Toyota Crystal Eye 60 Prius

Toyota Crystal Eye 60 Prius

For most of its life, the Toyota Prius has been the vehicular equivalent of beige carpet. Sensible, efficient, and about as emotionally charged as a toaster. But the current-generation Prius changed that narrative. It finally looks… good. Genuinely good. Toyota swapped the fridge-on-wheels silhouette for something sleek, low, and just edgy enough that you don’t feel like you need to apologize for driving it.

Naturally, that meant the tuners were going to get involved.

Enter the Crystal Eye 60 Prius, a one-off show car from Japan that answers a question nobody asked: What if the Prius were designed by a cyberpunk samurai with a Fast & Furious DVD collection?

The car debuted at the Tokyo Motor Show, where subtlety went to die. Built by lighting specialist Crystal Eye with help from Body Shop Kikuta, this Prius doesn’t just push the styling envelope—it shreds it into confetti and lights it on fire.

A Prius That Looks Ready to Commit Crimes

Up front, the car wears a splitter so large it could double as municipal snow-removal equipment. Above it sits a ventilated hood that suggests track-day intent, even if the powertrain underneath is still politely humming along in hybrid serenity. Wide, flat aluminum fender extensions flare outward, wrapping around 20-inch Work wheels that gleam like jewelry stolen from a supercar.

It’s the rear, though, where things really spiral into glorious madness.

A towering wing sprouts from the tailgate, flanked by angular fins that jut out like mechanical paddles. Beneath it all sits a massive rear diffuser, because nothing says “aerodynamic efficiency” like a Prius that looks like it’s about to enter a time-attack race.

And then there are the taillights: custom hexagonal LED units developed by Crystal Eye themselves. They’re sharp, futuristic, and will soon be sold to anyone who wants their own Prius—or anything else—to look like it belongs in a dystopian anime.

Laying Frame in a Hybrid

The entire thing rides on Air Rex Odin air suspension, allowing the Prius to drop to mere millimeters above the pavement when parked. It doesn’t just sit low—it lies in wait. It’s the kind of stance normally reserved for supercars and show queens, not for a plug-in hybrid whose natural habitat is the Whole Foods parking lot.

Yet here we are.

Still a Prius… Technically

Under all the carbon, aluminum, LEDs, and bosozoku-inspired chaos, the Crystal Eye 60 is still a Prius. It uses Toyota’s most powerful plug-in hybrid setup, good for 223 PS, which is respectable—but not exactly the stuff of street-racing legends. There are no turbochargers hiding beneath those vents, no engine swaps yet lurking in the shadows.

That makes this build all the more hilarious and brilliant. It looks like it should be illegal in at least three countries, yet it’s still technically road-legal in Japan.

Why It Exists

This Prius was never meant to be a production car. It’s a rolling billboard, built to showcase Crystal Eye’s lighting products and grab attention at auto shows. And it absolutely succeeds. In a sea of tastefully modified sports cars and hypercars, the most outrageous thing in the room is… a Prius.

Somehow, Toyota’s once-boring hybrid has become a blank canvas for wild creativity. And in the hands of Japan’s tuning culture, it has transformed into something that blurs the line between show car, anime villain, and rolling art installation.

If this is the future of the Prius, count us in—even if we’re still secretly laughing at it.

Source: Toyota

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