Inside the Impact of New AV Laws on Sex Toy Ecommerce

Over the past few years, age verification (AV) has gone from a niche policy discussion to a very real, very immediate concern for anyone operating in the adult space. More than half of U.S. states now have laws on the books designed to prevent minors from accessing explicit material online, and numerous other states are weighing similar legislation. These laws require websites hosting a substantial portion of content deemed “harmful to minors” to verify each user’s age via methods such as government-issued IDs or biometric data.

A key turning point came in June 2025, when the Supreme Court decided the pivotal case Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton by upholding Texas’ age verification law, HB 1181. The court’s ruling affirmed that states can compel websites to require proof of age before granting access to certain material, signaling a broader shift in expectations around anonymity and access across the internet.

While much of the early conversation around age verification (AV) focused on adult content platforms, the ripple effects have already been felt far beyond.

In a national survey conducted in March by the Woodhull Freedom Foundation, 73% of sex educators said they were concerned that AV laws will impact their work, and 76% feared that such laws could be used to restrict access to sex education and related resources. In states with AV laws currently in effect, 33% of sex educators said they believed that their work has already been affected.

Among sexual health professionals more broadly, 58% said they believed that AV laws could be used to restrict access to education and resources, while 53% said they believed the laws have already had an impact.

Echoing those concerns, industry attorney Lawrence Walters believes that it’s only a matter of time before enforcement efforts and lawsuits expand from digital adult content to target online pleasure product retailers as well.

“Nothing in these laws prevents their application to product retailers if the content on the sites fits the definitions in the statutes,” Walters says.

Pleasure brands, retailers and sex educators are therefore now asking a new set of questions: How will this impact customer trust? Will added barriers disrupt already sensitive purchase journeys? What does AV compliance look like in a space where discretion has always been part of the experience?

Adult Retail: The Next Target?

Industry attorney Corey D. Silverstein expects more states to pass AV laws, and notes that compliance expectations are becoming more operationally concrete rather than theoretical.

“Compared to a year ago, there’s less room to rely on constitutional uncertainty as a buffer,” Silverstein says. “Companies should now be actively implementing age-gating mechanisms where applicable, and documenting those efforts.”

Association of Sites Advocating Child Protection Executive Director Tim Henning warns, “Noncompliance in active states risks immediate attorney general lawsuits, daily fines and injunctions.”

To make matters worse, most of these statutes have unidirectional attorney’s fees provisions. That is, if the plaintiff prevails, they recover attorney’s fees. However, if the defendant prevails, the defendant does not recover attorney’s fees. In Tennessee and South Dakota, noncompliant site operators can even face criminal charges.

Because of such considerations, the general sentiment among industry stakeholders and observers is that it is always better to be safe than sorry. However, Henning does not see immediate peril on the horizon for pleasure product companies.

“Most pure pleasure product ecommerce sites are likely safe for now,” he says. “Courts have not applied these laws to typical sex-toy retailers. Separate 2025 Texas bills that aimed to require ID checks specifically for online sex-toy sales failed in the legislature. And pleasure retailers have mostly stayed under the radar by not triggering the threshold.”

The “threshold” is a common provision in state AV laws, which specifies that any website containing 33.3% or more of material harmful to minors must implement age-verification measures. Henning urges pleasure product e-tailers to audit their site’s content, taking into account text, images and videos when calculating whether they meet that ratio.

Woodhull Freedom Foundation COO Mandy Salley speculates that many retailers likely believe their content isn’t “explicit” enough to trigger AV requirements.

“Their websites might have pictures of products or models, but they are usually clothed,” Salley notes. “I think, by luck and because many legislators are very focused on porn, retailers probably haven’t seen a significant impact yet.”

Walters cautions that while a sexual wellness site with minimal explicit content might not trigger compliance issues, the line is rarely clear.

“Ultimately, the decision on offering AV services will depend on each operator’s willingness to accept risk,” Walters says. “Some of these definitions are intentionally vague and broad, giving claimants wide latitude to identify potential targets. Some AV laws don’t rely on specific percentages of adult content to determine applicability; instead, they use terms like ‘substantial’ or ‘significant.’ These definitions can make it difficult to determine the compliance expectations.”

Industry attorney and Free Speech Coalition (FSC) board chair Jeffrey Douglas sees the lack of clear definitions as deliberate.

“The most effective way to discourage behavior is often to refuse to specify what is considered lawful,” Douglas says. “In nearly all areas other than the regulation of sexual devices or activities, courts do not accept a law that doesn’t clearly inform the average person of what is legal and what is not.”

Under obscenity laws, Douglas notes, defendants tend to find out whether material is obscene only after a jury convicts them.

“For harmful material, there’s even less direction,” he laments. “That’s done on purpose because they want to discourage businesses from operating effectively in the marketplace, due to their underlying hostility toward sex.”

Douglas describes some potential pitfalls retail websites may encounter in this climate.

“Under many state statutes, if the product is anatomically correct — that is, if it looks like an erect human penis — that clearly falls under the definition of ‘harmful matter,’” he explains. “If it is just a missile-shaped but otherwise featureless dildo or vibrator, whether it is considered harmful matter depends on the description, because most state adult verification laws include written descriptions.”

FSC and its subdivision, the Sexual Wellness Professionals Association (SWPA), offer members referrals to attorneys experienced in age verification issues.

“The lawyer you consult will evaluate your risk and customize their advice based on all available information,” Douglas says.

Compliance Challenges and Options

Another tricky aspect of AV laws is that many require sites to hire external AV providers rather than create their own age verification process. Henning estimates that sites can expect to pay between $0.50 and $2 per verification, plus setup fees.

Those extra costs can mount up, notes Salley.

“Considering the huge traffic some of these websites get, it can become very costly very fast,” she says. “Also, some laws require age verification every 60 minutes, so it’s not enough to verify once and be done.”

In addition to the expense, outsourcing requires depending on a vendor to ensure compliance.

As Walters points out, the surge of state AV laws has led to a boom in AV service providers — some of whom seemingly appeared overnight.

“Their services depend on the provider’s understanding of legal obligations and the quality of their legal advice,” Walters says. “Some compliance methods offered by certain vendors are unlikely to satisfy the strict verification requirements of U.S. state laws. Since there is no federal AV law, states have created a patchwork of different verification options, data deletion and retention requirements, and other rules that can be difficult for any AV provider to understand and follow.”

Those data rules constitute a key part of compliance, since most AV laws require websites to delete a user’s information after verification. But that may not be entirely feasible, cautions Salley.

“The technology simply isn’t there yet,” she says. “I know technology can do some pretty amazing and innovative things, but right now, there isn’t any technology that can completely erase someone’s data — it still exists on a server somewhere. That’s a problem, to say the least. Most people in 2026 have experienced some form of hacking, such as having their credit card information stolen.”

While vendors can help streamline compliance, they do not let sites off the hook, Silverstein emphasizes.

“Companies still hold responsibility for ensuring the solution meets legal requirements, handles user data correctly and operates reliably,” he says. “Failures at the vendor level can still result in direct liability for the business.”

For that reason, Silverstein urges businesses to seek strong indemnification clauses, clear commitments on data handling and privacy, audit rights and performance guarantees when partnering with age verification providers.

In response to the concerns detailed above, FSC announced in March that it would grant members exclusive access to PrivateAV, which the organization describes as “a private, compliant and affordable age verification service that financially supports FSC’s advocacy work.”

PrivateAV provides two verification options: AI-based age estimation, and full document verification with biometric matching. To safeguard user privacy, no personal data is ever stored, logged or saved to disk. All inputs are immediately erased after verification, allowing site operators to prioritize user privacy.

FSC is offering PrivateAV as an additional membership benefit. Plans start at $30 per month for up to 1,000 verifications.

FSC Executive Director Alison Boden tells XBIZ, “We introduced PrivateAV to provide our members with an affordable, privacy-focused compliance option they can trust not to store or sell user data. We also believed it was crucial to offer a solution that doesn’t financially benefit the companies lobbying to implement even stricter age-verification laws.”

‘A new category of risk’

Another sector struggling to keep up with age verification laws and their implications: the insurance business.

According to Ashlin Hadden, founder and CEO of Essence Protection, traditional insurance policies were never designed to withstand the level of regulatory scrutiny AV brings — particularly for online-first pleasure-product companies.

“Most standard general liability policies and even many cyber policies either don’t cover age verification issues at all or quietly exclude them through broad regulatory, statutory or ‘knowing violation’ exclusions,” Hadden says. “The biggest gap is that these laws are creating a new category of risk that falls between privacy, consumer protection and product liability, but doesn’t fit neatly into any existing coverage.”

Claims about improper age verification, failure to restrict access, or alleged harm to minors can cause multiple exclusions at

once, leaving businesses unexpectedly uninsured.

“From a business point of view, age verification laws are forcing companies to make quick operational decisions in a very uncertain legal environment, and that’s exactly where insurance often falls short,” Hadden explains. “Many brands think that trying to comply gives them protection, but policies usually react based on how a claim is made, not on the intent behind it.”

As a result, Essence is advising clients to go beyond just compliance and assess how their verification processes, data management and platform integrations might be challenged.

“This includes reviewing vendor agreements, understanding how customer data is stored and verified, and ensuring that their risk-transfer strategies align with how regulators and plaintiffs’ attorneys actually handle these cases,” says Hadden.

Ready for What’s Next

In today’s rapidly evolving landscape of laws and regulations governing adult content, it can be difficult to predict what new tactics inventive legislators or aggressive enforcement agencies might use next. So how can retailers and other sites in the adult space prepare for the future?

Silverstein’s advice: “Companies should create flexible systems, both legal and technical, that can adapt to evolving requirements across jurisdictions. This includes modular verification tools, ongoing legal monitoring and internal policies that can be quickly revised as laws change.”

Henning recommends that sex toy e-tailers subscribe to real-time tracking tools, perform documented quarterly site audits for legal defensibility. He also suggests analyzing revenue exposure, focusing on high-volume areas like Texas and Florida, and using IP geolocation to activate only the restrictions required in a given area.

“This shifts reactive firefighting into proactive adaptation,” Henning explains.

Other strategies for websites include routing traffic intelligently: light or no gate for low-risk regions or pure-product pages, and full verification where legally required, as well as regional site variants or SFW mirrors for high-enforcement markets.

On the insurance front, Hadden is developing coverage to protect her clients from lawsuits arising from AV.

“What we are developing with our carrier partners is more deliberate coverage that directly addresses these gray areas by reducing exclusions, clarifying defense coverage for regulatory actions and creating manuscript endorsements — custom-written amendments to an insurance policy — that specifically address age-verification-related allegations,” she explains.

Boden reaffirms FSC’s commitment to monitoring state, federal and international legislation, and sharing information members need so they aren’t caught off guard.

“On the federal side, we’re actively engaging with lawmakers, advocating for an approach that truly works instead of just copying the patchwork of state laws on a national level,” Boden says. “We’re also keeping members updated through guidance documents and communications as the landscape changes, and connecting them with legal experts who specialize in this area when they need personalized advice.”

FSC and its allies are proponents of device-level age verification, which ensures that age is confirmed once and shared with sites via an encrypted token that validates only what’s necessary: that the user is an adult.

“No identity documents or biometric scans on hundreds of websites are required,” Boden points out. “There are no data breaches exposing users’ browsing history. It eliminates the confusing patchwork of conflicting state laws for businesses to navigate. The technology is available; policymakers just need to catch up.”

For now, however, site-based AV laws have prompted platforms like Pornhub to go dark in many jurisdictions, while traffic has shifted to noncompliant sites, piracy has surged and VPN use has skyrocketed as users seek to avoid intrusive AV practices.

Boden says it’s obvious that the current approach to age verification is failing.

“None of this protects kids,” she states simply. “FSC is educating lawmakers about what’s really happening and why repeatedly collecting sensitive identity information from adults isn’t the solution. Judging by reactions to the spread of these laws, the breaking point may be near.

“The question is whether policymakers are willing to pursue solutions that truly work,” Boden says. “Or if they will keep passing laws that look good on paper but do nothing for children.”

Salley hopes that members of the adult retail community will reach out to their state and federal representatives and share how poorly conceived AV laws negatively affect legitimate businesses while failing to protect anyone effectively.

“People don’t necessarily want to be political or activists, but if policymakers aren’t hearing from the people affected, it’s really hard to oppose these things,” she says. “So we have to get loud.

Amy Nosferatu Nabs XMA Creator Award

Amy Nosferatu Nabs XMA Creator Award

MIAMI — Amy Nosferatu won Trans Clip Creator of the Year at the 2026 XMA Creator Awards.

“Winning this award is such an incredible feeling,” Nosferatu said. “I’ve worked really hard on my content and creative vision, so being recognized like this means so much to me. I’m beyond thankful to everyone who has supported me throughout this journey.”

For a complete list of 2026 XMA Creator Award winners, click here.

Follow Amy Nosferatu on X.com.

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Alexis Fawx Scores 2026 XRCO Awards Nom

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Alexis Fawx has nabbed a nomination for MILF of the Year at the 2026 XRCO Awards.

“I’m incredibly honored to receive this XRCO nomination,” said Fawx. “To be recognized by critics and industry professionals who have watched my journey over the years means a lot to me. I’m grateful to everyone who continues to support my work and motivate me to keep pushing myself creatively.”

The 42nd Annual XRCO Awards Show will take place on May 24 at Boardner’s in Hollywood. To watch the nominees announcement, click here.

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Pride Studios Drops 3 New Releases for May

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LAS VEGAS — ASGMax’s Pride Studios is dropping three new scenes this month.

First, for Extra Big Dicks, Eddie Patrick and Jake Waters make a friendly wager while gaming in “Loser Takes It All.”

Next, Brogan and Miles Fallon have a tiff in “The Make Up Session,” from Men Over Thirty.

Finally, reigning and three-time XMAs Gay Performer of the Year Derek Kage stars with Reese Rideout, Zac Steele, and Jacob King in the new Family Creep scene, “Swapping Step-Dads: Sneaking Around.”

Director Micah Martinez enthused about the scenes.

“Pride Studios has very quickly become the source of some of the most fun content I get to film,” said Martinez. “Having three vastly different sites with models ranging from people I work with all the time to newer faces has kept it fresh and exhilarating. I’m excited for you all to see these new updates.”

The Family Creep scene drops May 25; the Men Over Thirty and Extra Big Dicks scenes are currently streaming on ASGMax.

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TadpoleXStudio Scores 2026 Urban X Awards Nom

LOS ANGELES — TadpoleXStudio has been nominated for Most Popular Pro-Am Studio at the 2026 Urban X Awards.

“Congratulations to all the nominees,” Pole said. “I am just happy to be nominated and recognized. I wish everyone the best of luck. Thank you Urban X Awards and all of the fans that pre-nominated me.”

The 2026 Urban X Awards are set to take place on Aug. 16 at the Regent Theater in Los Angeles.

For a complete list of nominees, click here.

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Bianka Strange Stars in Latest From Collective Corruption

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HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Bianka Strange stars alongside director Mickey Mod in a new scene from Collective Corruption, titled “Kept.”

The scene opens in a hotel room where “Bianka is lying down on the couch with her hands bound and her sparkly dress pulled down, exposing her breasts,” said a rep. “Mickey enters the room, manhandles her, and she sits up and kisses him. He spanks her tits and fingers her as she squirms in pleasure. Next, Bianka rolls on her stomach and signals she wants to give him a BJ. After that, she raises her ass in the air — Mickey spanks her and fucks her in doggy before taking her in missionary. The scene is filmed in color with a film noir and ‘70s feel.”

Mod enthused about the scene.

“This was a great scene to film,” he said. “Bianka was really into it. I also liked playing with the lenses and filters, adjusting everything to give it a feeling of being disjointed at times and of closeness between us at others. The way it’s shot is a huge part of the scene and really transformed everything. Although it’s only 16 minutes, it seems longer because the viewer gets lost in time watching it.”

The scene is streaming on CollectiveCorruption.

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Danica Danali Returns to Blush Erotica VR

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LOS ANGELES — Danica Danali stars in a new scene from Blush Erotica VR, titled “This Is How I Like It.”

As the scene begins, Danali “invites viewers into a more intimate experience as she models a new lingerie set she couldn’t wait to show off,” said a rep. “She builds anticipation with playful eye contact, slow reveals, and undeniable chemistry.”

Blush Erotica VR owner Charles Lyle enthused about Danali.

“Danica is the kind of performer every producer hopes to work with,” he said. “She’s confident, creative, collaborative, and always brings ideas that make scenes feel more natural and engaging. She understands how to perform for VR in a way that pulls viewers into the experience, and that makes every project with her exciting to shoot.”

Added Danali, “Shooting VR is a completely different game. Blush Erotica has the setup perfected; Charles and Stacy create an environment where you’re not just performing, you’re fully immersed. It’s more real, more intense, and way more engaging.”

The scene is streaming on BlushEroticaVR.

Follow Danica Danali on X.com.

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Dante Diggz Nabs 2 XRCO Awards Noms

LOS ANGELES — Dante Diggz has scored two nominations at the 2026 XRCO Awards.

The nominations are in the categories of Best Leading Actor (“Shadows of Trust”) and Star Showcase (“Diggz Them Out Vol. 1”).

“I am overflowing with gratitude to be nominated for such a prestigious award,” said Diggz. “I am thankful for the recognition and dedicated to continuing to please the industry.”

The 42nd Annual XRCO Awards Show will take place on May 24 at Boardner’s in Hollywood. To watch the nominees announcement, click here.

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From Ring Lights to the Spotlight: 2026 XMA Creator Awards Celebrate Community and Indie Stardom

MIAMI — M2 transformed into a neon-drenched fever dream Wednesday night as the 2026 XMA Creator Awards, presented by Fansly, returned to Miami Beach in a haze of flashing lights, tropical heat, and pure digital decadence.

Beneath towering LED screens and pounding bass, creators, performers, and industry power players packed the iconic venue for a celebration where the only vices in sight were skin, sequins, and stiff cocktails. The scent of the tropics lingered in the air as glistening skin shimmered under Miami’s humid glow. At the same time, barely-there fashion, glittering couture, and nonstop camera flashes carried the energy deep into the night.

Guiding the evening’s festivities were hosts Elly Clutch and Girthmasterr, whose effortless chemistry kept the crowd buzzing from the moment they stepped onstage. Clutch dazzled in a sparkling, midriff-baring two-piece ensemble that caught every pulse of light in the room, while Girthmasterr brought smooth Miami sophistication in a cream-colored linen suit that perfectly balanced her shimmer. Flirty banter, playful jabs, and affectionate exchanges flowed naturally between the pair all night long, showcasing the real-life connection fans have come to adore from the friends and Brazzers contract stars.

Before the awards began, attendees turned the famed pink carpet into a runway of pure Miami heat. Jewel tones, tropical prints, shimmering pastels, and glittering netted looks gave the arrivals a sultry, mermaid-after-midnight vibe as cameras flashed from every angle. After making their way past pink carpet correspondent Violet Brandani, guests entered the packed venue where drinks flowed freely, and nostalgic club anthems pulsed through the crowd.

The moment Clutch and Girthmasterr finally took the stage, the room erupted. Clutch twirled her hair with excitement as the duo launched into a performance that felt equal parts hilarious, heartfelt, and celebratory. Both former XMA Creator of the Year winners themselves, the pair brought an infectious warmth to the stage that immediately set the tone for the night.

“You know, when I was younger, I was terrified of public speaking,” Girthmasterr joked to roaring applause. “Then somebody told me that if you’re nervous, it helps to picture the audience naked, so thank you all for making that incredibly easy for me tonight.”

Bunnydollstella turned the flirtation all the way up after taking home the trophy for Female Streamer of the Year, strutting onto the stage with playful confidence as the crowd erupted around her.

“I’m the happiest girl ever tonight! Thank you to everyone who voted for me, and one last thing — fuck all the other nominees! No, seriously, let’s fuck because you’re all so hot,” she quipped, sending the audience into a momentary gasp before the room exploded into laughter and applause.

Meanwhile, Big Bear claimed the trophy for Male Streamer of the Year, practically sprinting toward the stage in disbelief after presenter and industry veteran Alexis Fawx called his name.

“I think this really shows that there’s room in the industry for bigger dudes,” he exclaimed before heading offstage.

Backstage in the Winner’s Circle, the newly crowned winner reflected on the emotional moment with raw honesty.

“It was honestly a surprise because everyone else in the crowd is what I would consider a beautiful guy,” he admitted. “Six-packs, massive horse cocks — they’re just beautiful. And then there’s me, this 400-pound dude who’s just doing my best to dance and put on a show. And I fucking won!”

Carrie Madsin, who earned the title of Trans Streamer of the Year, burst onto the stage in a sparkling, body-hugging minidress, radiating joy as she accepted her award.

“I can’t believe I won,” she shouted. “Thank you to all the black and brown trans women that fucking made me the woman I fucking am. And goddammit, there will be more after me.”

Raising her trophy high above the crowd, Madsin paused before flashing a grin and instructing the audience to “watch the walk” as she sauntered offstage to deafening cheers.

Elsewhere, Isabelle Goncalves delivered one of the evening’s most heartfelt moments after winning Inked Streamer of the Year. Speaking in her native Spanish, she closed her speech with a simple but powerful reminder: “Dreams don’t have borders.”

Streamer Duo of the Year went to Casey Kisses and Kylie Le Beau, the fan-favorite pair whose real-life romance famously led to an onstage engagement during a previous XBIZ ceremony. Accepting the award beneath the club’s flashing lights, Kisses delivered an emotional speech reflecting on both their journey and the industry that helped shape it.

“XBIZ, thank you so much for following the industry the way it should be followed,” Kisses said. “Every accolade I’ve ever had, there’s been somebody from XBIZ there to witness it, recognize it, and celebrate it. Honestly, thank you so fucking much. I started in Miami, and I finished in Miami.”

Some of the evening’s other standout streamers included Felicia Hardy, who claimed MILF Streamer of the Year; Crimson Kitten, who earned the trophy for Cosplay Streamer of the Year; Piggy Rose, who took home BBW Streamer of the Year; and BlaizeyBBy, who secured Fetish Streamer of the Year during one of the night’s most emotional acceptance speeches.

“I don’t really know what to say because I didn’t think I was going to win,” BlaizeyBBy admitted through tears. “When I first got sober, the first con I ever went to was XBIZ Miami, and I saw how great this experience was. It’s been a dream to get this, and I’m still two years sober too!”

Meanwhile, Rising Streamer of the Year winner Gracie Smith reflected on her rapid rise in the industry with visible disbelief and gratitude.

“Oh my gosh, I’ve only been doing this a year and a half and my fans really just changed my life in so many ways,” Smith said. “I’m so grateful. So humbled. I can’t believe it.”

Many of the winners used their acceptance speeches to celebrate the communities and audiences that helped build their careers from the ground up.

Faceless Clip Artist of the Year winner Miss Lexa delivered one of the evening’s simplest yet most emotional moments after taking the stage to thank the fans who support her work without ever fully seeing her identity.

“I know I don’t show my face, but you guys help me feel seen every day,” she told the crowd.

Elsewhere, Bree Sky earned Rising Clip Creator of the Year, using the moment to spotlight the growing power of independent creators carving out their own lane in the industry.

“It’s super awesome to win because it shows that creators can do things,” Skye said. “I’m doing everything by myself, creating my own VR studio and creating my own platform. So it’s awesome to be recognized.”

Fetish Clip Creator of the Year winner Liz River brought both humor and heartfelt emotion to the stage as she reflected on her decades-long journey in the business and her advocacy for fetish creators.

“After 20 years, I cannot believe this is happening to me,” River said. “It’s never too late. I want to thank XBIZ for making fetish creators feel seen. Sometimes we feel like the stepchildren in the industry, so we really appreciate this representation.”

She also took a moment to acknowledge her ongoing advocacy work within the industry.

“I fight for every single word and every single fetish that we can,” she continued. “I’m fighting for all of us.”

Backstage in the Winner’s Circle, the emotional victory still had not fully sunk in.

“Nineteen or 20 years ago, I was living in my car, and now I’m a fucking winner,” River said with disbelief. “All of my dreams just came true. I’m going to Disneyland!”

Meanwhile, SantanaXXL’s long-awaited win for Gay Clip Creator of the Year triggered one of the loudest reactions of the evening as the creator processed the milestone in real time.

“Oh my God, I don’t believe this shit,” he shouted. “Ten years in the business, and this is my first XBIZ award.”

Stephanie Love, who earned Inked Clip Creator of the Year, radiated chaotic excitement as she accepted her trophy.

“I literally worked my fucking ass off for this,” Love said. “I worked so hard to get this!”

Backstage, she kept the energy hilariously unfiltered as she thanked the fans who voted for her.

“I love them, and I’m going to suck all their dicks,” she joked. “That’s what I told them. That’s how I won. It’s going to be a busy year.”

Victoria Peach also celebrated a major independent creator victory after taking home Female Clip Creator of the Year, visibly overwhelmed as she stepped onto the stage beneath the flashing lights.

“Oh my God, my heart is pounding. I think I might have peed. I’m not sure,” Peach laughed. “I’m so happy. I worked so fucking hard for this. I did it all by myself. There are no companies. I did it completely on my own.”

Meanwhile, Clip Creator Duo of the Year winners TheJellyFilledGirls accepted their trophy from reigning champs Max Fills and Hailey Rose before delivering one of the evening’s most passionate speeches about female-focused adult content.

“Thank you to the lesbians,” the duo said to roaring cheers. “We create content for women because women need good porn too. I think we’re a little overlooked sometimes, so it’s really beautiful that people showed up for us. Women deserve more recognition and more love in the industry.”

Some of the night’s other standout clip creators included Freaky T, who earned Male Clip Creator of the Year; Amy Nosferatu, who claimed Trans Clip Creator of the Year; Krystal Davis, who took home MILF Clip Creator of the Year; Busty Bexx, who secured BBW Clip Creator of the Year; and Mr. Lucky, who won POV Clip Artist of the Year.

At one point during the evening, the spotlight shifted from creators to the platform that powers much of the creator economy, as Leah Koons, Director of Marketing for presenting sponsor Fansly, stepped onto the stage to address the packed crowd.

With her hair swept into an elegant updo and clad in a strapless sea green satin gown that perfectly matched the night’s colorful aesthetic, Koons delivered a fiery speech celebrating creators, sex workers, and the community-driven spirit of the industry.

“I want to thank the entire XBIZ staff that put this thing on for us, the production staff kicking their asses back there, the bartenders, the security, but most importantly, the Fansly creators that are nominated tonight,” Koons told the audience. “We have so many Fansly faces in this room, and we’re grateful for every single fucking one of you.”

The crowd erupted again as Koons doubled down on the platform’s creator-first philosophy in unapologetically blunt fashion.

“We are sex work first. We are sex work always,” she declared. “And there’s going to be no fucking bans for no reason on my fucking platform.”

The statement drew one of the loudest applause breaks of the evening as audience members cheered, whistled, and raised cocktails into the air.

“And I promise you right now that we’re not going fucking anywhere,” Koons added before thanking the crowd once more for their continued support.

The night’s wave of social media star awards celebrated winners ranging from viral stars to longtime fan favorites who built devoted audiences one post, clip, and livestream at a time.

Male Premium Social Media Star of the Year winner Gattouz0 delivered one of the evening’s most unexpectedly heartfelt speeches after taking the stage to accept his trophy.

“Thank you so much, everyone. My name is Gattouz0, but my real name is Yosef,” he told the crowd. “I’m really happy to be in the United States. I didn’t expect it to be such a beautiful night.”

He then used the moment to deliver a message about health and self-care that quieted the packed venue almost instantly.

“Fame comes and goes, money comes and goes, but please take care of yourself,” he said. “Eat healthy. Don’t drink. Don’t vape. No cigarettes. No drugs. In the end, what really matters is your mental health and your health.”

Meanwhile, BBW Premium Social Media Star of the Year winner Karla Lane brought the room roaring to life after presenters Vicki Chase and Sarah Arabic called her to the stage. Chase playfully shimmed her shoulders and shouted, “Come here, big mama!” as Lane made her way through the cheering crowd.

“I’ve been fucking on camera for 21 years — my career is old enough to drink,” Lane joked before proudly gesturing toward her mouth with her trophy. “This is what I’m good at.”

Backstage, Serenity Cox appeared visibly emotional after earning Premium Social Media Star of the Year, crediting creator platforms for changing the trajectory of her career.

“I’m shaking,” Cox admitted. “I’m so excited because the creator stuff is what made me, what brought me into this business, so it’s what excites me the most.”

Trans Premium Social Media Star winner Vanniall was equally overwhelmed backstage moments after her victory.

“It feels fucking insane,” she said, still breathless with excitement. “My heart’s going about a million a minute. I did not expect this at all, but it feels so amazing.”

Female Premium Social Media Star of the Year winner Violet Brandani closed out her acceptance speech with an empowering message for fellow creators in the room.

“All of you are so awesome,” Brandani said. “Just be yourself. You’re killing it, and it takes a lot to be yourself every single day. Fuck everybody else. Do you and keep killing it!”

Some of the evening’s other standout social media winners included Connie Perignon, who earned Inked Social Media Star of the Year and remaining visibly shaken backstage after her surprise victory; Maya Hill, who claimed Rising Premium Social Media Star of the Year; Drake Von, who secured Gay Premium Social Media Star of the Year; Calista Melissa, who earned Fetish Premium Social Media Star of the Year; and Toochi Kash, who took home Social Media Influencer of the Year.

As the final trophies were handed out and the night began winding down, hosts Elly Clutch and Girthmasterr returned to the stage one last time to close out the ceremony with the same warmth and chemistry that carried the show from the very beginning.

“Oh my God, if you lasted this long, hello!” Girthmasterr joked as the exhausted but energized crowd erupted into cheers once again.

“Wow. What a night,” Clutch added before the pair paused to celebrate the evening’s winners and nominees one final time.

“Honestly, one of the coolest parts about this business is that there’s no single path to getting here,” Girthmasterr reflected. “Some people started camming from their bedrooms. Some made clips on their phones. Some of us thought we were just signing up to make a little extra money and became true professionals at this game.”

The pair then shifted into a more emotional reflection on creator culture and the risks many performers took to build careers on their own terms.

“That’s what tonight is really about,” Clutch said. “Not just awards, but creators who took a chance on themselves.”

“The people who kept posting, kept creating, and kept pushing forward even when things got hard,” Girthmasterr added before pausing with a grin. “Especially when things got hard, actually.”

From there, the party spilled out into the humid Miami night as creators poured onto Ocean Drive for the official after-party at Mango’s South Beach, sponsored by Chaturbate. Beneath glowing neon signs and swaying palm trees, the celebration continued well into the early morning hours as bass rattled through the crowded dance floor, cocktails clinked beneath the sticky tropical heat, and bodies writhed to the music under the electric South Beach glow.

New Kickstarter Rules Ban Fundraising for Adult Content, Products

LOS ANGELES — Crowdfunding platform Kickstarter has posted new “Mature Content” rules banning projects that involve adult content and sextech.

The new rules warn that Kickstarter “is not a venue for adult-only or sexually explicit content and such content is prohibited.”

Among the specific provisions listed are bans on “any project specifically stating it or the rewards being offered are being created for sexual pleasure,” as well as “any project that distributes or enables distribution of pornographic content” and sexual wellness products that are “explicitly designed for sexual stimulation through insertion or penetration, or are intended to have body parts inserted into them.”

The rules also prohibit sexual wellness products that are “marketed or presented primarily for sexual gratification in a manner that creates heightened safety or moderation concerns,” though the rules do not detail what factors might trigger such concerns. XBIZ has reached out to Kickstarter for clarification.

The rules do allow sexual wellness products that are not designed for insertion or penetration, as long as they are “not marketed primarily for sexual gratification,” listing as acceptable examples “lubricants, nipple jewelry, and other intimate items such as bras and underwear.”

A Change in Direction

The new rules represent a policy reversal, since numerous adult projects have previously found backing via Kickstarter.

Early in its history, pleasure brand Dame crowdfunded Fin, a finger-mounted vibrator. The platform was initially resistant but eventually hosted the campaign, which was then fully funded in two days.

Spanish men’s sexual wellness brand MyHixel conducted successful Kickstarter campaigns for its ejaculation control strokers in 2018, 2022 and 2024.

Last year, Ohdoki launched two new stroker sleeves via Kickstarter, ultimately receiving pledges totaling more than $1.5 million.

In 2025, insertable pleasure product Groove Thing, which plays audio, raised $100,000 in the first 12 hours of its campaign, ultimately receiving pledges of more than half a million dollars.

Last year, Kickstarter even introduced “Kickstarter After Dark,” which the platform billed as a newsletter for projects such as “adult lifestyle products and innovations,” as well as “personal wellness technology” and “mature-oriented design projects.”

That service included the slogan, “Because NSFW deserves a home on Kickstarter.”

“Adult creators deserve the same spotlight and promotion as any other project on Kickstarter,” the announcement read.