We’ve all heard of "hand-eye coordination," but the missing link in that chain is latency. In computing, latency is the delay between a command and the action. In baseball, latency happens when your eyes receive "old" or "muddled" information because of poor lighting, and your hands react to where the ball was, not where it is.
When you wear traditional, fixed-tint sunglasses, you are essentially playing with a "filter lag." If the light is too dim for your tint, your brain has to work harder to "render" the image of the ball. This extra millisecond of processing time is the difference between catching the ball in the pocket or off the tip of the glove.
Maris flip up sunglasses act as a Latency Killer for your nervous system.
By giving you the ability to "switch modes" instantly, you ensure that your hands are always working with the highest-quality, lowest-latency data possible.
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The High-Definition Edge: By flipping up the lenses when the sun ducks behind a cloud or as the game heads into twilight, you remove the "tint-induced blur." Your brain receives a high-frequency, high-brightness signal, allowing your hands to move with a certainty that tinted vision can't provide.
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The "Clear-Path" Reaction: When you aren't squinting or fighting a dark lens in the shadows, your nervous system remains in a "flow state." Your hands can react instinctively to a bad hop or a late-breaking curve because they are receiving a crystal-clear, real-time feed from your retinas.
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The Fatigue Buffer: Visual latency increases as your eyes get tired. By toggling to natural light during lower-light periods, you reduce the "strain-load" on your brain, keeping your reaction times as sharp in the 9th inning as they were in the 1st.
The secret to elite athleticism is the speed of the feedback loop between what you see and how you move. Maris Sunglasses ensure that your visual "internet speed" is always at 5G. Don't let a static lens slow down your hands—upgrade to the only flip up baseball sunglasses that keep your reaction time in the fast lane.

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The "Micro-Stutter" Fix: Eliminating the Brain’s Processing Gap
The "Seam-Reader" Advantage: Why Dynamic Light is the Secret to Velocity