A wide, silky-textured dual-ended vibrator with a glowing plasma ball end and a vibrating silicone shaft, tested vaginally and clitorally over multiple solo sessions. The verdict: a genuinely novel sensory experience that quickly became a favorite, though usability quirks around the controls, warmth, and cleaning keep it short of perfect.
There is something almost cinematic about the way our tester first encountered this toy. A crowded festival floor in Prague, November 2025, lights, noise, dozens of products competing for attention, and then, glowing in the middle of it all, a plasma ball. She wandered over because she could not not wander over. Months later, when her review unit finally arrived, she opened the package in her car. Not at home. Not in some considered, ceremonial way. In the parking lot, because waiting felt impossible.
That kind of pre-use enthusiasm is rare, and it sets the tone for everything that follows. This is a product that announces itself before you have even pressed a button, and then, more importantly, mostly delivers on the promise.
Our tester, a Female, 31, CZ, spent multiple sessions with the toy across both clitoral and vaginal use. She tried every vibration mode, every position she could think of, and even attempted a few unconventional placements (the nipples, for the record, were a no-go). What follows is her experience, with all the genuine delight, and the genuine friction, that came with it.

Let's start where she started, with the texture. Silicone is silicone, you might think, until it isn't. The body of this toy is described, repeatedly, as "almost silky," and the comparison she reaches for is telling: something used by people of the high class. That phrasing might sound florid out of context, but in context it is precise. Plenty of silicone toys feel rubbery, or sticky, or that slightly tacky drag that makes you reach for lube whether you need it or not. This one, by her account, feels like a different category of object entirely.
"The moment I held it, I was amazed — the material feels almost silky, like something exclusive. Using it vaginally, I was surprised by how easy the insertion was despite the size, and it hit all the right spots. The plasma ball on the clitoral area was a genuinely new experience: it touches a wider area at once, reaching multiple sensitive spots simultaneously. This toy has become my absolute favorite."
The pleasant surprise, and this matters more than it might sound, is that the silky finish does not translate into slipperiness in the hand. Toys that feel premium often pay for that feel with a tendency to skid out of your grip at the most inopportune moments. Not this one. The grip stayed secure through every position our tester tried, which means the texture is doing aesthetic and tactile work without sabotaging the basic ergonomics. That is a harder design feat than it sounds.

About that plasma ball. It would be very easy, almost expected, for a feature this visually arresting to be pure marketing theater, the kind of design flourish that sells units at festivals and then fades into the background once you actually use the thing. That is not what happened here.
The plasma ball is the wider, rounded end of the toy, and our tester used it primarily for clitoral and surrounding-area stimulation. What she discovered, and what she had not encountered with any previous vibrator, is that the ball's shape allows it to make contact with multiple sensitive zones simultaneously. Most clit-focused vibrators are, by design, pinpoint instruments. They go where you put them, and they do their job in a small radius. This one spreads its attention more generously, touching the clit and the area around it at once, which she found genuinely novel. Not better than targeted stimulation, necessarily, but different in a way worth exploring.
The visual element is, she admits, more partner-oriented than solo-oriented. When you are using a vibrator on yourself, your eyes tend to be closed. The plasma ball's glow is harder to fully appreciate when you are concentrating on internal sensations rather than watching the toy work. Solo, it added a small extra dimension. With a partner in a dark room, she suspects, it could be properly magical. She did not have a partner to test this theory with, but the imagined scenario clearly sparked her curiosity.
This toy is wide. Notably wide. Our tester says it looked, on first inspection, "short and huge in terms of width" compared to the more conventionally proportioned toys she was used to. Width can be intimidating, especially if your previous experience leans toward slimmer, longer designs.
The good news, and this is genuinely good news for anyone hesitating: with adequate lubrication, insertion was significantly easier than the visual would suggest. The silky finish helps here. So does the rounded shape. She was, in her words, surprised by how comfortable it was to insert despite the size, and once in place, it hit "all the right spots." The width that looked intimidating turned out to be the width that delivered a fuller, more enveloping internal sensation.
This is one of those product traits that splits an audience cleanly. If you actively prefer slim, focused insertion toys, this is not going to convert you. If you have been curious about something fuller but felt unsure where to start, the combination of silky finish and forgiving shape makes this a surprisingly accessible entry point.
The vibration system here has two independently controllable ends and multiple modes. Our tester worked through all of them across her sessions, and her account of how she used the modes is worth pausing on, because it speaks to something the toy gets right at a design level.
"I've always been drawn to toys that reward patience, and this one delivered completely. Because it feels so pleasurable and has such a distinctive shape, I found myself naturally slowing down, switching between modes, and experimenting with pressure and position rather than rushing toward a goal. Lying on my belly with the plasma end near my clitoris and the other end at my vaginal entrance created an intense, layered sensation I hadn't anticipated. The ability to set different vibration patterns on each end added another dimension entirely. This is genuinely a toy built for exploration, not just quick satisfaction."
What she is describing is a toy that resists the quick-hit logic a lot of vibrators are built around. Many toys, especially fixed-intensity ones, push you toward a get-in-get-out approach because the experience itself is fairly one-note. This one, by her account, invites lingering. The longer-pause patterns work for unhurried, exploratory play. The mid-intensity continuous setting is the reliable workhorse for climax. And being able to layer different patterns on each end at the same time creates combinations that single-motor toys simply cannot replicate.
There is one frustration here, though: she could not figure out how to match the vibrations on both ends. Setting them differently is easy. Synchronizing them, deliberately, defeated her. Whether this is a limitation of the hardware or a quirk of the controls is unclear, but it is the kind of thing that should be a simple toggle and isn't.
The intensity itself sits in a particular range. For her, it was just right. For someone with more sensitive preferences or a lower vibration threshold, it could read as too strong, especially because there is no intensity dimmer beyond switching between modes. Worth noting if you tend to start gentle.

If there is one criticism that runs through her account most consistently, it is the controls. They look great. They are integrated cleanly into the body of the toy in a way that contributes to the premium aesthetic. But mid-session, with the toy in use and your eyes likely closed, they are surprisingly hard to locate and distinguish from each other by touch alone.
She tried to acclimate. She used the toy a lot, in her words, hoping the muscle memory would arrive. It mostly did not. She still found herself, repeatedly, reaching for one control and accidentally activating the other, which has a way of pulling you out of the moment in a particularly unwelcome way. Imagine settling into a rhythm, reaching to nudge the pattern up a notch, and finding that you have instead changed something else entirely. Multiply that across a session and you have a real friction point.
This is the kind of design issue that is easy to overlook in a showroom and impossible to overlook in actual use. It does not ruin the toy, she still calls it her favorite, but it is a consistent reminder that visual elegance and ergonomic clarity sometimes pull in opposite directions.
After about 15 to 20 minutes of continuous use, the toy gets warm. Not hot, not painful, not (as far as anyone can tell) dangerous. Just noticeably warm, in a way our tester did not expect and was not entirely sure how to interpret.
She is, for what it is worth, a fan of warmth in other intimate contexts. Hot wax, for example, is on her list of yeses. But the warmth a vibrator generates from its motors working hard is a different kind of heat, less sensual and more mechanical-feeling, and she did not particularly enjoy it. There is no documentation she could find clarifying whether this is intentional or a side effect, which adds a small layer of uncertainty to longer sessions.
If you tend toward shorter sessions, you may never notice. If, like our tester, you treat this as a toy for extended exploration, it is something to be aware of.
The same intricate surface details that make this toy visually distinctive, the diamond shape, the heart-shaped logo relief, the textured controls, also create crevices. Crevices, as anyone who has owned a detailed silicone toy knows, are where bodily fluids settle and where your cleaning routine has to actively go looking for them.
Our tester usually prefers to put a toy aside after use and clean it properly in the morning. With this one, she felt obligated to clean immediately, because waiting risked missing spots and ending up with something genuinely unhygienic by morning. That is a small inconvenience that adds up over time, especially if you are using the toy before bed.
The charging port, by contrast, gets a small cheer. It is so well hidden she briefly thought there wasn't one. Once she realized what was going on, she appreciated how cleanly it disappears into the design. A nice example of attention to detail working in the user's favor.
This is, despite the size and the sophisticated vibration setup, a toy that our tester rated as appropriate for beginners, which feels right once you understand her reasoning. The fixed intensities mean you do not have to figure out a complex control scheme to get pleasant sensations. The forgiving shape means insertion is gentler than the width suggests. The shape and feel encourage slow exploration, which is exactly what someone newer to toys often needs.
That said, it will likely suit some users better than others. If you love full, broad-coverage clitoral stimulation and have been curious about wider insertable toys, this is close to ideal. If you are considering a partnered scenario where the visual element of the plasma ball can shine, even better. If you are someone who pursues quick, targeted, pinpoint stimulation, or who finds intricate-surfaced toys annoying to maintain, this may frustrate more than it delights.
The honest summary is this: a toy that earns its premium feel, delivers a genuinely novel form of stimulation through the plasma ball end, and rewards a slower, more exploratory style of play, but is held back from being unequivocally great by some specific, fixable usability issues. The controls need rethinking. The warmth deserves either documentation or engineering attention. The surface detailing is beautiful, and it is a pain to clean.
None of that stopped our tester from declaring it her favorite toy. She plans to keep using it, keeps finding new ways to enjoy it, and is clearly hoping the controls problem will eventually click into muscle memory. There is a version of this toy, presumably the next iteration, that fixes the small frustrations and becomes something close to a masterpiece. The current version is already remarkable, just remarkable with a few caveats worth being honest about. For a beginner-friendly entry into more adventurous, exploratory play, with a visual signature that is hard to forget, it is a strong recommendation, eyes open.