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Motorbunny Buying Guide: Is It Worth the Price?

25 January 2025 · 8 min read

Motorbunny occupies a specific category: the high-power, high-price end of the consumer sex machine market. At £400–600, it is more expensive than most Hismith machines and sits closer to a professional-grade device than a casual entry. The question most buyers are trying to answer is whether the premium is justified — and what, specifically, they are paying for.

What Motorbunny Is

Motorbunny is a US-made electric riding machine. The design is a saddle-style device that the user sits or mounts on, with an attachment arm that extends upward and can hold a dildo or other accessory. The core function is high-power vibration and oscillation delivered through the user's weight and through the attachment.

It is not primarily a thrusting machine — it does not operate like a Hismith with a reciprocating arm. The Motorbunny's primary mechanism is extremely powerful vibration/oscillation, with some models adding a thrusting attachment capability. This distinction matters when comparing to Hismith: the experiences are different in kind, not just intensity.

The Motor: What "Most Powerful" Actually Means

Motorbunny markets itself as the most powerful personal sex machine available to consumers. This claim is based on its motor output, which exceeds typical consumer devices by a significant margin — the equivalent of comparing a Hitachi Magic Wand to a standard bullet vibrator, but at a larger scale.

In practice, this means:

Vibration intensity that is felt deeply and at distance. Users describe sensations that are qualitatively different from conventional toys — not just stronger, but a different type of stimulation entirely.

Duration without fatigue. The machine sustains constant output without effort on the user's part, which enables extended sessions that would require ongoing physical effort with manual toys.

Multiple users by weight. Motorbunny is engineered to handle substantial user weight during normal use, which consumer-grade devices often are not rated for.

Models

Motorbunny Buck

The standard model. Electric (plugged in — no battery), saddle mount, variable speed via a dial controller, attachment compatibility via the proprietary mount system. Price approximately £450–500.

Motorbunny Buck Plus

Adds app control (iOS/Android) and a broader speed range. The app enables preset patterns, speed ramping, and music-sync. Price approximately £500–600.

Motorbunny LINK

App-enabled and designed for remote play. The LINK model supports internet-connected partner control — someone in a different location can control the device. For couples or long-distance use cases, this is the model.

Attachments

Motorbunny uses a proprietary mount system. Attachments include vibrating wands (the Motorbunny Lil' Buny and others), dildos, and combination accessories. The attachment library is smaller than Hismith's KlicLok ecosystem.

Material note: Some Motorbunny own-brand attachments are silicone. Verify the material specification of any attachment before purchase — the same guidance applies as for all sex toys. Non-porous silicone is strongly preferred over TPE for hygiene.

Compared to Hismith

| | Motorbunny | Hismith Premium | |---|---|---| | Primary mechanism | Vibration/oscillation | Thrusting | | Power level | Very high | Moderate to high | | Price | £450–600 | £200–400 | | Portability | Limited (mains-only) | Some models portable | | Attachment ecosystem | Proprietary, smaller | KlicLok, larger | | App control | Yes (Plus/LINK) | Yes (Premium 3.0) |

The experiences are genuinely different. Motorbunny is best for users who want intense, powerful vibration/oscillation from a saddle-mount design. Hismith is best for users who want thrusting with variable stroke depth and speed. Choosing between them depends on which type of stimulation you are interested in, not which is objectively better.

Is It Worth the Price?

For specific use cases, yes. Motorbunny makes sense if:

  • You have used high-power vibrators (Hitachi, Doxy) and found them insufficiently powerful
  • You specifically want a riding/saddle-style device
  • You want long-distance or app-controlled use (LINK model)
  • Power and durability matter more than portability or price

It does not make sense if you primarily want thrusting (Hismith does this better), if you are trying your first machine and not sure what you want (start with a Hismith Traveler), or if noise is a major constraint (Motorbunny is loud at high power settings).

Practical Notes

Noise. Motorbunny at higher speeds is audible. Not as mechanically loud as some thrusting machines, but the vibration transmits through floors and surfaces. Floor placement on a thick mat reduces transmission significantly.

Power source. Mains-only. No battery option. Requires access to a power outlet; not usable without one.

Storage. Bulkier than a typical sex toy and requires dedicated storage space. Some users keep it under a bed; others find it easier to store in a wardrobe with the attachment removed.

See also: sex machine buying guide, hismith sex machine guide, sex furniture guide, and app-controlled vibrators guide.

Products in this guide

b-Vibe Realistic Rechargeable Silicone Thrusting Dildo Machine

b-Vibe Realistic Rechargeable Silicone Thrusting Dildo Machine

AU$

Insertable: 16.7cm · Ø 3.81cm

shevibe

Motorbunny Original

Motorbunny Original

AU$1490

motorbunny

Motorbunny Buck

Motorbunny Buck

AU$2309

motorbunny