Anubis Raptor
The Mighty Avenger.
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The white lens are looking pretty cool. Kinda spoiled myself though when I looked at those photos. But being spoiled has never been this exciting


Yup, still too wide. They only need to be lenses the size of bale's eyes, maybe a little bigger. Perhaps some kind of black lensing mechanism with a white central unit?
Making the lenses any smaller would limit his peripheral vision. That was one of the problems Ben Affleck had with the helmet in Daredevil. I'm happy with them as is. Again, it only works in comics because we say it works. And this comes from a guy who's drawn Batman
Yeah, I agree the lense do look too wideI'm pretty sure that we're just seeing them from the wrong angle here. They look far to wide, but given that his head is tilting down, that will be taking away from the virtical axis . . . hence making them look wider.
I really would like to see critics produce better. No photoshop, make a cowl with wearable lenses.
Zim is an alienEven then, it's still too wide. Those eyes are entirely too huge for that head. Reminds me of those cartoon bugs:
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If they wanted lenses, at least make it look good and not half-assed. I would've been just fine without their appearance if I knew they'd do it like this.
.Zim is an alien.
So, so true.Making the lenses any smaller would limit his peripheral vision. That was one of the problems Ben Affleck had with the helmet in Daredevil. I'm happy with them as is. Again, it only works in comics because we say it works. And this comes from a guy who's drawn Batman.

I loved that shoooooow.
Making the lenses any smaller would limit his peripheral vision. That was one of the problems Ben Affleck had with the helmet in Daredevil. I'm happy with them as is. Again, it only works in comics because we say it works. And this comes from a guy who's drawn Batman.
The DD artwork above is really cool, but it's not what i was looking for. The artwork was on the official website in the first editions and it was among many other artwork. It was a color drawing with a white background.
I don't see why you'd apply real-world problems to that of the film.So, so true.
And for the arguments about white and black color lenses - how would that help in not blocking peripheral vision?