Man visits Japanese store and finds the world's first human washing machine worth $400,000 so gets in and tries it

On a random visit to a Japanese store, a content creator found the world’s first human washing machine worth $400,000, so he got in and tried it out.
Content creator Joey Bizinger was exploring a Japanese electronics store when he came across one of the strangest gadgets imaginable.
Sitting on display was a futuristic pod described as the world’s first human washing machine, and there was only one logical response.
Minutes later, he was climbing inside the $400,000 machine to test whether the future of bathing had officially arrived.
Man finds the world’s first human washing machine worth $400,000
The YouTuber found the weird piece of tech inside a store in Ikebukuro, Tokyo, where shoppers could stop and stare at the bizarre invention.
Looking like something straight out of a science fiction movie, the giant pod promised to wash an entire person in around 15 minutes.

Instead of using soap and a loofah, users sit inside while warm water fills the chamber.
The machine then releases microscopic bubbles said to be smaller than hair follicles, helping clean the skin without traditional detergents.

Joey admitted it felt slightly awkward being on public display, but once the warm water started flowing, he quickly relaxed.
He said the temperature felt perfect and the experience was surprisingly calming, especially with the relaxing video playing on the wall.

He tried it with jets, steam, and sensors
Once the cycle began, the machine stepped things up dramatically.
Jets fired from above and the sides, mist filled the pod, and sensors monitored his heart rate while music and visuals played through bone-conduction headphones.
At one point, Joey joked that it felt like being a human in a luxury car wash, but he also admitted it was genuinely fun.
When the wash was complete, the futuristic pod drained itself and switched into a steam mode designed to help dry the user off.
After climbing out, he said he didn’t just feel wet, he felt properly clean, comparing it to leaving a spa or traditional Japanese onsen.
Would he buy one for $400,000?
Probably not, but after trying it, Joey said machines like this could easily feel normal in the distant future.


