Ah, the Magic Eye. For years, it made dolphins and sharks extrude from the bedroom posters of '90s teenagers, and now it's bringing an entire music video to life. For their latest track, "Black Is Good," indie band Young Rival – as well as director Jared Raab and programmer Tomasz Dysinki – decided to use random dot autostereograms to convey the images, creating an illusion of depth. If you can "decouple" your eyes correctly, that is.

"We collected real-time depth data of the band performing the song "using an X-Box Kinect hooked up to a computer," explained the YouTube video description. "The computer was running software called RGBD toolkit, designed for capturing the depth information from the Kinect using its built-in infrared system. Once we had our depth information, we unpacked it into image sequences and edited these sequences as if they were regular video."

If you really want to see it, make sure the video is set to 1080p HD and blow it out full-screen. Personally, I have some sort of Magic Eye disability that makes the images sink in instead of jumping out, but for people like me, they've also conveniently released a "crossed-eye" version (which asks you to cross, rather than "relax" your eyes) as well as a depth-map version that reveals the images without any eye acrobatics. Consider it the easiest difficulty setting.

Crossed-eye version

Depth-map version