In 3026, Delta City bleeds neon. Rebuilt, reloaded, and dripping in oil—RoboCock is back! With Grace, Big T, and Gunslinger at his side, the Verhoeven Club rules the night. But when an old enemy rises from the shadows, the spotlight turns to carnage. This time, it’s not just about the tips… it’s about survival.
Mature readers only!
NSFW
In 3026, Delta City bleeds neon. Rebuilt, reloaded, and dripping in oil—RoboCock is back! With Grace, Big T, and Gunslinger at his side, the Verhoeven Club rules the night. But when an old enemy rises from the shadows, the spotlight turns to carnage. This time, it’s not just about the tips… it’s about survival.
Mature readers only!
NSFW
In 1987, Paul Verhoeven gave us RoboCop — a brutal, satirical sci-fi classic about a slain cop reborn as a cyborg enforcer. Sharp, violent, unforgettable.
Three years later came RoboCop 2. Directed by Irvin Kershner, rewritten from Frank Miller’s darker script, it landed as a chaotic blend of violence, satire, and spectacle. Flawed, but impossible to forget.
Then came Showgirls (1995) — Verhoeven’s wild, excessive gamble that crashed hard and became one of Hollywood’s most notorious flops.
Now imagine these worlds colliding. The grit of RoboCop, the chaos of RoboCop 2, and the outrageous excess of Showgirls. Out of that fusion comes RoboCock 2 — part homage, part parody, all madness.