
They could earn Bimbo Attitude (BA) and IQ points by playing mini-games or spending time at locations in the city. Players were responsible for feeding their bimbo, maintaining her mood, and keeping her clean and healthy. Traffic to still redirects to the previous URL, instead of the current ximbo.land address. Miss Bimbo/Bimboland trademarks are now registered under BIMBOLAND LTD. Beemoov went on to create Like a Fashionista, which is similar to the original Ma Bimbo game. Miss Bimbo was closed and relaunched 1 March 2015 as The Republic of Bimboland. Blouzar retained rights to the Miss Bimbo game and continued to develop the website independently. In 2008, Beemoov and Blouzar split, citing difficulties co-operating. Ma Bimbo was owned and developed by Beemoov and Miss Bimbo was developed by Blouzar Ltd., London. Miss Bimbo started as an English version of a French game called Ma Bimbo. Many of the gameplay mechanics and names of attribute points changed when Miss Bimbo was controversially relaunched as Bimboland with new politics, later rebranding to Ximboland with the reported reason being that investors didn't like the word 'bimbo'. The website also features a diverse forum and the opportunity for players to design their own clothes to be sold in the digital shop. Points can be earned by playing mini games, participating in competitions, spending time at specific city locations, or points can be bought with in-game currency. Players style their 'Ximbo' character and level her up by accumulating a variety of attribute points. (I you must plop your daughter in front of a screen, have her watch this (now ximbo.land) is an online fashion game and social networking site.
MISS BIMBO .COM TV
But it makes me think of the brilliant children's TV program, Wonder Showzen (which is mostly just a stoner TV show - watch a not-safe-for-work clip and see) and the warning that runs before each episode: If you let your child watch this show, you are a bad parent or guardian. I am pleased that Feministing is indignant and upset, and happy even more so that the mainstream media has rolled its eyes, too. As much as I enjoy her quote-unquote "bimbo activities" in real life, like shopping and eating chocolate, I'm sorry to report gloriasteinem's probably going to either gasp to death from thirst, starve or perhaps OD on "medicines." And maybe if we ignore this site, it will go away. Crude, offensive, and misogynist social satire, but I admit, I'm a little bemused. I guess it's marketed to little girls? But come on. A quick Google search reveals this is the commonly accepted benchmark for mental retardation. Yup, in addition to weight and attitude, measures your bimbo's IQ. More curious than the absence of pubic hair on someone supposedly old enough to go tanning and take "medicines," is gloriastienem's IQ. She's still got 1,000 "bimbo dollars" and 0 "bimbo attitude," just about directly in opposition to my actual dollars vs. And she's 15% hungry and 16% thirsty - which is quite remarkable, considering I didn't feed or nourish her for over 24 hours. But tonight I logged in and gloriasteinem had grown a bra (strapless) and panties (a thong, natch). As soon as I saw PayPal, I rolled my eyes and signed out. If you spend your 1,000 dollars, you visit "The Bank," which is PayPal. You can also turn a profit, though I haven't figured out how yet. The way works is that the user is granted "money" for their avatar to spend: a trip to the tanning bed is 60 "bimbo dollars," bottled water is 5 "bimbo dollars" and the elusively-named "medicines" (blue and white pills) are 100 bimbo dollars. But I was delighted to see my avatar is much happier than I am and has more "bimbo dollars" than I do in my checking account right now. It was so ridiculous, I took a picture of it. And curiously, she had no pubic hair or nipples.

She signed a copy of Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions for me.) She was naked - and had little percentages floating next to her head indicating she was 0% hungry and 0% thirsty. Once I logged into the site, I met my avatar. I tried the more bimbo-y variations of my own name, like Jess, Jessie and Miss Jess. First, users have to create a name for their avatar. So instead of other things I could be doing during the workday, like working, I signed up. A blonde-ringleted ample-cleaveaged nymph wearing white bunny ears sat atop the page.

Feministing's on top of it, too, so just out of curiosity, I checked out, the "virtual fashion game" web site. The text running across the bottom of a TV screen read something like, "New game encourages young girls to starve themselves and shop!" Oh, sister, I thought. I saw the words "Miss Bimbo" emblazoned across the TV screen, a cartoon image of a woman shaped like a paper doll, and stock video of young girls.
