We're adding a new face to the lineup this month: Si70 MO Roxy, a 70cm doll with a look that leans into old ruins and adventure instead of anything modern or polished. Dark hair, sharp eyeliner, and a calm, confident expression give her a bit of an explorer-who's-seen-things vibe.
She's not tied to one backstory. Think less "here's her lore" and more "here's a character you can build on." So far people have been using her for photo sets, cosplay-style shoots, or just as a display piece with a bit of personality.

What she's made of
Roxy uses medical-grade silicone, molded as one piece. Silicone just feels closer to real skin than older TPE material does: softer, a bit more give when you press on it, and it holds up better over time instead of going saggy or sticky. The skin tone isn't one flat color either. It's built up in layers by hand so there's some natural variation, similar to how skin actually looks under different light. Her face gets hand-painted and finished individually too, so the lashes, brows, and lip detail are touched up by a real person rather than stamped from a template. Cleaning is simple as well; regular care keeps the silicone in good shape for years.

How she moves
A lot of the actual design work goes into this part. Roxy has an internal skeleton with dozens of points of articulation: neck, shoulders, elbows, wrists, waist, hips, knees, ankles. She can sit, kneel, lean, or hold a standing pose without slowly slipping out of it.
One update worth pointing out on this specific model: the shoulders now have a shrug joint built in. Before, shoulder movement was mostly limited to rotating forward and back. Now she can lift and drop her shoulders on their own, and combined with the neck and arm joints, that opens up a lot of small, everyday-looking postures, like a slight shrug with a tilted glance, or shoulders just relaxing down naturally. If you're into photography or dressing her up for different looks, this is probably the update you'll notice the most.
One last thing
Roxy doesn't come with a script. She's more of a blank space you can build your own thing around, whether that's photos, outfits, or just a character you make up as you go. The material and joint updates on this version are really just about making it easier to pose her the way you actually want.
If you'd like this story of a forgotten temple to keep unfolding in your own space, visit the product page to learn more about
Si70 MO Roxy and her customization options.