On May 1, 2026, Amsterdam-based interactive sex tech maker Kiiroo announced the PowerShot Case, a modular accessory designed to dock with three of the brand's existing strokers — the Keon, the PowerBlow, and the PowerShot — and merge their motion, suction, and vibration capabilities into a single integrated experience. The launch was first reported by XBIZ and confirmed on Kiiroo's site. Pricing and an exact ship date were not disclosed in the announcement; the product was positioned as the first concrete deliverable of Kiiroo's previously-teased modular ecosystem strategy.

Why It Matters

Modular sex tech is a long-discussed but rarely-executed concept. Most brands prefer the higher per-unit margin of complete new products to the lower-margin accessory route, which is why "upgrade kits" are vanishingly rare in this category. Kiiroo's PowerShot Case is one of the first serious attempts by a major brand to build a true ecosystem play in male masturbators, and if it works, it positions Kiiroo to compete with Lovense not just on individual products but on platform lock-in — a far more durable competitive moat. Watch for whether the company publishes a developer SDK or third-party-accessory specification, which would meaningfully escalate the platform thesis.

Per CEO Toon Timmermans' statement to XBIZ, the goal is "to bring together every sensation a man can feel into one modular system — not as separate products, but as one connected experience." The PowerShot Case is the load-bearing piece of that strategy: by acting as a docking shell that hosts existing Kiiroo motors and sleeves, it gives existing customers an upgrade path that doesn't require buying a wholly new device. That's a notable departure from the male masturbator industry's standard playbook, in which incremental improvements typically arrive as full new SKUs (Fleshlight Quickshot, Quickshot Vantage, Quickshot Boost; Tenga Flip Zero, Flip Zero EV, Flip Zero Black) and old hardware quickly becomes orphaned.

For Kiiroo specifically, modular compatibility also reinforces the brand's existing position as the most VR/cam-platform-integrated male toy maker on the market. The Keon is one of the most widely supported devices in the FeelConnect ecosystem and pairs with adult content from SLR (SexLikeReal), VRBangers, and other major VR studios; the PowerBlow adds suction; the PowerShot (launched September 2025) added a compact dual-motor vibrator. With the Case unifying all three into one rig, Kiiroo customers can theoretically run a single device that stroked, sucked, and vibrated in time with VR content — closing the gap with Lovense's Solace Pro automated stroker (released 2025) on capability while preserving the option for users to keep using their existing investments.

The competitive backdrop is sharper than usual. Lovense — Kiiroo's principal competitor in connected male hardware — absorbed WOW Tech (We-Vibe / Womanizer) in 2021 and has since dominated the integrated couples-and-solo connected device space; Lovense's Solace Pro is the current high-water mark for a single-purchase automated male stroker at $349. Kiiroo's "buy the case, keep your motors" pitch is a deliberate counter-positioning aimed at customers reluctant to spend $300+ on a new device. It is also a clear bid to lock customers into Kiiroo's hardware ecosystem in the same way Apple uses port standards and accessory compatibility to retain users.

Sources


Update — 2026-05-03

Initial entry — story first created.