Playboy: Virtual Vixens
2/5 Stars for pleasure. 4/5 Stars for historical weirdness. Essential viewing for anyone who wants to understand why your dad had a CD binder full of discs labeled "3D GIRLS."
The most notable entry was Playboy's Virtual Playmate . This wasn't just a viewer; it was a "builder." You could mix and match body parts, hair colors, and outfits (or lack thereof) to create a custom 3D companion. It was a deeply clunky precursor to Sims 4 's Create-a-Sim or Cyberpunk 2077 's character creator. You wanted a Playmate with Pamela Anderson’s hair, Jenny McCarthy’s eyes, and a torso from a 1987 centerfold? The CD-ROM would try its best, usually resulting in a terrifying chimera that haunted your desktop. Looking back, Playboy Virtual Vixens is easy to mock. The graphics are laughable. The "interactivity" is shallow. The voice acting is stilted. Playboy Virtual Vixens
Playboy’s strategy was simple but ambitious: scan their famous Playmates into a computer, wrap their bodies in low-polygon 3D models, and let users "interact" with them. The flagship title, Playboy Virtual Vixens , featured models like Victoria Fuller and Angel Boris. 2/5 Stars for pleasure