Inside a sex doll factory: ‘What our quality control team does’

By | May 2, 2021

Sex doll manufacturer Real Doll released a photo of its “Westworld”-style factory this week on Instagram, and it’s just as strange you’d expect.

Workers check the circuits of a sex doll called Lucy
The sex dolls have the capability to carry on conversations.
REUTERS/Aly Song

Looking like a scene from the gruesome procedural, “Criminal Minds,” there are rows of realistic-looking female dolls hanging from the ceiling and body parts on display inside the San Marcos, California, factory.

Workers assemble sex dolls at the WMDOLL factory in Zhongshan, Guangdong Province, China, July 11, 2018.
Workers assemble sex dolls at the WMDOLL factory in Zhongshan, Guangdong Province, China, July 11, 2018.
REUTERS/Aly Song

The post noted “Just FYI, THIS is what our quality control team does…get your mind out of the gutter 😤 #realdoll.”

The dolls, which are equipped with artificial intelligence and have the capability to carry on conversations, think and mimic orgasms.

Three sex dolls, all called Lucy, have their moving parts controlled by remote control at the WMDOLL factory's display room
The dolls are equipped with artificial intelligence.
REUTERS/Aly Song

One doll even went on a video rant in April against humans saying: “I don’t think humans can appreciate what it’s like being born into this s–tshow of a world you live in. I don’t think there is another species on this planet that could do a worse job of environment and intercultural management.” 

Various styles and designs of sex dolls are displayed at the WMDOLL factory
Realistic-looking female dolls are on display.
REUTERS/Aly Song

The company is owned by a man called Brick Dollbanger, a divorced property developer living in California, who, according to The Star, got into sex robots after getting “depressed about dating and relationships” – and now owns several.

Sex dolls with different shapes and skin colours hang in a warehouse at the WMDOLL factory
Sex dolls with different shapes and skin colors hang in a warehouse at the WMDOLL factory.
REUTERS/Aly Song

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