Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Gaming
  5. Reviews

Hands On: Tobii's eye-tracking camera can handle work, but is best at play

Using Tobii's eye-tracking camera is like having Superman's laser-guided gaze

Add as a preferred source on Google
hands on tobii eyemobile handson 9708
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

Think about what you do when you pick something up. You look at it first, then move and grab. Interacting with computers, or playing a game, works in a very similar manner, but takes longer. You look, then move a cursor using the mouse or touchpad, and tap. Eye-tracking technology company Tobii wants to simplify the process, making interaction faster and more intuitive.

Recommended Videos

Using Tobii’s eye-tracker made me grin. It’s different, fun, and an experience unlike any other.

Tobii showed me the updated version of its eye-tracking system, mounted inside the MSI Dominator Pro gaming laptop — the first of its kind — with Windows Hello, and the new Assassin’s Creed Syndicate game. The result is technically fascinating, and shows the tech may belong in the gaming world, rather than as an alternate UI control system.

The Tobii system’s capability is far in excess of Hello’s requirements, so unsurprisingly, it worked very well. After snapping an unflattering infra-red picture, the system requires you to be looking at the computer screen from a distance of about 90 centimeters or less. If it sees you, it will simply unlock itself. No passwords, no PINs. Just sit down, and you’re in.

Assassin’s Creed Syndicate better demonstrates Tobii’s ability. I was guided through a few demos, starting with the horse drawn carriage races, where a glance around corners on the screen — with your eyes — re-orientated the camera, giving an early peak at what was to come. It’s something we do naturally when driving or cycling, and is a little like strafing using two sticks on the controller, except using your eyes.

Tobii-EyeMobile-handson_9705
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

A widely used feature in Assassin’s Creed is the ability to rope-slide between buildings, and targets are selected by centering the camera at the target. With Tobii, that’s not required — you can simply gaze at your target. It’s faster, more accurate, more immersive, and more fun. I could almost feel beams firing out into the screen. The eye-tracking also simplified targeting, as enemies fit for assassination were selected with a look, reducing camera and character movement.

I’d never played the game before, so I didn’t have to relearn any controls already deeply ingrained in my mind. The Ubisoft representative demoing the game knew it inside out, and appeared totally at home with all the new eye-tracking controls. How long had he been using them? I expected him to say weeks or even months. “Two hours,” he told me. I was the first person to see it working.

Controlling your laptop

Outside of the game, this comfort level was reduced. Menus, icons, and other actions in Windows can be performed with a look and a click, removing the need to physically move a cursor. Accuracy was great, making it possible to hit small menu buttons with ease.

But it was also disorienting. It just felt so weird, and when I got into trouble, my hand instinctively went for the mouse to correct the situation. I couldn’t imagine using it often because of this. Those few seconds saved by glancing just didn’t seem worth retraining years of now instinctual finger/touchpad control.

The point that games may represent Tobii’s future isn’t lost on the company, and its latest bar is designed to be very attractive to gamers and gaming peripheral manufactures. It’s smaller, slimmer, and an integral EyeChip takes the pressure off the laptop’s processor, bus, and GPU. This reduces power consumption, and leaves the laptop’s resources free to power the game, rather than the Tobii. The MSI laptop with Tobii eye-tracking will go on sale at the end of January for an as-yet undisclosed price.

Using Tobii’s eye-tracker made me grin. It’s different, fun, and an experience unlike any other. However, it made more sense in a game than on the desktop. I hope to see the gaming-orientated bar find its way into more notebooks this year.

Highs

  • Fun to use
  • New dimension for game controls
  • Windows Hello support
  • Updated model doesn’t take PC resources

Lows

  • Requires brain ‘retraining’
  • Questionable usefulness for UI control
Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
OneDrive is getting an AI feature that names your files so you don’t have to
Microsoft's Copilot Suggested Rename reads what's inside your OneDrive files and suggests better names for them automatically.
Microslop Microsoft AI Copilot logo

Renaming files is one of those tasks that sounds trivial until you are staring at a folder full of documents or files called Document1, Scan_04182026, and FinalFINALv3. Microsoft is doing something about it.

A new feature, called Copilot Suggested Rename, is on the Microsoft 365 roadmap. It is scheduled to roll out starting June 2026. The AI-powered OneDrive feature reads the content of your file and automatically recommends clear, descriptive file names, saving you time. 

Read more
AMD’s Radeon RX 9070 GRE has strong 1440p claims, but $549 may be a hard sell
Radeon RX 9070 GRE goes global after China debut
AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE front view

The Radeon RX 9070 GRE has now launched globally at Computex 2026. AMD first introduced the RDNA 4-based GPU in China in May 2025, so this is a wider rollout rather than a brand-new graphics card.

It will be available from board partners starting June 2, in reference and overclocked versions, with a suggested retail price of $549.

Read more
Windows 11 is finally addressing key annoyances with the universal Search system
Partial terms now surface compound file names anywhere they appear, not just at the start.
Windows 11 Laptop

If you have ever typed a file name into Windows Search but stopped midway because you only remembered part of it, Microsoft has something for you. 

In its latest Windows 11 Insider Preview build, Microsoft has added a focused but genuinely useful improvement to the way Windows Search finds your files. It is one of those fixes that makes me wonder why it took so long. 

Read more