Zeusus
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Predator eye areas are almost always close set *Mods sticky this*
Creates a much more striking/intimidating stare.
This allows predators/hunters to accurately gauge depth perception and hone in on a prey. Distance is more easily approximated with closer set eyes. Having wide set eyes allows the animal to see greater perimeter surrounding itself. A prey animal needs to ensure that the predator cannot sneak up behind it, so its visual arc needs to be larger
Having wide-set gay alien eyes like Barrett is a major failo
Barrett may only serve as a woman's handbag no way this guy inspires any lust or raw sexual attraction in women.
Needs wide-set eyes to make sure no one in nearby vicinity is spying on him when hes fucking his husband
Guess who is fucking the top tier PSL goddess Adriana Lima...?
Guess who is the #1 porn star rated by women...?
Keep coping with "muh wideset eyes" you prey-eyed subhumans
Here is an article from BBC explaining why our eyes faces forwards: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20141013-why-do-your-eyes-face-forwards
"Take a stroll through a zoo and, if you're paying attention, you might notice that most animals can be sorted into two groups. There are those animals with eyes on the sides of their heads – chickens, cows, horses, zebras – and then there are those with eyes that are closer together on the front of their face, like monkeys, tigers, owls, wolves. All the humans visiting the zoo are obviously in the latter camp. What's behind this divide?
There's a trade-off when it comes to eye placement. As the eyes move forward along the face, two fields of vision overlap. It's that overlap – the slightly different perspective on the scene in front of you that each of your two eyes sends to your brain – that allows you to perceive depth. Animals with sideways-facing eyes may not have this well-developed depth perception, but they are able to see an extremely wide panorama instead."
"Predators are best served, ostensibly, by having extremely good depth perception. That would help them to better locate and more effectively take down their prey, whether that's a leopard stalking a gazelle or a raptor snatching a rabbit in its talons, or one of our primate ancestors grabbing an insect from the branch of a tree."
Creates a much more striking/intimidating stare.
This allows predators/hunters to accurately gauge depth perception and hone in on a prey. Distance is more easily approximated with closer set eyes. Having wide set eyes allows the animal to see greater perimeter surrounding itself. A prey animal needs to ensure that the predator cannot sneak up behind it, so its visual arc needs to be larger
Having wide-set gay alien eyes like Barrett is a major failo
Barrett may only serve as a woman's handbag no way this guy inspires any lust or raw sexual attraction in women.
Needs wide-set eyes to make sure no one in nearby vicinity is spying on him when hes fucking his husband
Guess who is fucking the top tier PSL goddess Adriana Lima...?
Guess who is the #1 porn star rated by women...?
Keep coping with "muh wideset eyes" you prey-eyed subhumans
Here is an article from BBC explaining why our eyes faces forwards: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20141013-why-do-your-eyes-face-forwards
"Take a stroll through a zoo and, if you're paying attention, you might notice that most animals can be sorted into two groups. There are those animals with eyes on the sides of their heads – chickens, cows, horses, zebras – and then there are those with eyes that are closer together on the front of their face, like monkeys, tigers, owls, wolves. All the humans visiting the zoo are obviously in the latter camp. What's behind this divide?
There's a trade-off when it comes to eye placement. As the eyes move forward along the face, two fields of vision overlap. It's that overlap – the slightly different perspective on the scene in front of you that each of your two eyes sends to your brain – that allows you to perceive depth. Animals with sideways-facing eyes may not have this well-developed depth perception, but they are able to see an extremely wide panorama instead."
"Predators are best served, ostensibly, by having extremely good depth perception. That would help them to better locate and more effectively take down their prey, whether that's a leopard stalking a gazelle or a raptor snatching a rabbit in its talons, or one of our primate ancestors grabbing an insect from the branch of a tree."