Giant Squid
Weirdness 8/10

The deep-sea giant with eyes the size of dinner plates

This deep-sea giant has eyes the size of dinner plates — the largest of any animal alive.

The short version

The giant squid can grow over 40 feet long and has the largest eyes of any animal — about the size of a human head — to spot the faint glow of hunting sperm whales. It grabs prey with two long toothed-sucker tentacles and a sharp beak, and inspired the kraken legend.

Why it's so weird

  • The Giant Squid has the largest eyes of any animal alive, roughly the size of a human head.
  • The Giant Squid can grow over 40 feet long.
  • The Giant Squid uses its dinner-plate eyes to spot the faint glow of hunting sperm whales in the blackness.
  • The Giant Squid grabs prey with two long feeding tentacles lined with toothed, gripping suckers.
  • The Giant Squid tears its catch apart with a sharp, parrot-like beak.

The full story

Deep in the dark ocean lives a giant with eyes the size of dinner plates. Meet the giant squid, a creature so elusive that it was never even filmed alive until the year two thousand twelve. It can grow over forty feet long, and its eyes are the largest of any animal on the entire planet, roughly the size of a human head. Those enormous eyes help it spot the faint glow of its main predator, the sperm whale, hunting in the blackness far below the surface. It catches prey with two long feeding tentacles lined with toothed, gripping suckers, then tears it apart with a sharp parrot-like beak. For centuries, sailors who glimpsed its huge tentacles told terrified tales of a sea monster they called the kraken. A real giant, hiding in the deep. Follow for more weird animal facts.

Watch the 45-second version

Giant Squid gallery

Giant Squid 1Giant Squid 2Giant Squid 3