The Most Bizarre Tech Patents That Actually Exist
Bizarre tech patents prove that invention has no limits. Every year, patent offices worldwide receive thousands of wild ideas. Some are genius hiding behind weird descriptions. Others are truly, genuinely strange. But they all share one thing. Somebody believed in them enough to file paperwork. And that paperwork costs real money.
Patent databases are gold mines of human creativity. They also hold some of the strangest documents ever written. From pet-petting machines to anti-gravity boots, inventors dream big. Sometimes they dream too big. Here at KREAblog, we dug through the archives. These ten filings stood out as the wildest of all.
1. A Method for Exercising a Cat With a Laser
Yes, someone actually patented pointing a laser at a cat. U.S. Patent 5,443,036 was granted in 1995. It describes “directing a beam of light” for feline exercise. The patent drawings show a cat chasing a dot. Most cat owners had done this for decades before the filing. However, the patent held up for its full term. It’s a reminder that obvious ideas sometimes slip through the system.
2. A Device to High-Five Yourself
Feeling lonely? Patent US 5,356,330 had you covered in 1994. It described an apparatus for “simulating a high-five.” The device was basically a mounted plastic hand on a spring. You’d slap it, and it would slap back. The inventor argued it provided “emotional gratification.” No evidence suggests it ever reached production. Still, the paperwork exists in the official record forever.
3. Bizarre Tech for Birdcage Covers That Play Music
In 1999, a patent appeared for a birdcage cover with speakers. The idea was to play calming music while the bird slept. But here’s the twist. The cover also had a microphone to record the bird’s songs. Then it would remix those songs and play them back. The patent described this as “avian audio enrichment.” Nobody knows if any bird ever enjoyed the feature.
4. A Motorized Ice Cream Cone
Why lick your ice cream when a motor can spin it? Patent US 5,971,829 described a cone with a built-in motor. The scoop would slowly rotate as you held it. This let you lick without turning your wrist. The filing included detailed engineering drawings of gears inside a cone. Surprisingly, similar products actually reached store shelves years later. Sometimes bizarre tech ideas find their audience eventually.
5. Glasses That Let You Watch TV While Lying Down
Patent US 2,388,622 dates all the way back to 1945. It described prism spectacles for reading while lying flat. The wearer could look straight up at the ceiling. Meanwhile, the prisms bent the view toward a book or screen. The concept was simple but oddly ahead of its time. Modern versions of this idea sell well on online marketplaces today. Sometimes the strangest patents become real products decades later.

6. A Santa Claus Detector for Children
Patent US 5,523,741 aimed to prove Santa’s arrival. Filed in 1996, it described a stocking-mounted sensor. When someone placed gifts nearby, a light would flash. The child would then “know” Santa had visited. The inventor clearly had a sense of humor. However, the patent examiner approved it with full seriousness. The detailed technical drawings show careful engineering for pure whimsy.
7. A Helmet That Reads Your Dreams
In 2004, a Japanese filing described a dream-capture helmet. It used EEG sensors to monitor brain waves during sleep. Then software would attempt to create images from the data. The patent claimed users could “review” their dreams each morning. Actual neuroscience was nowhere near this capability at the time. Even today, dream imaging remains extremely primitive. But the patent sits there, waiting for science to catch up.
8. Bizarre Tech for a Dog-to-Human Translator
Several patents have tried to crack animal translation. One notable filing from 2002 described a collar with a microphone. It analyzed bark pitch, duration, and frequency patterns. Then it matched those patterns to preset phrases. The output appeared on a small screen attached to the collar. “I’m hungry” and “I’m happy” were sample translations. Pet owners worldwide wanted this to work. So far, no version has proven scientifically accurate.
9. An Apparatus for Facilitating the Birth of a Child by Centrifugal Force
This is possibly the most alarming patent ever granted. Patent US 3,216,423 was filed in 1965. It described a rotating table that would spin a pregnant woman. Centrifugal force would theoretically assist delivery. The filing included a net to catch the newborn. No hospital ever adopted this approach, for obvious reasons. Yet the patent remained in the official database for its full term.
10. A Coffin With an Escape Hatch
Fear of being buried alive isn’t new. But patent US 7,346,938 gave it a modern twist in 2008. It described a coffin with an air supply and alarm system. The buried person could pull a cord to ring a surface bell. It also included a two-way radio and a heart monitor. If the monitor detected a heartbeat, it would alert emergency services. This filing shows that even our oldest fears get the tech treatment.
Patent offices don’t judge whether an idea is good or bad. They only check if it’s new and described clearly enough. That’s why databases overflow with filings that seem absurd. But here’s the thing worth remembering. Many great inventions once seemed completely crazy too. The line between bizarre and brilliant is thinner than we think. So the next time you have a wild idea, maybe file the paperwork. History might thank you for it.
This article is for informational purposes only.












