Here’s a feature story concept exploring Enaturist , a fictional or emerging platform/service that blends digital life with naturism. The angle is “digital wellness meets social nudity” — timely for post-pandemic discussions about body image, remote work, and authentic connection. By [Author Name]
“You see real bodies — scars, rolls, stretch marks, prosthetics, mastectomy scars — just living,” says Dr. Helena Ruiz, a body-image psychologist not affiliated with the platform. “That’s radically different from curated nudity on Instagram or OnlyFans. Enaturist’s mundanity is its magic.” Enaturist isn’t naive. The team employs AI blurring for unsolicited explicit poses (contradicting naturist principles but protecting against harassment). A 24/7 moderation team — all trained naturists — reviews reports within minutes. And the platform has a “digital towel” feature: users can place a pixelated overlay on any part of their body without leaving the chat. enaturist
At first glance, Enaturist looks like any other social network. Profiles, forums, event listings, and even a “Zen Mode” video chat. But here, clothing is optional — and for most, it’s entirely absent. Here’s a feature story concept exploring Enaturist ,
Today, Enaturist claims 120,000 active users across 50 countries. Growth is deliberately slow. No ads. No influencers. No algorithms pushing outrage. Just verified humans, a strict “no leering” policy, and a design philosophy Leo calls “social nudism for the screen age.” Joining Enaturist requires a verified ID (to prevent bad actors) and a short course in digital naturist etiquette. Rule one: The camera is a mirror, not a window. Users are encouraged to position their webcam at chest-or-eye level — no genital-focused framing. Rule two: Consent first. Want to start a nude book club? Announce it. Want to stay clothed for a discussion about gardening? That’s fine too. Helena Ruiz, a body-image psychologist not affiliated with
Surprisingly, early research suggests yes. A small survey of 500 Enaturist users found that 78% reported improved body image after three months of active use. The key, members say, is the ban on private messaging photos (all images are shared only in group contexts) and the “Casual Cam” feature — think The Office but nude: people cooking, stretching, knitting, or working from home.
Imagine joining a video call where everyone is professionally dressed — except “professionally” means nothing at all . Welcome to Enaturist, a slow-growing but fiercely loved platform redefining what it means to be naked online.
Still, controversy follows. Critics argue any nude platform online will attract predators. Enaturist’s response: mandatory age verification (21+), no search by location, and a two-strike ban for unsolicited advances.