“Like, babe, you should totes take a picture of us!” your girlfriend says. The slight surprise made you change the settings of the camera ever so slightly. It now responds to whatever the owner, (That’s you,) is thinking of whenever it takes a picture. You get on the bed, using your oversexualized girlfriend as a pillow, and say “Cheeze!”
Another function of the camera is that when more than one person is pictured at one time, the camera will create a relationship. However, said relationships tend to be stereotypical, especially when unmodified.
For example, taking a picture of a group of friends may turn them into siblings, or a polycule, depending on a bunch of things. Anything from the arousal of the person taking the picture, to the position of the moon.
The camera will also change reality as little as possible, prioritizing overwriting its own changes. As an example, Candy wasn’t always a brainless plastic bimbo; she had to work to become like that. She was a perfectly normal person before her 20th birthday. If she was turned into an Amazonian warrior, she would still have been perfectly normal before her 20th birthday; just instead of plastic surgery and hypnotism, she worked out and got a tan.
If you were to be turned into a bimbo, then you would have probably been a masculine girl before your bimbofication.
That’s not to say the camera can’t change reality to its whims. In fact, it’s very willing to change everything for the sake of a cute couple.
Speaking of a cute couple and reality alteration, a side effect of the transformation is the proliferation of… let’s say not exactly child friendly media around your abode. Or in other words, because of the bimbo in your life, your house is full of porn. One specific piece fell across your sight the moment before the flash.
It was…