Reviewed by SexHerald Staff
Yet
another portal site rises from the mists of the mysterious Porn
Galaxy and brings us CyberfoldsWeb.com, a clearinghouse for the
kind of high-end porn the classics like Playboy
and Penthouse offer us. With no original content,
the site depends on the integrity of its feeds – and in this
case, the content compiled is quality stuff.
Unlike
many portal sites, the information here is organized in a way that
makes sense and works fairly consistently. Just be sure to disable
your popup blockers before you start, and the top feeds offer excellent
thumbnails, picture organization, slideshow functioning (including
handsfree slideshowing), and streaming video using Windows Media
or RealPlayer. There is a good bit of video content here for those
who favor it, but the real treats are the photographs. Like PinkFever.com, Cyberfoldsweb (like Centerfolds, get it?) offers a top Penthouse
photographer’s best work in Earl Miller Galleries. Not just
softcore portraits, but girl-girl and girl-guy shots as well, all
with beautifully clean, top-notch models, are available in photos
and videos for your delectation.
American
Beauties, J.S. Hicks’ offering, is similarly inclined and
of similar high quality, with artsier photography, beautiful close-ups
(a challenge for any photographer), and a section of “oldies
but goodies” for the vintage fans.
The third of the top three feeds, Cyberfolds, offers a slightly
more awkward interface, with a tacky picture “frame”
taking up much of the browser window and much smaller pictures appearing
in the top center of the screen. Quality glamour shots, a la Pure
Candy images, constitute most of the fare here.
Naturally,
JennaMaxxx and other feeds one sees everywhere around the web pop
up here as well, and your membership gives you access to reality
sites like BangBoat.com and MySexTour.com. But
if this site has any spirit at all – which is difficult, but
at times achieveable, in a portal site – it’s toward
the old-fashioned, airbrushed porn we know and love, when perfection
of images mattered more than a sense of “reality,” and
when tenderness was more a part of hardcore than the bang-em-and-leave-em
mentality so popular today.
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