in the Polls", Bender demonstrates that (at least in his case) they are actually shaped like the standard "stop" symbol on a recording device, and can change to the "play" or "rewind" shapes when he is performing those functions.
243* In ''WesternAnimation/LittlestPetShop2012'', Ramona's eyes look pretty normal most of the time (for a macaw, at least) but [[https://imgur.com/tzD0NnX become like this]] when she starts scanning her surroundings for intruders.
244* ''WesternAnimation/{{Metalocalypse}}'': Dick Knubbler, sound engineer for Dethklok, has a pair of robotic eyes after his real eyes were literally exploded by [[ThePowerOfRock the power of the band's rocking]]. Each eye can move independently, like a chameleon.
245* Matrix, Enzo's adult form in ''WesternAnimation/{{Reboot}}'' season 3, after he lost an eye to an opponent in a fighting game, replaces it with a [[SupernaturalGoldEyes gold optic]] with a stylized M. When he gets angry, it rolls and the M on the other side [[RedEyesTakeWarning glows red]].
246* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'':
247** Clone Commander Wolffe sports a cybernetic right eye from his second appearance onwards, thanks to an offscreen run-in with [[DarkActionGirl Asajj Ventress]]. Unlike most other cybernetic eyes on the series, his is a utilitarian grey and doesn't glow.
248** Separatist Admiral Trench, when he reappears as a {{cyborg}} after his presumed demise in his first appearance, has the left-most of his [[ExtraEyes many eyes]] as a glowing {{red|EyesTakeWarning}} prosthetic.
249** Clone commando Wrecker of the Bad Batch is a more {{ambiguous|Situation}} example: his left eye is completely white, and the scarring on the left side of his head would seem to support that it's a cybernetic replacement, but it hasn't been explicitly confirmed that this is the case.
250** There are also various minor characters with glowing prosthetic eyes that usually tend to be on the bulky side, completely covering their old eye socket.
251* Cyborg of ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'' has a mechanical eye. This is a plot point in one episode where the Titans are facing robots built with the same technology and Cyborg reveals that his mechanical eye has a weakness that can be exploited to make objects invisible to it, which they use to sneak past the robots.
252[[/folder]]
253
254[[folder:Real Life]]
255* Many scientists are working on [[http://www.2-sight.com/ creating retinal implants that can send information directly into the optic nerve]], effectively curing many kinds of blindness (and simpler models, such as those which transmit image data onto another kind of receptor, [[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1210425/Blind-people-able-using-amazing-tongue-tingling-device-bypasses-eyes.html such as the tongue]], already exist). These same scientists are perfectly aware that once you can turn an electronic camera into an effective human eye, there is (theoretically) little difficulty in giving these eye cameras night vision, zoom functions, etc... Unfortunately, these optic nerve/visual cortex devices currently have far lower resolution than even the cheapest digital camera and are generally limited to producing "white" or "black" (on or off) pixels. It's better than being blind, but it produces nowhere near the detail of normal vision.
256* In 2005, Tanya Marie Vlach has lost her left eye in a car accident. Now she is collecting funds to help her build an HD-equipped prosthetic eye capable of augmented reality. Apparently, it will shoot in a 720p resolution. However, it will not send the data to a nerve of some sort. Instead, the video will be transmitted to a mobile device. Vlach wants the eye to take photos from blinks.
257* Rob Spence, "the Eyeborg," lost one of his eyes in a shooting accident as a teenager, and eventually had a prosthetic eye installed that matches the motion of his existing eye and transmits the video to a handheld receiver. It's not HD and it doesn't have Augmented Reality capabilities yet, but the technology is a proven element.
258* The US Army is working on a cybernetic eye code-named "[[Franchise/StarWars Luke's Binoculars]]".
259* [[https://www.instagram.com/bsmachinist/ Brian Stanley,]] an American CNC machinist, was diagnosed with cancer[[labelnote:*]]specifically retinoblastoma[[/labelnote]] and had to have his left eye surgically removed when he was a child. In his adult years, he took to making prosthetic eyes of his own loaded with [=LEDs=] of various colors and arrangements, including white ones that he can use as a built-in flashlight.
260[[/folder]]

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