The Fun Factory Sundaze is the German brand's 4-in-1 vibrator-pulsator-tapper, $129–$169 in pistachio green or grape blue, combining four distinct motion technologies into a single curved silicone wand. It's the more affordable, app-free sibling of Fun Factory's Stronic G ($200) pulsator line and aimed at users who want to experiment with non-vibration sensations without committing to a dedicated pulsator.

Why It Matters

The Sundaze is one of the cleanest examples of motion-tech experimentation in mid-priced vibrators — most toys at this price point ship a single motor and a microcontroller varying its speed. The Sundaze has multiple distinct motion mechanisms in one device, which is engineering-expensive and rare outside Fun Factory's German production. For buyers who've cycled through standard vibrators and want to feel something genuinely new without spending $250+, this is the rare option that delivers.

The four modes are the entire selling point: standard vibration (familiar buzz), pulsation (slow internal piston motion, similar to a thrusting toy but at much shorter stroke length), tapping (rapid percussive impulses against the skin, similar to a sonic-wave toy but contact-based), and combined rhythms that layer two motions at once. Eleven speeds across the three primary modes, four combined rhythm presets, all controlled by an intuitive 3-button layout. The biological hook Fun Factory advertises: pulsation activates Ruffini ending nerves while tapping activates Merkel discs — two distinct receptor types that standard vibration doesn't reach as efficiently. Whether reviewers buy the neuroscience claim or not, they generally agree the sensations feel meaningfully different from a standard vibrator. Made from medical-grade silicone, 100% waterproof, USB-magnetic charging, 8-hour run time on standard vibration, German-made with 2-year warranty.

Reviewer reception is consistently "good but takes patience." Elia Winters' review noted that the Sundaze "slowly grows on you" — initial impressions can be confusing because the tapping and pulsation modes feel weird before they feel good. Once users settle on a preferred rhythm and learn to control the curve, multiple reviewers — including Being The Little Spoon and the PleasureScore reviewer — report the toy delivering some of their most intense orgasms. The PleasureScore ranking placed it at 72/100, with the explicit note that this is one of those toys where the score doesn't capture the polarized response from users. The most consistent caveat: it works much better as an internal toy than as an external clitoral one despite the marketing suggesting both. The shape and curvature target G-spot stimulation more than external use.

Best for: users who already own a good standard vibrator and want to explore non-vibration sensations, anyone curious about pulsator/thrusting toys but not ready for a $200 Stronic G, gender-neutral buyers (the curve and shape work well for prostate stimulation too, though Fun Factory markets it primarily for G-spot). Buy from FunFactory.com, Amazon, Lovehoney, or Peepshow Toys. At $129–$169 it's mid-tier — significantly cheaper than the Stronic G or the LELO IDA Wave, in roughly the same range as the LELO GIGI 2 or LELO MONA 2.

Sources


Update — 2026-05-16

Initial entry — added as the entry-level pulsator/tapper, sitting between standard vibrators and the dedicated Stronic G pulsator.