
There is still a relative dearth of genuine AR porn sites out there (not including passthrough VR content). This is somewhat surprising given that “AR glasses” are starting to take off in a way that VR headsets never did, and thus a potential gold rush could be around the corner. One reason for the scarcity is that the leading AR sites that have established themselves use expensive volumetric capture equipment to create avatars based upon live action models – think RealGirlsNow or BraindanceVR. On the other hand, we’ve had a few examples of smaller outfits attempting to create web based mobile phone apps that rely entirely on CGI. And to be honest, they’ve pretty much all been pants and haven’t lasted long. The company behind EnjoyMeNow.com – DCBC Group – certainly feel that their product is going to be different, despite taking the CGI route.
EnjoyMeNow, built by DCBC Group LLC (founded 2025, USA), is the first platform to place interactive, photorealistic sexual characters into a user’s real-world environment through augmented reality. Using only a smartphone camera and browser — no app, no download, no account — full-body CGI characters appear in the user’s actual space and respond to their movements in real-time. 100% computer-generated. No real performers. All processing runs locally on the device.
After briefly trying out the CGI characters (or “Pleasurettes”) of EnjoyMeNow, I suspect this won’t be much of a success either. The handful of Pleasurettes currently available are crude and unrealistic. Whilst this at least means they are not good enough to even enter the Uncanny Valley, you’d have to be quite a strange person to find any of them sexually arousing. They do have sexy voices, but it often doesn’t match either the “action” or the character. For example, the shemale Pleasurette moans that she is “dripping all over your floor”. I guess she must mean sweat.
The big selling point of EnjoyMeNow is its (claimed) interactive features. The fact that the CGI characters are uninspiring might be forgiven if the site was indeed pioneering a novel interactive AR experience. The Pleasurettes are supposed to be able to respond to hand gestures in the “virtual sex” mode. In practice, I couldn’t seem to get this to work, and certainly not in any way that was meaningful, let alone sexually arousing. Samantha Cole, a sex tech journalist who writes for 404Media, also met largely with frustration:
When I make a jerkoff motion in his general direction, he squats up and down like he’s teabagging me in Halo. Bizarrely, when I do this, his entire body shrinks, my hand now a monstrous size in comparison to his penis. No judgement, but he moans in a woman’s voice. “Come on my back soon,” he says, before a screen interrupts the session saying I need to pay $2.99 to unlock more features, such as making my Pleasurette™ orgasm.
Admittedly, I have only played around with the free version for 30 minutes and haven’t yet paid the $2.99 to unlock the additional features (Samantha Cole says she tried with two different payment methods and failed each time). Perhaps enough people will see some novelty value in this to pay (if it’s possible) the low membership price and enable further development of the site. Call me a pessimist, but I think it’s unlikely. Another thing to note about EnjoyMeNow is that it only works on your smartphone. So not only are you faced with decidedly unerotic blocky avatars, you have to hold your phone up whilst attempting to masturbate with your other hand. I might pay $2.99 NOT to have to do this, but not to have to do it. If you want a genuinely erotic AR experience, using your VR headset or the Apple Vision Pro, the only real option currently is BraindanceVR.
One other thing that needs to be highlighted is that according to Samantha Cole’s article (where I first discovered EnjoyMeNow), DCBC Group in their original press release made a bold claim that they chose purely CGI based characters in order to avoid the “consequences” of using live human models. These allegedly include “exploitation, coercion, content leaked without consent, performers pressured into work they’re uncomfortable with, and careers that follow people for the rest of their lives whether they want them to or not.” Cole points out the utter stupidity of a porn site pouring fuel onto the fire that is slowly consuming the adult industry (although Cole herself doesn’t help with her frequent use of anti-porn cliches such as “the Male Gaze.” As we’ve already seen with growing hysteria around AI porn and AI girlfriends, protecting women from exploitation and abuse is the last thing the anti-porn lobby are motivated by. DCBC Group have, however, changed their press release after the criticism from Cole.
Check out my list of the best AR porn sites in 2026.



