>>11338329>And it works both for lewd poses and artistic ones. The real question is, do you control her facial expression as well? Rob her of that last bit of individuality? On the one hand, it's surely terrible to take her last moments and destroy in favour of a generic, attractive expression. On the other hand, who wants a statue of a beautiful woman baring her tits with a terrified expression?
>you can collect members of every race. That has the bonus feature of making different species more or less desirable. Certain races are pretty normal. No one will pay an especially high price for a human or an orc. They're hard to get, because they put up a fight, but they're not exactly rare. Any collection without a nice varied collection of displayed humans isn't even worth looking at.
But other species fetch a really high price. Proud, perfect, long-lived races like elves or minor goddesses are long sought-after. Not only are they rare and powerful, but there's a certain appeal to taking a beautiful, ancient, impossibly perfect woman with accomplishments that dwarf even the greatest human and turning her into a cold stone pinup. Sculptors take great pleasure in finding great dark-elf warriors and queens and chiselling them down into nothing more than a haughty pair of tits. I'm sure in the past she was very highly regarded. But now all anyone will see is her nice rack.
And of course there are the bottom of the barrel races. Small, mostly insignificant species you can't walk five yards without running into. Most people don't even bother with races like fairies, gnomes and goblins. They're nothing more than bargain bin, dime-a-dozen dolls to be quickly frozen and forgotten. Still, some people make use of them. A few especially dedicated collectors have whole intricate gravel gardens made of nothing but petrified pixies, all visually unique but barely noticed by those who simply walk over them. They do it more for the principle of the thing, really.