Quick Summary
In nine years of selling authentic sex dolls and supporting customers across 60+ countries, we’ve handled hundreds of cases where buyers came to us after being scammed by counterfeit operations. The patterns are remarkably consistent: a “WM doll” purchased for $800 (vs $1,400 authorized retail), arriving in 6 weeks instead of the promised 2, with melted-looking skin texture, a skeleton that snapped within 30 days, and a seller who stopped responding to emails the moment the customer complained.
Counterfeit sex dolls represent 25-35% of dolls sold online globally. The counterfeit market is sophisticated, well-funded, and actively targeting buyers searching for premium brand names like WM, 6Ye, Starpery, and Real Lady. This guide explains exactly how to identify counterfeits before you pay, what verification methods work, and what to do if you’ve already been scammed. No marketing fluff — just the verification steps that actually work.
Why this matters: Counterfeit dolls aren’t just lower quality — they frequently contain uncertified TPE blends with toxic chemicals (phthalates, lead, industrial fillers), have structurally unsound skeletons that break during normal use, and degrade into unusable condition within 6-12 months. The “savings” of $400-$700 typically becomes a complete loss when the doll fails. Real cost of a counterfeit: full purchase price + no warranty + no support + potential health risks.
How Counterfeit Operations Actually Work
Understanding the business model behind counterfeit sex dolls helps you spot them faster. Counterfeit operations are not amateur scammers running from a garage — they’re organized businesses with dedicated factories, marketing teams, and customer acquisition strategies. Here’s how they operate.
The Production Pipeline
Counterfeit factories typically operate in industrial zones in China that aren’t authorized by premium brand owners. They reverse-engineer the molds and designs of authentic dolls by purchasing one real doll, dismantling it, and creating their own production molds. The result is a doll that looks visually similar in product photos but uses dramatically cheaper materials.
The typical counterfeit factory will produce dolls using uncertified TPE blends from unregulated suppliers (saving $200-$400 per doll on material costs), lower-grade carbon steel skeletons instead of stainless steel (saving $100-$200), and shortcut assembly processes that skip quality inspections (saving $100-$300 in labor and rejection costs). A doll that takes the authentic factory $700 to produce can be counterfeited for $300.
The Marketing Operation
Counterfeit operations run sophisticated marketing. They build professional-looking websites that mimic authorized retailer aesthetics, copy product photos and descriptions directly from brand websites or authorized retailers, use SEO and PPC to rank for brand name searches like “WM doll” or “buy 6Ye doll cheap,” and run social media accounts that look established but were created within the past 6-12 months.
The pricing strategy is consistent: counterfeit dolls are typically priced 30-50% below authorized retailer prices. This isn’t accidental — it’s calibrated to be cheap enough that price-conscious buyers feel they’re getting a deal, but not so cheap that obvious scam alarms ring. A $1,400 WM doll counterfeit will be priced at $800-$1,000, not $200.
The Customer Acquisition Funnel
Counterfeit operations target buyers at the most vulnerable point in their research: after they’ve identified a specific brand they want but before they’ve committed to an authorized retailer. The funnel typically works:
A buyer searches “WM doll 165cm sale” or similar specific brand searches. They land on a counterfeit site at the top of search results (achieved through aggressive SEO/PPC). The site shows the exact doll the buyer wants, with the brand’s official photos, at a price 30-50% below other retailers. The site has fake reviews, fake “authorized retailer” badges, and stock photos of factories or warehouses. The buyer pays — often via methods that prevent chargebacks (cryptocurrency, wire transfer, gift cards). The counterfeit doll arrives 4-8 weeks later. By the time the buyer realizes it’s fake, the seller has stopped responding to communications.
The 5-Step Verification Process Before You Pay
Before any money changes hands, run these five verification steps. Any retailer who fails even one of these is almost certainly selling counterfeits. Legitimate authorized retailers pass all five easily and welcome the verification process.
Verify Authorized Reseller Status on the Brand’s Official Website
Premium brands maintain official authorized reseller lists on their corporate websites. WM Doll has a verified retailer list at their official factory site. 6Ye Premium publishes their authorized resellers. Starpery and Real Lady do the same. If a retailer claims to sell “official WM dolls” but isn’t on the WM authorized list, they’re either a counterfeit operation or buying from unauthorized middlemen (which voids warranty and frequently means counterfeit product anyway).
Action: Search “[brand name] authorized retailers” and verify your potential retailer appears on the brand’s own list. Don’t trust the retailer’s claim that they’re authorized — verify with the brand directly.
Request the Brand’s Authentication Certificate Before Payment
Every authentic premium doll comes with a brand-issued authentication certificate that includes a unique serial number, manufacture date, factory code, and authentication QR code. Authorized retailers can provide a sample certificate within 24 hours of request — they have access to these through the brand’s official systems.
Counterfeit operations cannot provide authentic certificates. They’ll either ignore the request, provide fake certificates (often with obvious errors like wrong fonts, incorrect serial number formats, or missing security features), or claim “we don’t provide certificates until shipment” (which is a stalling tactic).
Action: Email the retailer: “Before placing my order, can you send me a sample authentication certificate from [brand name]? I want to verify the format before purchasing.” Authentic retailers respond within 24 hours with a real certificate sample.
Verify Domain Age and Business Registration
Counterfeit websites are typically created 3-12 months before they actively sell. The domain registration date is public information accessible through tools like whois.com or domaintools.com. A retailer claiming “10 years of experience” but with a domain registered 8 months ago is lying about their history.
Beyond domain age, verify business registration. Legitimate retailers have business registration documents, physical addresses (not just PO boxes), and can provide official invoices with tax IDs. Counterfeit operations typically have vague company information, addresses that don’t exist when checked on Google Street View, and refuse to provide official invoices.
Action: Search the retailer’s domain on whois.com to verify registration age. Cross-check their claimed company address on Google Maps. Request a sample invoice from a recent customer’s order (with sensitive info redacted) — legitimate retailers can provide this.
Cross-Reference Customer Reviews on Independent Platforms
Counterfeit retailers control the reviews on their own websites — those are useless for verification. The reviews that matter are on platforms the retailer can’t control: Trustpilot, Reviews.io, Better Business Bureau, and Reddit’s r/sexdolls. These platforms have verification systems that make fake reviews much harder.
Look specifically for: (1) Volume — established retailers have hundreds of reviews accumulated over years. (2) Date distribution — fake review operations typically spike reviews in compressed time periods (50 reviews in one week, then nothing). (3) Detailed complaints — legitimate retailers have some negative reviews with detailed customer service responses. Counterfeit operations either have suspiciously perfect 5-star reviews or no reviews at all on independent platforms.
Action: Search “[retailer name] Trustpilot,” “[retailer name] reviews Reddit,” and “[retailer name] BBB.” Cross-reference what you find with the reviews on the retailer’s own site. Significant discrepancies indicate fake review operations.
Test Customer Service Responsiveness Before Buying
Send a substantive question to the retailer’s customer service — not “do you ship to USA” but something requiring real product knowledge: “What’s the difference between WM’s standard articulated fingers and 6Ye’s standard articulated fingers? Which would you recommend for someone primarily interested in photography?” Authentic retailers with real product knowledge respond within 24-48 hours with detailed, accurate answers. Counterfeit operations either give generic non-answers, take 3-5 days to respond, or never respond at all.
This single test catches a large percentage of counterfeit operations. They simply don’t have the product knowledge or trained staff to handle real customer service questions because they’re not actually selling the products they claim to sell — they’re drop-shipping counterfeits and have no expertise.
Action: Send a detailed product question before ordering. Evaluate the response quality, accuracy, and turnaround time. If the answer is generic, wrong, or never comes — walk away.
Visual Red Flags When the Doll Arrives
If you’ve already received a doll and want to verify authenticity, these visual inspection points distinguish authentic from counterfeit. We’ve handled enough cases over nine years to know exactly what to look for.
Skin Texture and Appearance
Authentic premium TPE has a consistent, slightly matte finish with realistic pore detail visible on close inspection. The skin feels soft but firm, with a natural-feeling resistance when pressed. The color is uniform across the body without splotches, discoloration, or visible mold seams.
Counterfeit TPE typically has noticeable issues: an unnaturally shiny or plastic-looking finish (cheaper TPE blends), visible mold seam lines at the hips, shoulders, or back (rushed manufacturing without finishing), inconsistent coloration with darker or lighter patches, and a “tacky” sticky feel when touched (indicating improper TPE curing or contaminated material). The skin may also have an unusual chemical smell that doesn’t dissipate after airing out the doll — this indicates uncertified TPE with high VOC (volatile organic compound) content.
Skeletal Integrity
Authentic premium dolls use stainless steel skeletons with precisely machined joints that move smoothly through their full range of motion. The joints have detectable but firm resistance — they hold poses without drifting. The overall structure feels solid and balanced.
Counterfeit skeletons reveal themselves quickly: joints that are either too loose (pose drift within hours) or too tight (require excessive force, leading to TPE damage), squeaky or grinding noises when moving limbs (indicating poor manufacturing tolerances or low-grade steel), and joints that bind or “click” at specific angles (assembly defects). Within 30-60 days of normal use, counterfeit skeletons typically develop noticeable wear — joints that won’t hold pose, hands that flop, or visible bulges where the skeleton is failing under the TPE skin.
Documentation and Packaging
Authentic premium dolls arrive with documentation: brand authentication certificate (with hologram and unique serial number), product manual with the brand’s official letterhead, care instructions matching the brand’s standard documentation, and warranty information with valid contact details. The shipping carton has the brand’s official markings and proper protective packaging (foam inserts shaped specifically for the doll, vacuum-sealed bag, silica gel desiccants).
Counterfeit dolls arrive with telltale documentation problems: generic “user manual” with poor English translation and no brand-specific content, fake certificate that doesn’t match what the brand’s authentic certificates look like (compare with photos of authentic certificates online), no warranty information or warranty contact that doesn’t work when called, plain shipping carton with no brand markings, and crude packaging with bubble wrap and random foam pieces instead of proper protective materials.
The Top Red Flags in Listings and Websites
Beyond the verification steps, these specific patterns appear in counterfeit listings consistently. Recognizing them helps you screen out counterfeits within seconds.
Red Flag #1: Prices 30-50% Below Other Retailers for the Same Specific Model
If five authorized retailers price the WM 165cm H-cup at $1,400-$1,600 and one retailer prices it at $850-$950, that retailer is selling counterfeits. Authorized retailers have small price variations based on shipping and promotions, but they don’t undercut each other by 40%. Premium brands have minimum advertised price policies (MAP) that prevent dramatic price cuts. A site dramatically below MAP is not an authorized retailer.
Red Flag #2: Vague or Missing Company Information
Counterfeit operations want to remain anonymous. Their “About Us” pages are generic (“We are a leading provider of premium adult products”), their contact pages have only a contact form (no phone, no physical address, no business registration), and their domain WHOIS information is hidden behind privacy services. Legitimate retailers have real business identities they’re happy to share.
Red Flag #3: Payment Methods That Prevent Chargebacks
Counterfeit operations strongly prefer payment methods you can’t dispute: cryptocurrency (Bitcoin, Ethereum), wire transfers, prepaid gift cards (especially Amazon gift cards or Steam gift cards used for “anonymity”), Western Union, or Cash App / Venmo / Zelle to personal accounts. Legitimate retailers accept credit cards (which offer chargeback protection), PayPal (with buyer protection), or escrow services. If a retailer pushes you toward cryptocurrency or wire transfer or offers significant discounts for using those payment methods — they’re trying to prevent your ability to dispute the charge when you receive a counterfeit.
Red Flag #4: Unusually Long Shipping Times Combined With Vague Tracking
Authorized retailers ship from stocked warehouses or established factory partnerships with shipping times of 2-4 weeks total (manufacturing + shipping). Counterfeit operations typically advertise “4-8 weeks” or “made to order” with tracking that doesn’t update for weeks at a time. The extended shipping window serves them in two ways: it pushes the delivery past the credit card dispute window (you can’t chargeback after 60-120 days from purchase), and it gives them time to disappear if too many complaints come in.
Red Flag #5: Fake “Authorized Retailer” Badges and Certificates
Counterfeit websites prominently display “authorized retailer” badges, certificates of authenticity, brand logos, and similar trust markers. These are nearly always fake or meaningless. Counterfeit operations create their own “authentication” graphics that look official but link to nothing or link to pages on their own site that show fake brand endorsements. Real authorized retailer status is verified through the brand’s own website, not through self-displayed badges.
Red Flag #6: Domain Names Designed to Confuse
Counterfeit operations often register domains that mimic authentic brands or established retailers: “wmdollshop.com,” “6yedollofficial.com,” “buy-real-doll.com,” “starperysale.net.” These domains have no relationship to the actual brands they’re imitating. Legitimate authorized retailers have established brand names — they don’t need to piggyback on others’ brand recognition.
Red Flag #7: Pushy Sales Tactics and Manufactured Urgency
“Limited time offer! Only 3 left in stock! Order in the next 6 hours to receive your doll!” Counterfeit operations create artificial urgency to prevent buyers from doing the research that would expose them as counterfeits. Authorized retailers don’t need fake urgency — they have real inventory and stable pricing. If a site is pressuring you to buy quickly with countdown timers, “only X left” messages, or claimed limited-time pricing — slow down and verify before purchasing.
Real Customer Stories We’ve Helped Recover From
To make this concrete, here are three patterns from real cases we’ve supported customers through over the past nine years. Names changed and details slightly modified for privacy.
“I bought what I thought was a WM 165cm doll from a site that came up first when I searched ‘WM doll cheap.’ The price was $850 versus the $1,400 I’d seen elsewhere. The site looked professional. They asked for payment via Bitcoin for a ‘discount.’ The doll arrived 6 weeks later. It smelled strongly of chemicals, had visible seam lines along the hips, and the right elbow joint snapped within 10 days of normal use. The seller stopped responding when I complained. I was out $850 with no recourse because Bitcoin transactions can’t be disputed. I came to SSD to buy an authentic replacement and was shown exactly what a real WM looks like — totally different from what I’d received.”
— Customer from Texas, recovered case from 2024
“The website showed reviews and authentication certificates that all looked legitimate. The price was about 30% below what I’d seen on other sites — not so cheap that it seemed obviously fake, just enough to feel like a deal. I paid by credit card, which turned out to be my saving grace. The doll arrived after 7 weeks, looking nothing like the photos. The skin was sticky and discolored. I contacted my credit card company, provided documentation including before/after photos and email communications, and the chargeback succeeded after 45 days. I learned to always pay by credit card, never by methods that prevent chargebacks.”
— Customer from California, recovered case from 2023
“I researched for two weeks before buying. The retailer I chose had a professional website, claimed to be ‘authorized’ for 6Ye dolls, and had a phone number that someone answered when I called. What I didn’t do was verify with 6Ye directly that this retailer was actually on their authorized list. The doll I received was a counterfeit — the 6Ye serial number was fake when I emailed 6Ye to verify, and the materials were clearly inferior. I now verify authorized status with the brand directly before every purchase, not just trust the retailer’s claim.”
— Customer from UK, recovered case from 2025
The Pre-Purchase Verification Checklist
Run This Checklist Before Any Sex Doll Purchase
- Verified retailer appears on the brand’s official authorized list (not just claims to be authorized)
- Requested and received an authentication certificate sample within 24 hours
- Verified domain age is at least 2-3 years on whois.com (not registered in past 12 months)
- Confirmed business address exists on Google Maps Street View
- Cross-referenced reviews on Trustpilot, Reviews.io, and Reddit r/sexdolls (not just retailer’s own site)
- Tested customer service with a substantive product question and got an accurate, prompt response
- Confirmed pricing is within 10% of other authorized retailers (not 30-50% below)
- Payment available via credit card or PayPal (not pushed toward cryptocurrency or wire transfer)
- Shipping timeline is 2-4 weeks (not “6-8 weeks” or vague open-ended)
- Company information includes phone, physical address, business registration
- No artificial urgency tactics (countdown timers, “only 3 left” pressure)
- Authentic brand-specific photography matches the official brand catalog
If a retailer fails any 3+ items on this checklist, treat it as a counterfeit operation regardless of how professional the website appears. Counterfeit operations have invested heavily in looking professional — the verification steps are what separates them from legitimate retailers.
What to Do If You’ve Already Bought a Counterfeit
If you’ve received a doll you suspect is counterfeit, time matters. The dispute window with your credit card company is finite (usually 60-120 days from purchase), and the seller may close down their operation at any moment. Take these actions immediately.
Step 1: Document Everything Before the Seller Can Modify
Take screenshots of the seller’s website, your order confirmation, all email communications, the product listing with description and specs, payment receipts, shipping confirmation, and tracking information. Counterfeit operations sometimes modify their websites or remove specific product listings when complaints come in — having complete documentation protects you. Save everything to a folder organized by date.
Photograph the doll thoroughly: overall condition, specific defects (seam lines, discoloration, joint problems), the packaging it arrived in, any documentation that came with it, and side-by-side comparisons with the brand’s authentic photos. The clearer your documentation, the stronger your case in disputes.
Step 2: Initiate Credit Card Chargeback (If Paid by Credit Card)
Contact your credit card company immediately if within the dispute window. Explain the situation as “merchant sold counterfeit product, refusing to refund.” Provide your documentation. Most chargebacks succeed when proper documentation exists — banks recognize counterfeit operations as merchant fraud.
If you paid via PayPal, file a dispute through PayPal’s Resolution Center using “item not as described” within 180 days of payment. PayPal’s buyer protection has helped many customers recover from counterfeit purchases. If you paid via cryptocurrency, wire transfer, or gift card, recovery is extremely difficult — these payment methods exist precisely to prevent reversal. This is why payment method matters so much.
Step 3: Report to the Brand Owner
Premium brands actively pursue counterfeit operations because counterfeits damage their reputation and undercut their authorized resellers. Email the brand directly (WM, 6Ye, Starpery, Real Lady, etc.) with your documentation and the seller’s information. Brands often have anti-counterfeit teams that pursue these operations legally. Your report contributes to building cases that eventually shut down counterfeit operations.
Step 4: Report to Consumer Protection Agencies
File complaints with relevant agencies in your country: in the US, file with the FTC and your state’s consumer protection office. In the UK, file with Citizens Advice and Trading Standards. In Australia, report to the ACCC. In the EU, use the European Consumer Centre Network. These reports build pattern evidence that authorities use to prosecute counterfeit operations.
Also report to the Better Business Bureau (US/Canada), file complaints with the seller’s hosting provider (look up via whois.com and email their abuse department), and report to payment processors if applicable (PayPal, Stripe, etc.) — they remove counterfeit operations from their platforms when patterns are documented.
Step 5: Warn Other Buyers
Post detailed reviews on Trustpilot, Reviews.io, Reddit (especially r/sexdolls), and Google reviews. Include specific details: photos of the counterfeit, comparison with authentic products, the seller’s name and website, what red flags you missed in retrospect, and how the recovery process went. These reviews are how future buyers find counterfeit operations before they get scammed. Your detailed warning prevents others from making the same mistake.
How Authorized Retailers Differ (And Why It Matters)
Throughout this guide, we’ve referenced “authorized retailers” as the safe alternative to counterfeit operations. Here’s what that actually means and why it provides protection counterfeit operations cannot match.
Authorization Is Granted Specifically by Brand Owners
Premium brands like WM, 6Ye, Starpery, and Real Lady grant authorized reseller status only to retailers who meet specific requirements: business stability and longevity (typically 3+ years operating), order volume thresholds that prove serious commitment, customer service standards the brand can audit, regional market expertise the brand needs for distribution, and ongoing relationships with brand representatives who handle escalations.
This authorization is granted in writing, listed on the brand’s official website, and renewed periodically. Authorized retailers can prove their status with brand correspondence, official letterheads, and contact information for the brand’s distributor managers. Counterfeit operations have none of this — they fabricate “authorized” claims that fall apart when verified with the brand directly.
What Authorization Actually Gets You
Beyond product authenticity, authorized retailer status means: factory-direct sourcing (no middlemen who could substitute counterfeits), full manufacturer warranty coverage through the retailer, replacement parts available through brand channels, brand-trained customer support for product questions, escalation paths to the brand if issues can’t be resolved at the retailer level, and inclusion in the brand’s anti-counterfeit network (retailers report counterfeit operations to brands, brands pursue them legally).
When you buy from an authorized retailer, you’re buying not just the product but the entire support infrastructure that comes with it. When things go wrong (and over 5+ years of ownership, something usually does), authorized retailers have brand backing to resolve problems. Counterfeit operations have nothing — once they have your money, you’re on your own.
Frequently Asked Questions
How common are counterfeit sex dolls?
Based on our 9 years of customer support data, counterfeit sex dolls represent approximately 25-35% of all dolls sold online globally. The counterfeit market is concentrated on premium brand names like WM, 6Ye, Starpery, and Real Lady — buyers searching for these brands are the primary targets. Counterfeit operations often have professional-looking websites, use stolen product photos, and price products 30-50% below authorized retailer prices to lure buyers.
What’s the easiest way to verify a doll is authentic?
Three verification steps in order: (1) Check if the retailer is listed as authorized on the brand’s official website — most premium brands maintain authorized reseller lists. (2) Request the brand’s authentication certificate, which legitimate retailers can provide within 24 hours. (3) Verify the factory serial number — premium dolls have unique serial numbers that can be verified by contacting the brand’s official support. If a retailer cannot or will not provide these three items, they are almost certainly selling counterfeits.
Can I tell if a doll is counterfeit from product photos alone?
Sometimes, but not always. Counterfeit operations often use the original brand’s product photos (stolen from authorized retailers or the brand’s website), making visual identification from photos unreliable. The key red flags are not the photos but the surrounding context: pricing 30-50% below market, missing authentication certificates, no authorized reseller verification, vague company information, suspiciously new domains (less than 1 year old), and payment methods that prevent chargebacks (cryptocurrency, wire transfers, gift cards).
What should I do if I think I bought a counterfeit doll?
Take action immediately: (1) Contact your credit card company to initiate a chargeback within the dispute window (usually 60-120 days). (2) Document everything — photos, communications, payment receipts, website screenshots before the seller can modify or remove them. (3) Report the seller to the brand owner (WM, 6Ye, etc.) — they actively pursue counterfeit operations. (4) File complaints with consumer protection agencies and the Better Business Bureau. (5) Write detailed reviews on Trustpilot, Reddit r/sexdolls, and Google to warn others. Most chargebacks succeed when proper documentation exists.
Are counterfeit dolls actually dangerous to use?
Yes, in multiple ways. Counterfeits frequently use uncertified TPE or silicone blends containing toxic chemicals — phthalates, lead, or industrial fillers — that can cause skin reactions, chemical burns, or long-term health issues. The structural integrity is also poor, with skeletons that break under normal use, leading to limb collapse or injury during handling. Counterfeit silicone often degrades into a sticky residue within 6-12 months, making the doll unusable. Beyond physical risks, counterfeits void any warranty protection and have no customer support if problems arise.
Why are counterfeit dolls cheaper than authentic ones?
Counterfeit operations skip the costs that make authentic dolls premium products: brand licensing fees, certified material sourcing, quality control inspections, factory worker wages at compliant facilities, customs/import documentation, manufacturer warranties, and customer support infrastructure. They typically use cheaper TPE blends from unregulated suppliers, lower-grade skeletons, and assembly-line shortcuts that reduce durability. A $1,200 counterfeit of a WM doll might cost the operation $300 to produce versus $700 for the authentic brand — the savings come from quality compromises, not better business practices.
One Last Thing
The counterfeit sex doll problem isn’t going away. As long as there’s a price gap between authentic premium dolls and what counterfeit operations can produce, there will be operations willing to exploit that gap by selling inferior products to uninformed buyers. The solution isn’t to wait for the industry to clean itself up — it’s to become an informed buyer who can spot counterfeits before paying.
The verification steps in this guide take 30-60 minutes to complete before any purchase. That time investment, compared to potentially losing $800-$1,500 on a counterfeit plus health risks plus emotional disappointment, is the highest-ROI activity you can do in your buying process. Take the time. Verify the retailer. Test their customer service. Confirm authorization with the brand directly. Then buy with confidence knowing you’ve protected yourself from the most common scam in this industry.
Need help verifying a specific retailer or product? Email our team with the website URL and brand you’re considering. We’ve cataloged hundreds of counterfeit operations over nine years and can usually tell you within 24 hours whether a retailer is legitimate or operating as a counterfeit. No obligation to buy from us — we’d rather you buy authentic from a real authorized retailer than buy counterfeit from anyone. Get in touch →
About SexySexDoll.com
SexySexDoll.com has been an authorized retailer of premium adult dolls since 2016, with 12+ brand-authorized reseller relationships including WM, 6Ye Premium, Starpery, Real Lady, and others. Our 851+ verified customer reviews and 9 years of operation across 60+ countries inform the counterfeit detection patterns and recovery procedures in this guide.
For related reading: Brand Comparison: WM vs Starpery vs 6Ye vs Real Lady · Pricing Guide · Material Guide: TPE vs Silicone vs Hybrid · Customization Guide
Counterfeit detection methods described here are based on aggregated patterns from nine years of customer support cases and industry experience. Specific counterfeit operations evolve their tactics over time, and individual cases may differ. Brand authorization status, pricing benchmarks, and verification procedures should be confirmed directly with brand owners and authorized retailers, as these can change without notice. This guide provides general guidance and should not be considered as legal advice; consult appropriate legal or consumer protection authorities for specific recovery situations.




