Sex tech has been promising the holy grail of immersive and interactive adult AR for years. But, we’re still entirely limited to experiencing what there is, on expensive and still bulky VR headsets such as the Meta Quest 3 or the Apple Vision Pro. Enter EnjoyMeNow, the self-proclaimed “first browser-based WebAR adult entertainment platform” from DCBC Group LLC. Launched in early 2026 (the company itself was founded in 2025), it lets you point your phone’s camera at any room and summon 3D CGI characters (branded Pleasurettes™), who appear to occupy your actual space and respond to your hand movements in real time.
Another big claim from DCBC Group is the privacy and accessibility of EnjoyMeNow. No apps or downloads, or even any log in. Just open EnjoyMeNow.com in Safari on iOS or Chrome on Android, grant camera access, and you’re in. The entire 45 MB experience streams to your browser, runs locally on-device, and is gone when you close the tab. DCBC calls it “Arousal Intelligence™” powered by their custom WebAR engine – *Rhythm Flow* for zero-lag synchronization and FantasySync for blending camera input, skeletal tracking, and expressive animation. In Private Show mode you watch solo or group scenes; in Virtual Sex mode your hand becomes the controller, dictating position, rhythm, and response. All processing is on-device, nothing is recorded, and the company insists no personal data ever leaves your phone.
The Promise: Privacy-First, Performer-Free CGI Sex in AR
DCBC Group positions EnjoyMeNow as a technological and ethical leap. Every Pleasurette is built from scratch in 3D software with realistic skin shading, multi-pass hair rendering, and soft-body physics—no real performers, no filming, no motion capture. The pitch is explicit: “No one is exploited. No one’s livelihood depends on what they’re willing to do on camera.” Characters currently include five women in lingerie and one male model, Adrian. The company claims 95 %+ mobile-device compatibility (2018 flagships and newer), millisecond response times, and global CDN delivery with 200+ edge locations. Encryption is applied at the asset level, and the closed system prevents uploads or redistribution.
For sex-tech enthusiasts tired of clunky VR headsets or privacy-hostile apps, the browser-only, zero-persistent-data model is genuinely compelling on paper. It’s the kind of frictionless accessibility that could finally push AR adult content beyond early-adopter nerds and into mainstream mobile use.
The Reality Check: Samantha Cole’s Hands-On Verdict
Not everyone is convinced the execution matches the hype. In a detailed and characteristically blunt review for 404 Media, journalist Samantha Cole spent time with the platform and came away calling the experience “weird, schlocky and unsatisfying.” She tested both female Pleasurettes and the male character Adrian, describing the latter’s “90-degree angled dick,” “jiggliest pair of male titties,” and a “thousand yard stare” while he moaned in a woman’s voice. Hand-tracking made characters squat, shrink, or crawl over a semi-transparent “ghost penis” overlay, but the interactions often resulted in clipping, fist-bump-style collisions, or unintentionally comical animations. Cole noted that full features like orgasms required a $2.99 payment that her test transactions couldn’t unlock.
Cole also pushed back hard on DCBC’s original marketing language around performer exploitation. The company initially framed the all-CGI choice as a moral safeguard against “real consequences” in traditional porn. After feedback, they revised the statement to call it “a format choice, not a moral position.” Cole described the pivot as “infuriating” and “gallingly dismissive of the industry,” arguing it echoes anti-porn talking points while ignoring the agency and livelihoods of real performers. She also quoted privacy reporter Joseph Cox, who called the lengthy privacy explanations “just needless words” that could have been simplified to “we don’t allow uploads.”
Why AR Porn Fans Should Still Pay Attention
Even with Cole’s critique, EnjoyMeNow represents an interesting technical milestone. True real-time hand-responsive AR running entirely in a mobile browser—without pre-rendered video or static models—is rare. The local processing and aggressive privacy architecture address two of the biggest pain points in adult tech: data leaks and platform lock-in. For users who specifically prefer fully synthetic characters (a growing niche in AI-generated and CGI adult content), the concept of summoning a responsive 3D partner into your bedroom without leaving a trace is novel.
That said, the early reviews suggest the “Arousal Intelligence” still has a long way to go before it feels truly erotic rather than experimental. The uncanny valley is wide when a character’s physics are convincing but facial expressions, voice acting, and nuanced reactivity fall flat. Sex-tech veterans know that interactivity alone doesn’t equal immersion – timing, emotional connection, and believable anatomy still matter.
EnjoyMeNow is the latest reminder that the gap between a flashy press release and a satisfying bedroom experience can be measured in millimeters of hand-tracking lag and degrees of anatomical realism. DCBC Group has built something genuinely new in terms of delivery and accessibility; whether that translates into repeat users or just a curious one-off demo will depend on how quickly they iterate on the character quality, motion fidelity, and feature depth.
If you’re the type who loves poking at the bleeding edge of adult AR, the link is public and the barrier to entry is literally zero. Just remember: right now the Pleasurettes might appear in your space, but the real spark of desire still has to come from somewhere deeper than a browser tab. The tech is here. The polish – and the conversation about what “ethical” even means in synthetic sex – has only just begun.
