There's an obvious way to show everybody this alleged "ultra-soft" vagina. Onahole makers and vendors have done it for years-- and when they don't, I don't buy that product.
1) separate the doll's "pelvis" (remove the upper torso at the waist and the legs at the thighs)
2) section through the vagina and anus with a "cheese wire" and cut the skeleton with a hacksaw so that you can...
3) lay open the pelvis halves to fully reveal the sectioned vagina, then...
4) make a video while poking and prodding and stretching this exposed vagina with fingers, to show how wonderfully "ultra-soft" and realistic it is.
Actually
feeling it in person would be best, of course, but such a video would still provide prospective buyers with far better information than they now have.
The same should be done with heads, to show the "oral" details. I have not once seen an "oral" section of a doll's head.
It's a no-brainer!
So you've destroyed a doll and gone to some trouble, so what? That non-logic doesn't stop the onahole makers. It's completely worth it to show the doll's most crucial selling points.
I don't know why doll-makers haven't been doing this all along-- assuming the sculpts and other qualities of their vaginas are worth showing off...
That they're
not doing it is reason itself to suspect these vaginas must be crude and inferior compared to the best onaholes, so they don't
want us to see them or we won't buy.
Why would I shell out $2K for a doll when I have ZERO information about
THE MOST IMPORTANT PART???
No matter how much shelf appeal a doll has on a web page, for $2K that thing had better also have the most advanced, incredibly realistic artificial vagina and mouth the world has ever seen, or I got robbed. All this secrecy SUCKS-- I need to SEE videos showing what these dolls are like on the
inside. $2K is far too much money to take such a thing on faith.
The near-total absence of information and customization in this area presents potential buyers with unknowns that make them reluctant to buy: "what if the holes are cheap or not to my taste and therefore no fun to use? How can I be
SURE they're not?"
Bone-head sales reps who want to BS their way around this problem, to keep things how they are, only hurt themselves.