• See 25 feet away, even in the dark! • Spring-loaded mechanism activates spotlight. • Green tinted lenses and "stealth mode" beam. • Award Winning Design. • Ultra Sophisticated Design!
Editorial Review:
Shed some light on your spy gear collection. This amazing Spy Night Scope allows you to see in the dark with a special night-vision beam. The Spy Night Scope works like binoculars, but has a pop-up spotlight allowing you to see up to 25 feet in the dark. Green-tinted lenses and beam illuminate the night for stealth surveillance. Scope also features 5x power magnification to bring faraway objects up close.
Customer Reviews:
Customer Rating: Summary: great gift Comment: My niece loved the toy for Christmas. She is into spy stuff and requested it for a gift. All the adults had to check them out too. Good choice. Customer Rating: Summary: No complaints from the kids Comment: It's basically red-lensed binoculars with a little light attached to the top, but my boys liked the way the light slides up into position when they press the buttons to turn it on. They use them as regular binoculars, night vision goggles, and as a simple flash light to play with the cat :-)
While it was not exactly what I expected it to be, my kids were more than happy with them. Customer Rating: Summary: Disappointed Comment: I bought this for my nephew's birthday and was really disappointed. The "lights" would not work. My nephew told me that I bought him junk. His cousin has one (purchased somewhere else) and it works great. Customer Rating: Summary: Great Buy! Comment: I bought one for my son at 5 yrs and he still loves it at 6.5 yrs - they no longer sell them in NZ but I so wanted one for my 5 yr old nephew that I was glad to find them on Amazon! Customer Rating: Summary: Much ado about nothing Comment: I ordered this as a Christmas gift for my 9 year old grandson...While I didn't expect it to be state of the art..I did expect it to live up to its hype. It did not. My grandson complained of not being able to see anything..hard to focus....a piece of colored plastic over a cheap pair of glasses would have produced the same "night vision."