thumb_up Pros
- + Bridgette B's commanding screen presence
- + Sharp 8K video quality
- + Natural scale without distortion
- + Strong eye contact and dirty talk
- + Good value at 47 minutes
thumb_down Cons
- − Flat studio lighting kills office atmosphere
- − Conservative positions don't match kinky premise
- − Background music occasionally drowns dialogue
- − Feels padded in places
VR Bangers tries to spice up the tired "therapy session" premise with Bridgette B as your unconventional psychologist, and while the blonde MILF brings genuine star power to the role, the execution feels surprisingly vanilla for such a kinky setup. The 8K footage is crisp on Quest 3 with Bridgette's enhanced curves looking appropriately dimensional, though the studio lighting creates that familiar flat, too-bright aesthetic that robs the office setting of any intimate atmosphere.
Bridgette knows how to work the camera and maintains solid eye contact throughout, especially during the extended blowjob sequences where her experience shows. The scale feels natural without the "giant woman" distortion that plagues some VR Bangers releases, and her dirty talk hits the right notes for the roleplay scenario. However, the scene structure feels oddly conservative, after all the buildup about "unconventional methods," you get fairly standard positions that don't fully capitalize on either the office setting or Bridgette's commanding presence.
Audio is clean with no echo issues, though the background music occasionally overwhelms her dialogue during quieter moments. The camera positioning works well for most positions, particularly the cowgirl segments where Bridgette's assets are properly framed. The scene clocks in at 47 minutes which provides good value, but it feels padded in places where tighter editing would have improved the flow.
This delivers exactly what you'd expect from a VR Bangers MILF scene, polished production values and a skilled performer, but it doesn't push boundaries despite the promising premise. Worth it if you're specifically seeking Bridgette B content, but the "revolutionary therapy" angle undersells itself.