Elon Musk’s Neuralink is doing something that, until recently, felt straight out of a sci-fi movie. The company has rolled out brain implants that let specially abled people play games just by thinking about moving a cursor. No hands. No clicks. Just the brain doing its thing.
And no, this isn’t some far-off future idea anymore. It’s already happening. The line between what the human body can do and what technology can help with is getting thinner by the day.

Neuralink (Photo via X)
So what exactly is this AI brain chip everyone’s talking about?
Right now, Neuralink has 21 people across the world testing its brain implants, up from 12 last September. These implants help people with paralysis control computers, games, and digital tools using only their thoughts. Early users are already browsing the internet, posting on social media, and moving cursors around smoothly, all without lifting a finger.
The company says it’s closely watching how these users interact with the tech so it can fine-tune both the device and the surgery that goes with it. Real people, real feedback.
No movement. Just thought.
Participants can play video games, scroll through laptops, and chat online using nothing but their minds.
The tech is designed mainly for people with paralysis and spinal injuries, translating brain signals into actions on a screen. What sounds unbelievable on paper is slowly becoming part of everyday life for those testing it.
Musk hints at what’s next
Elon Musk shared an update on X, saying the next version of Neuralink’s device will be three times more powerful than the current one and could arrive sometime in 2026. He congratulated the team, writing, “Congrats to the @Neuralink team for helping many people who have lost use of their body with our Telepathy implant.”
He also spoke about another project called Blindsight, which aims to help people who are completely blind. The idea is to start with low-resolution vision and improve it over time through software updates. The goal is to allow users to “see” by stimulating the brain directly. It’s still early days, but the ambition is big.
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How it all started
Neuralink began human testing in 2024, after its application was initially rejected by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2022. Since then, things have moved fast. With 21 participants now onboard, the company is clearly gearing up for wider use.
According to Reuters, Neuralink revealed in September that 12 people with severe paralysis had already received the implant. Many of them are now using it to control computers, apps, and even physical devices, all through thought alone. And in June, the company raised a massive $650 million to keep pushing the technology forward.
What once sounded impossible is now quietly becoming real, and that’s what makes it so fascinating.