top of page

Game 2

Eye

Solve
in
1

A young mother walks in. You don't see anything immediately wrong with her. 

​

Oh that's right, she has a sleeping child in her pram. This is probably for the child, who doesn't look like they would be 1 year old. Maybe 2??

​

"She doesn't usually look at me, or my husband. What a waste of such beautiful big eyes you know?" she exclaims.

Solve 
in
2

You take them both into your consultation room. Not a lot you can do with a sleeping child without breaking consensual practice. 

​

So you just begin asking the mother some questions, such as did you notice anything wrong?

​

She replies "not really, ever since she was born she has been very reluctant to look at us, and usually just sleeps. she is fairly active at night, but she never watches the TV with us. she only plays with random items she stumbles across."

Final
Chance

The young girl finally wakes up. 

​

She looks at you in the dark room with big shining eyes, and then immediately gets distracted. 

​

Shining a single light, she immediately switches her focus. Her entire eye lights up red. She has no iris. 

​

You tell the mother to go visit the doctors and give her a referral.

The
Answer

Aniridia

​

- Associated with WAGR, but is harder to detect in females

- As name implies, there is an absence of iris, leading to this characteristic "big eyes"

- Activity at night and unwanting to look may be indicative of photophobia, anxiety and ADHD, all which is related to the "Range of Developmental Delays" part of the WAGR syndrome

- This is apart of VISN3111

2025, made by Eric Qin. UNSW. SOVS

bottom of page