Everybody writing against Miss Bimbo internet game. Everybody shouting against a game that permits girls to have a perfect, sexy and cool virtual body – even via plastic surgery or extreme diets. Why are you all so hypocrites? Do you live on another planet? Don’t you see your girls are already dolls, even without Miss Bimbo? Miss Bimbo is the product of this crappy society, not the cause. Go out on Saturday and visit your commercial center. You’ll find thousand of moms carrying bags full of fashion products for their little angels: plastic jewels, tangas and push ups made by Walt Disney, sexy skirts and hot t-shirts .. everything is done for your babies to look like lolitas, and you parents are part of it. Google out how many underage girls go for real for plastic surgery to have bigger breasts and hot lips. Did you react against all of this before miss Bimbo came out? Wake up, parent associations! You cry out when the damage is already done.





















March 27, 2008 at 4:21 pm |
you could argue these ‘virtual lives’ are actually healthier than changing your real life – ‘virtual’ cosmetics are better than people learning the hard way about doing it to themselves for real.
globus just wishes he’d meet more virtual bimbos
March 27, 2008 at 4:34 pm |
I hope you mean when you were a bimbo too …
April 23, 2008 at 10:30 am |
gbd f gdm jutfm
April 23, 2008 at 4:59 pm |
Martinka, which language do you speak?
January 9, 2009 at 9:05 pm |
It may be a product, but more importantly, it’s a perpetuator. That’s why it’s worthy of condemnation.
June 7, 2009 at 6:40 pm |
Being a rather late addition to this discussion; I think that what this issue truly comes down to is this:
Parents need to be conscious of what their children are doing on the internet and watching on television. They need to talk to their children about the images they see in the media. You can’t blame one website for the demise of our children. If you MUST blame someone; blame the sexualization of culture in general and the ignorance and inability of many parents to stop it(even those with the best intentions).
June 7, 2009 at 8:34 pm |
It seems to me it is not possible to stop sexualization of culture.
Parents do not have time or do not even know what internet is.
I was not blaming the website: the website respond to actual needs. And sex will be always a need.
What parents and society can do is to show other ways to enjoy life than shopping or masturbating in front of a monitor.
June 20, 2009 at 12:07 am |
i love missbimbo.com its just so cool hehe
June 20, 2009 at 12:14 am |
de gustibus non disputandum est
July 6, 2009 at 12:14 am |
I’m 27 and use Miss Bimbo a lot. Personally, I love the site. It’s like having a barbie doll, but with out dealing with the pain of all the clothing changes. Better yet, there’s a ‘healthy’ weight of 127 lbs your to keep. Not 119, or lower, but 127. AND they’ve recently added he option to reduce your breast size, because people asked for it.
Your also encouraged to ‘expand your mind’ and work for a better job, by learning and training for a better job. No lying, cheating or anything else to get there.
Is it perfect? No. But, I’d bet it’s hard to find anything in a game that is perfect. If you don’t like the game, you don’t have to play it. If your a mother, you can tell your child you don’t want them playing it. Nothing says you have to. But, as there are far worse things I could do with my spare time, please harp on other things instead of this. Boys play games that parents LET them buy, that are far worse then something like this.
July 7, 2009 at 3:17 pm |
I agree, there’re indeed crappy games for girls AND boys out there