Big or small. Gaunt or girthy. Stunningly erect or flawlessly floppy. One sexologist has even gone so far as to describe them as “items of beauty”.
But in a world where the sex toy market is predicted to smash $52.5 billion in 2023, what sets a good dildo apart from the rest?
Well, we went straight to the experts to find out. And by experts, we mean actual scientists who have crunched the numbers.
Watch: Jessie Stephens test the Fifty Shades of Grey vagina balls. Post continues after video.
Using data from Lovehoney, the world’s largest online sexual wellness retailer, researchers from the University of Kent have analysed particular characteristics and dimensions against customer star rating and level of engagement to assess the popularity of *clears throat* phallus-shaped, vaginally insertable sex toys.
Of the 265 dildos found online, 66 of them vibrated, 230 were made from realistic skin-like material and 96 even had a scrotum. (Hey, the industry certainly caters to all manner of tastes.)
“You can’t go shop a penis but you can go and shop different shapes and sizes of sex toys to find something that really suits you and your body, because all bodies are so different,” Alice Child, a Sydney-based somatic sexologist and sex educator, told Mamamia.