Originally posted by Icefalcon
The pupil is actually a hole to allow light to enter the eye. It\'s impossible to have a white \"hole,\" unless... er, light is actually coming out of the eye itself. :rolleyes:
Yes, I have been speculating about that as well, although there would not have to be light to be generated by the eye, it just has to be reflected uniformly over the spectrum. Therefore, an eye
could be made to be at least \"whitish\" (light gray) if:
1) the retina-equivalent would be much much more sensitive compared to a human eye
2) the back of the eye would have a reflective layer, like cat\'s eyes
3) the pupil was replaced by the entire eye, letting in light from the entire surface, but less per surface quantity
4) the inner eye would need to be more complex than the human eye in order to provide focusing ability, which is an absolute must, considering both diving and flying. Therefore, greater complexity would be required to achieve this objective anyway, as the human eye\'s focusing ability isn\'t very good (no zooming, for example, and long distance view isn\'t very detailed as well)
In fact, I think it is very reasonable to have the retina-equivalent be way more sensitive, because it needs to see underwater as well, and there is only very few light. Therefore, I think that the eyes will become clear (and thus black) when underwater or in the dark (which won\'t be visible due to lack of light). The bigger entry area has the additional benefit of allowing more light to get in (the same reason why the \"conventional\" pupil widens in the dark).
I think that a flash of light will have devastating effects on the Klyros\' eyes when administered in the dark, for this reason.
Edit2: this in fact
is, AFAICS, the nightvision from the settings page, not Infravision, as I thought Nightvision was going to be explained as.