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Taro 2 

By: Lechery Review      February 27 2026

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Pinhead

Let me start with the uncomfortable truth: writing this review hurt. A lot. Sohimi is the company that helped launch my reviewing career. They took a chance on me back when I was still finding my voice, figuring out my standards, and occasionally tripping over my own tail in this weird, wonderful, slightly horny corner of the internet.

For a long time, I trusted them. I believed in their products. I believed in their customer support. I believed that if something went wrong, they would step up and handle it responsibly. That trust is the only reason I even tried to resolve this situation privately at first.

Unfortunately, what happened with the Taro 2 shattered that trust completely.

This is not a review about “it didn’t feel good” or “it wasn’t strong enough.” This is a review about safety, transparency, and accountability. And about what happens when a company chooses corporate deflection over user well-being.

So fluff your tail, settle in, and let’s talk about why this toy never made it anywhere near my body.

Delivery

The Taro 2 arrived in a plain, discreet shipping box. That part was fine and pretty standard for this industry.

Inside, the packaging was minimal. a plane black box with some white writing at the bottom on the back, and a couple of Amazon scan code stickers. The toy was placed in a semi-clear plastic bag that wasn’t even sealed, despite having an unused adhesive strip. That already gave me a mild “nobody really cared” feeling before I even touched the product.

To be honest, I glossed over the manual as I see so many, and I completely missed the inconsistency until later testing. 

The manual did not list Sohimi as the manufacturer. It referred to the product as “Pinhead.” It listed another company, Beisar, along with a completely different support email. That is not a typo. That is a massive red flag. Considering Sohimi Claims they manufacture their own toys in their "own Factory" to "counter the copycats in the market." 

Small side note: Sohimi, in their efforts to deceive me, also claimed that they developed JoyHub an app I will not review due to my experience with it being essentially unusable back in 2022. App usability aside JoyHub lists SINGAPORE JOYHUB TECH PTE. LTD. in its privacy policy. The app is developed by GAP computer solutions and listed under a seller named Leo Seto.

To make matters worse, I noticed the toy struggling in my demo during the unboxing, and my excitement shifted into cautious concern. By the time I finished unboxing, I was already side-eyeing this toy harder than a suspicious raccoon near my snacks.

Whats In The Box?

1X Beisar Pinhead

1X USB Magnetic Charging Cable 

1X Wireless Remote

1X 20g (0.7 fl) Bottle Joyhub Gentle Lubricant

1X User Manual

Measurements

On paper, the Taro 2 actually looks reasonable.

It stands at roughly 6 inches tall, with about 5 inches of insertable length. The base measures around 7 inches long and about 3.5 inches wide, giving it decent surface area for stability.

The shaft circumference sits at around 4.5 inches, which puts it in the “comfortable” category for most intermediate users. Not tiny. Not monster-sized. Just… average.

Visually, it features rounded ridges along the shaft. In theory, this should provide layered stimulation.

The flared base is wide and long enough to be safe for anal play, which is good. At least that fundamental box is checked.

From a purely design standpoint, this could have been a decent foundation. Sadly, measurements alone do not make a safe or reliable toy.

The official material description for this toy is simply: “body-safe silicone.”

That’s it. No certifications. No testing standards. No curing method. No sourcing information. No third-party verification. Just vibes and trust, apparently. And trust is something this company lost with me.

Under normal circumstances, vague material claims are already annoying. In the context of this product’s other issues, they are deeply concerning.

What I can say is the silicone feels thin and soft. It is not sticky. It is not plasticky. At first touch, it passes as mid-range quality.

 

As for waterproofing, things get even messier. The website markets the toy as waterproof.


The manual explicitly warns against submerging it. Those statements directly contradict each other. That leaves users guessing how to clean an internal-use toy safely. That is not acceptable.

Features

On paper, the Taro 2 offers nine vibration patterns and 3 thrusting modes. That sounds decent for a mid-range toy.

However, the motor seems strained even at low settings. Instead of smooth, confident motion, you get uneven pulses and struggle. Thrusting frequently feels interrupted. Like the toy is fighting itself just to keep going.

 

There is no consistent rhythm. No sense of controlled output. Just mechanical uncertainty. When a toy makes you think, “Is that supposed to move like that?” you already have a problem.

I reported serious safety issues directly to Sohimi; I expected urgency. Investigation. Replacement. Recall. Something.

What I got instead was polite dismissal and pressure to continue the review.

That told me exactly where user safety ranked on their priority list.

Spoiler: not very high.

Once a company shows it is willing to downplay risk, trust is gone. Permanently.

Note: Canada follows a one-party consent rule. Under Section
184(2) of the Criminal Code, you can legally record or screenshot a conversation (including text messages, emails, or chat logs) if you are a participant.

and  

The Competition Bureau Canada prohibits companies from making misleading or false representations to the public. Meaning sharing business communications to protect consumers from misleading claims is considered in the public interest.

Magnetic Charging

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The Taro 2 uses a standard two-pin magnetic charging cable. In theory, this is a convenient system. No exposed ports, easier waterproofing, and less wear over time.

Where things fall apart is the documentation.

  • According to the box, charging takes two hours.

  • According to the manual, charging takes one and a half hours.

  • According to the box, battery life is one hour.

  • According to the manual, battery life is forty-five minutes.

 

Those are not small rounding differences. That is conflicting information about a basic function. As a user, you have no idea which one is accurate. Do you wait two hours or one and a half? Do you expect an hour of play or barely three-quarters of one?

final Thoughts 

Trust is everything in this industry. When I recommend a toy, I am telling people that I believe it is safe to use. That is not something I take lightly. With the Taro 2, my trust in Sohimi was slowly worn down by a pattern of inconsistency, deflection, and ignored safety concerns.

It started with basic documentation. The product listing called it one thing, the box called it another, and the manual called it something else. When I questioned this, I was told it was just a website update issue.

 

Then I noticed more contradictions. The box and manual listed different charging times and battery life. The website claimed it was waterproof while the manual warned against submerging it. The toy itself arrived in an unsealed plastic bag. None of this inspires confidence.

Then came the safety issues. During basic testing, the motor stuttered, froze, and overheated even under light resistance. I reported this immediately and explained why it was dangerous in an internal-use device. Instead of investigating, I was given scripted reassurance about safety features and encouraged to continue the review. No replacement. No real concern. Just polite dismissal.

After my concerns were brushed aside, I looked deeper and found the same product listed under multiple brands. When I raised this, Sohimi denied it and claimed exclusive manufacturing of the model they sent me. That claim fell apart when I realized the manual belonged to Beisar, complete with their support email.

Finally, while documenting everything, I found the product page had quietly disappeared, and while I was able to find it on wayback machine. It was with revised naming and with only one snapshot, February 13, 2026. Given the fact that it was exactly one week after I voiced concerns, that timing was impossible to ignore.

By the end of this process, it was clear this was not about one bad unit. It was about a company choosing image management over accountability. Ignored warnings, contradictory information, denied evidence, and quiet revisions destroyed my trust completely.

In the end, at least Sohimi did one thing right. When I told them I was going public, they didn't try to stop me. 

I am often asked what lube I use for my testing. Honestly, with the amount of monsters, beasts, and fantasy anatomy I put through their paces, I need something that can keep up with me, and Swisok Cum Lubricant has become one of my go-to essentials. It’s thick, creamy, and gives that realistic feel that just makes everything slide into place the way it should.

It’s water-based, body safe, and the pump applicator makes using it stupidly easy, even when you’re already in the middle of wrangling something big. The texture is slick without turning watery and creamy without getting gummy, which is exactly what I need when I’m pushing my limits or breaking in a Lovecraftian horror.

It also comes in two color options. Tied energy is clear blue, cute and fun. My favorite is the realistic cum version, a thick white that adds a visual kick to playtime and just looks right with fantasy toys.

If you want to try it, grab it here https://swisok.com/products/cum-lubricants

and use LECHERYREVIEW978 to save 20% off your entire cart. Your foxhole will thank you.

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