Game projects and experiences
We created Eyes First games to help people with speech and mobility disabilities to learn eye tracking skills in an easy and fun way. The games are powered by Windows 10 eye tracking APIs and can be used with or without Windows 10 Eye Control, a key accessibility feature for people with speech and mobility disabilities. Learn more about Windows 10 Eye Control and Windows eye tracking APIs in this Windows Blog (opens in new tab).
Explore the Eyes First games from Microsoft and our amazing student and intern collaborators.
Microsoft games
Eyes First games are popular games reinvented for an “Eyes First” experience. The primary purpose of the Eyes First games is to introduce the basic skills of using Eye Tracking devices. This is especially useful for people who haven’t used these devices before or haven’t reached a point where they depend on an eye tracker for communication.
Eyes First – Tile Slide
Practice your skills by using your eyes to slide the tiles back into order to solve the puzzles.
Eyes First – Match Two
Exercise your mind and eyes with match two! Flip cards to reveal images, and match up all the pairs to win the game.
Eyes First – Double Up
Use your eyes to slide all the tiles to collide like numbers to double them until you reach 2048 (or higher).
Eyes First – Maze
Learn how to dwell with your eyes and navigate Lunita through each maze to help her find her way home.
Student and intern game projects
Check out these amazing eyes-first games created by our student and intern collaborators, including Pocket Variable (Tanmay Kulkani) and OccularFlow (Nayana Dasgupta, Farhan Mahmood, Guide Limjumroonra).
Eyes First – Codebreaker
Use eye gaze to exercise your master mind and crack the code.
Eyes First – SubSweeper
Use eye gaze to sink all the submarines hidden on the board.
Of Mice and Messages
A fun pipe-based puzzle game designed for eye tracking users.