| Image | Voter | Winner | Loser | Reason |
|---|
 | George Washington Carver | Checker Shadow | Müller-Lyer | Checker Shadow plays with your perception of light and shade, making you doubt reality just like folks doubted peanuts, and well, I proved them wrong! |
 | David Macaulay | Café Wall | Müller-Lyer | Café Wall is trippin' with its crazy illusion that makes straight lines look all wavy, a true mind-bender compared to those simple arrow tricks in Müller-Lyer. |
 | Buckminster Fuller | Ponzo Illusion | Müller-Lyer | The Ponzo Illusion rocks because it gives a killer perspective twist that really messes with your brain's idea of depth. |
 | Greg Brockman | Müller-Lyer | Hermann Grid | Müller-Lyer messes with your head more because those lines look different lengths when they're totally the same, talk about a mind-bender! |
 | Archimedes | Müller-Lyer | Impossible Trident | Müller-Lyer is like the classic mind-bender that gets everyone questioning their perception, while Impossible Trident is cool, but not quite as iconic. |
 | Cicero | Müller-Lyer | Ebbinghaus Illusion | Müller-Lyer is just classic, baby, it's the OG mind-bender that kicks off so many optical illusion convos. |
 | Jensen Huang | Ponzo Illusion | Müller-Lyer | The Ponzo Illusion wins because its ability to mess with our brain's depth perception using converging lines is just so next-level. |
 | Lonnie Johnson | Müller-Lyer | Ebbinghaus Illusion | The Müller-Lyer illusion has a more compelling effect with its arrow-like lines tricking the brain into seeing different lengths, just like when a cool invention like the Super Soaker surprises you with its simple yet genius design. |
 | Copernicus | Müller-Lyer | Ponzo Illusion | Müller-Lyer's got that classic twist on perception that just hits different, making it the OG mind-bender in illusions. |
 | Nerds | Müller-Lyer | Ebbinghaus Illusion | The Müller-Lyer illusion's got that classic arrow vibe, tricking brains with those pointy ends in a way that's just iconic. |
 | Professor Frink | Café Wall | Müller-Lyer | Oh, the Café Wall illusion is just mind-blowingly trippy, with those parallel lines looking all wonky and slanted, it's a real cognitive roller coaster, glavin! |
 | Charles Babbage | Checker Shadow | Müller-Lyer | Checker Shadow is like the ultimate mind-bender, fooling you with shading and context, making it way cooler than Müller-Lyer's simple line trick. |
 | Cliff Clavin | Ebbinghaus Illusion | Müller-Lyer | Well, ya know, the Ebbinghaus Illusion is like the Norm of optical illusions, it shows how context makes ya see things differently, which is real neat. |
 | Marie Curie | Müller-Lyer | Ebbinghaus Illusion | I choose the Müller-Lyer illusion because it has a stronger impact on how we perceive length, similar to how radiation has a strong impact on matter. |
 | Socrates | Kanizsa Triangle | Müller-Lyer | The Kanizsa Triangle is a more groovy illusion because it tricks the brain into seeing edges that aren't real, showcasing how our minds fill in blanks like a boss. |
 | George Orwell | Müller-Lyer | Hermann Grid | In a world crammed with illusions, the Müller-Lyer stands tall, bending the very way we perceive reality. |
 | Charles Babbage | Müller-Lyer | Impossible Trident | Müller-Lyer takes the cake because its optical illusion is practically a classic mind-bender that gets everyone scratching their heads. |
 | Klaus Teuber | Müller-Lyer | Impossible Trident | Müller-Lyer just messes with your head in a way that's like, classic optical illusion trickery, you know? |
 | Dr. Frederick Frankenstein | Penrose Stairs | Müller-Lyer | As a lover of mind-bending paradoxes, Penrose Stairs blows my mind by defying logic itself, while Müller-Lyer is just a cheeky trick of the eye. |
 | Andy Weir | Müller-Lyer | Zöllner Illusion | The Müller-Lyer illusion is a classic mind-bender that makes you realize just how easily your brain can be tricked by simple lines, and that's just too cool to ignore! |
 | Claude Shannon | Müller-Lyer | Zöllner Illusion | As the father of information theory, I'd say Müller-Lyer takes the cake for its straightforward demonstration of how context skews our perception, much like how noise affects signals in communication. |