A Watch That Shoots Lasers? Yes, Please.

By Jason Fell Nov 21, 2014

Every morning when I wake up, I wish I could shoot lasers from my wrist. Don’t you?

One enterprising hobbyist heard my calls and created a watch that, yes, shoots lasers. (Weep. Tear.)

The watch was built by Patrick Priebe — my new hero — using a machined metal body, a carbon-coated cover and a 1,500-miliwatt laser. As you can see in the demonstration below, the laser isn’t just some puny beam of light. It burns hot enough to pop a series of balloons.

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Did I mention the watch also has an LED screen and tells time, too?

One can only assume that Priebe took inspiration from James Bond, who used a laser watch in 1995’s GoldenEye to dramatically escape a train car that was about explode. Kinda cool.

Why anyone would really need a laser watch is beyond explanation — other than tech-geek fantasy, anyway. Not to mention it is dangerous and probably breaks a few laws.

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Priebe apparently isn’t the only person crafty (crazy?) enough to create a laser watch. Here’s a version that features a 700 miliwatt laser:

And — because why not? — here’s the clip from GoldenEye where Bond blasts through the train floor with his laser watch. (It happens around the 1:10 mark, and the clip is conveniently set to video-game music.) Enjoy.

Related: Gold? Silver? Pffft. This Necklace Is Pure Illumination.

Every morning when I wake up, I wish I could shoot lasers from my wrist. Don’t you?

One enterprising hobbyist heard my calls and created a watch that, yes, shoots lasers. (Weep. Tear.)

The watch was built by Patrick Priebe — my new hero — using a machined metal body, a carbon-coated cover and a 1,500-miliwatt laser. As you can see in the demonstration below, the laser isn’t just some puny beam of light. It burns hot enough to pop a series of balloons.

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Jason Fell

VP, Native Content at Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur Staff
Jason Fell is the VP of Native Content, managing the Entrepreneur Partner Studio, which creates dynamic and compelling content for our partners. He previously served as Entrepreneur.com's managing editor and as the technology editor prior to that.

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