This Man Went Missing After Creating Device To See Multidimensional Beings

The Vanishing Inventor: Did One Man Build a Device to See Beings from Other Dimensions?

In the shadowy corners of fringe science and online conspiracy communities, few tales spark as much intrigue as the story of Daniel Nemes — a self-taught Spanish inventor living in Cali, Colombia, who claimed to have created a device capable of photographing entities from parallel realities. He called it Energy Vision (or ENERGIVISIÓN). Shortly after sharing his findings, his online presence largely disappeared, and so, it seems, did he. What did he uncover? Was it groundbreaking science, elaborate hoax, or something far more unsettling?

The Man Who Challenged the Veil of Reality

Daniel Nemes was no university professor or government-funded researcher. He described himself as an independent inventor with a passion for astronomy, practical sciences, and the hidden layers of existence. Operating outside mainstream institutions, he experimented with electromagnetic fields, light spectra, and unconventional imaging techniques. Around 2017, he began posting images he said were captured using his custom-built device — strange, ethereal figures, shadowy forms, and luminous anomalies that he attributed to interdimensional beings.

These weren’t blurry blobs or obvious fakes (at least, not to his supporters). Some showed humanoid silhouettes glowing in unnatural colors; others resembled faces or entities emerging from distorted backgrounds. Nemes claimed the technology combined ultraviolet, infrared, and black light with specialized lenses and sensitive screens to reveal what the human eye cannot perceive.

How the Device Was Said to Work

According to scattered accounts from his old posts and discussions in fringe communities, Energy Vision didn’t rely on conventional photography. It allegedly modulated electromagnetic fields and used a mix of visible and non-visible light wavelengths to “tune in” to higher or parallel frequencies. The process involved pointing the apparatus toward areas where signs of presence were felt, capturing raw footage or stills, and then processing them under different lighting conditions in a lab to reveal the entities.

Nemes reportedly took over a thousand such images. He argued that these beings — interdimensional intelligences existing beyond our three spatial dimensions and time — are all around us, invisible to normal senses but detectable through the right technological “window.” Some theorists linked this to concepts in quantum mechanics, string theory (which posits up to 11 dimensions), and the Casimir Effect, where hidden energies manifest in empty space.

The Sudden Erasure

What makes the story compelling is what happened next. By around 2018, Nemes’ social media accounts (particularly Facebook) went dark. Videos, posts, and images began vanishing. His digital footprint was scrubbed, and he stopped appearing in public discussions. While some reports dramatize this as a full “disappearance” with no trace left behind, the reality seems closer to a deliberate withdrawal: he largely wiped his own online presence and retreated from view. His Instagram lingered with little activity, but the vibrant sharing of his work had ceased.

This vacuum fueled speculation. If it was all a hoax, why the effort to erase everything? If the images were harmless pareidolia (seeing patterns in randomness) or digital manipulation, why the mystery? And if he had genuinely glimpsed something profound… who (or what) might want it silenced?

Science, Speculation, or Something Else?

Mainstream science remains skeptical. There is no peer-reviewed evidence, independent verification, or reproducible data supporting Energy Vision. Critics point out that many of the images show signs of manipulation, over-processing, or simple optical illusions enhanced by suggestive lighting. Nemes faced mockery, boycotts, and dismissal from the scientific community, which he reportedly attributed to resistance against paradigm-shifting discoveries.

Yet the tale taps into deeper questions that legitimate physics entertains:

  • Could other dimensions exist and be inhabited? String theory and M-theory suggest yes — though they’re mathematical constructs, not proven portals.
  • Is reality layered with frequencies and energies we cannot sense? We already live surrounded by radio waves, Wi-Fi, cosmic radiation, and infrared — all invisible without tools.
  • Might consciousness or non-physical entities interact through quantum-like nonlocality or vibrational states?

Respected physicists like Michio Kaku have discussed the plausibility of multidimensional spaces, even if accessing them remains far beyond current technology.

Reports from those who viewed Nemes’ images described feelings of unease, visual distortions, or a sense that “something was watching back.” Were these psychological effects, suggestion, or genuine contact?

A Hidden World Just Beyond Sight?

Whether Daniel Nemes was a visionary, a clever prankster, or something in between, his story endures because it resonates with an ancient human intuition: we are not alone, and reality may be far stranger than our senses reveal.

We are bathed in invisible waves every moment. What if intelligent life — or consciousness itself — operates in those hidden layers? What if certain technologies or altered states (like those induced by DMT or deep meditation) briefly pierce the veil?

Nemes’ abrupt silence leaves us with more questions than answers:

  • Did he see too much and choose to step back?
  • Was pressure applied to suppress the work?
  • Or did the device simply stop working — or reveal something he no longer wished to share?

The final, most chilling possibility: What if it actually worked… and whatever he encountered didn’t appreciate being seen?

The mystery of Daniel Nemes and Energy Vision remains unsolved, a modern parable about curiosity, the unknown, and the risks of peering too deeply into the fabric of existence.

What do you think — elaborate hoax, suppressed discovery, or something far weirder? Drop your thoughts in the comments.

(And if you’re out there, Daniel… the internet is still waiting for an update.)