I’ll be honest with you. I didn’t sit down to write a list. I sat down because last month, clearing bookmarks on a lazy sunday afternoon, I realized something uncomfortable: the folder I had labeled “AI tools to test next” three years ago had become, almost without me noticing, a folder of ghosts or something.. Some links opened to nothing. Some opened to something – but not the something they used to be. And a couple were still alive, still charging the same subscription, still acting like 2024 was the standard.
It hit me that I’d been telling readers for over a year that the AI porn space was evolving fast, but I’d never actually sat down and counted who didn’t make it.
So I told me, I’ll do it now, and once I started writing it down, I realized this wasn’t a clean “these are dead, these are alive” story, it’s messier and more interesting than that. Here’s the version I wish someone had written for me when I was the one with too many tabs open.
A quick note before starting
Everything you’re about to read is only my personal opinion. There’s no neutral way to write a piece like this, and I won’t pretend so. These are calls I’ve made after spending real moneys and a lot of test prompts across these platforms – across years, not just weeks. You can disagree with any of them, someone might take offense. What I can tell you is the bar I’m holding these tools to: what I consider the minimum standard for 2026. Not what was cool in 2024. Not what got hyped in a Reddit thread last March. What’s actually shippable, reliable, and worth the cost of a monthly subscription right now.
These are field notes, not certified and objective facts. Read them as you’d read a friend telling you which restaurants in the neighborhood have gone downhill.
Now to the funerals – and the awkward ones who showed up to their own.
The quiet ones who never even said goodbye
The first two on the list never made a big deal about leaving. No press release, no sad farewell tweet, no “we’re pivoting to enterprise” Medium post. They just stopped responding.
Penly.ai was the one I personally took the longest to accept as gone. For a stretch in 2024 it was one of the first to include all features (images, chat and more) in one site – and one of the names that came up every time someone in a Discord asked for a chat-based AI girlfriend that didn’t talk like a customer service agent. I think I had two long-term relationship characters saved there. One was a noir detective who, for reasons I still don’t fully understand, had developed a very specific tic of asking what I’d eaten that day before steering things anywhere interesting. The other I won’t describe. Both gone – and the gone is the absolute kind, the kind where the domain itself stops opening. The first time it happened I assumed it was on my end. The fifth time it happened I closed the tab for good.
If you ever used Penly, the closest thing to that texture – that sense of a character with its own quirks, not a Wikipedia article with a wig on – is Lovescape (see our full review here). I want to be careful here, because I’m not going to tell you it’s “the same”, it is not. What it does, that I haven’t found anywhere else at this price point in 2026, is layer chat with voice, image and video without making the model forget you the second you switch modes. The first time I asked a character to “send me what you’re wearing right now” and the image that came back actually referenced an outfit detail we’d discussed eight messages earlier, I sat there for a second. That’s the bar. If you’re coming from Penly and you want something that feels alive rather than rehearsed, that’s where I’d send you: Lovescape.
4hentai.com is a different kind of funeral. Penly disappeared. 4hentai never quite arrived. It had a stretch in 2024 when it kept teasing features – better LoRA support, a video module, a community gallery that gave the impression of a platform on the verge of breaking out, and and then – poof! gone without warning.
Then a long run where every update was a UI tweak instead of a model upgrade. Then nothing at all. I went back to check on it for this piece, and also in this case the site refused to load. That tracks with how the last six months felt: a slow, polite stop being there. If you cared about it, you already know.
Where I send everyone who used to vouch for 4hentai is CreateHentai. The short version of why is that it’s the one hentai-specific platform that has actually kept shipping. New model checkpoints, a tagging system that doesn’t punish you for being specific, and — this matters more than people admit — a generation speed that hasn’t degraded as their user base has grown, which is the silent killer of most platforms in this category. CreateHentai →
Now the ones who are still online but aren’t who they used to be
Now it gets more interesting. Because if a platform is dead, fine – you mourn it and you move on. The platforms in this section are still up, so you can still type their URL to Google and get something back. The problem is what you get back..
OnlyFakes is the cleanest example. If you used it in 2023 or early 2024 – and a lot of you did, it was one of the most-shared undress-style tools in its window: you remember the specific aesthetic, the specific UI, a specific set of presets, a specific way the outputs looked. Today, OnlyFakes is something else, and what I mean is that is a different product underneath. And I’m not telling that this is something necessairily bad, that on its own isn’t a crime. Platforms get repurposed, products evolve.
What bothers me is that whatever it is now hasn’t bothered to actually upgrade. The visual language is the same one from two years ago. The output quality, when I tested it for this piece, sits exactly where the original OnlyFakes sat in its last six months. You’re not arriving at a better product wearing a familiar coat. You’re arriving at a product that has stopped paying attention, in a category that hasn’t stopped paying attention for a single quarter since 2024. In this space, “the same as two years ago” is functionally a regression.
If you came up through OnlyFakes and you want the 2026 version of that workflow done seriously, the tool I’ve been using is LeakifyHub. It’s newer on the site – we added it relatively recently – and the reason I’m sending people there isn’t a feature list. It’s a posture. The output is sharper, the safety rails around what kinds of subjects are allowed are explicit rather than implied (which matters more than people want to admit), and the generation pipeline has a freshness about it that the OnlyFakes-of-today simply doesn’t. LeakifyHub →
AngelGF is the one I find genuinely sad. Not in the “I miss it” sense – I won’t pretend I miss it personally – but in the “this is what happens when a platform decides the people who supported it are disposable” sense. AngelGF had a brief moment, and it seemed to me that it could have a big impact in the AI girlfriend niche; I talked to the guys working at the project and and they seemed like Ok and motivated. And then, over a stretch I can only describe in retrospect, it began to wind down its obligations: For example, affiliates stopped getting paid, users started had some problems, and eventually the domain itself stopped behaving like a legitimate destination. Today, I would not click that link on a work machine and I would not enter a credit card on it for any reason. The smell test fails on multiple axes.
I’m spelling this out because it’s the single most important thing I can do for a reader in this space: tell you which links not to click anymore. If a platform burned its affiliates on the way out, it has exactly zero interest in protecting you on the way in, and after many years, i have this pattern recognition.
If you’re looking for what AngelGF was supposed to be – a cam-girl-style, real-time-feeling AI companion that you can actually play with rather than just chat at — the one I’ve moved my time to is FlirtCam.ai. It’s a name I’m willing to put my own affiliate link to, which I don’t do lightly: FlirtCam.ai. The reason is that the responsiveness – the latency between “I asked for something” and “she’s doing it”, has crossed a threshold this year that only a few ones attempted. Most of its competitors in this niche still feel like 2024 products with new wallpaper.
Still alive, still charging, still in 2024
The last group is the trickiest to write about, because nothing is technically wrong with these platforms. They work. They have users. They take payment. If you ask them, they will tell you they are doing well.
But here’s the thing about a fast-moving category: standing still is moving backwards. And the clearest example I’ve watched in slow motion this year is PornJourney.
PornJourney built a real image generator, and so far, nothing out of the ordinary, just like so many others. Credit where it’s due – for a stretch in 2024 and into early 2025, it was a perfectly defensible pick for someone who wanted realistic NSFW image output with a usable interface. The problem is that 2026 isn’t an image-only conversation anymore. The category has moved into video.
What you get on PornJourney today is roughly what you got eighteen months ago, with a video experience that is far from 2026 standards, behind a paywall that has not adjusted to reflect that you can now get more, faster, and in motion, elsewhere. As I said, that isn’t a death site, at all, but I think that there’s something subtler and more dangerous for a user’s wallet: stagnation that still bills monthly.
I’m not going to send you to a single “PornJourney replacement”, because the honest answer depends on what you actually wanted from it. If you wanted high-end NSFW image generation, the roundups we did last year still cover the best image-focused picks. If you wanted video and were on PornJourney out of habit, you owe yourself a weekend with one of the actual 2026 video tools we’ve written about – Playbox, Clothoff or Promptchan being the obvious places to start.
A quick word on Grok Imagine, because I know some of you are reading this and waiting for it. Grok is still online. It still generates images. SuperGrok ($30/month) is the tier you need to even consider it. But the NSFW reality, in May 2026, is that Grok’s filter has not relaxed in a way that makes it useful for the kind of generation most readers of this blog are looking for. The “spicy mode” exists; what it allows in practice is not what the marketing copy hints at. I include this paragraph because every single time I write a piece like this I get the same DM: “but what about Grok?”, answer is ‘it’s not dead, it’s just not for this’. My honest advice: save your 30 bucks.
What this list is really about
The reason I write this site, and the reason I write pieces like this one, is exactly this: somebody has to tell you which doors not to open, and which subscriptions are quietly billing you for a product that has stopped trying. The AI porn space in 2026 is not a place where you should be choosing tools based on a name you remember from 2024. Half of those names are now ghosts. Half of the rest are now strangers wearing the old logo. And a third group is still alive but charging you for a 2024 product in a 2026 market.
If you spend money on something I link to from aigenerationporn, my job – the only real job I have here, is to make sure that money goes to a platform that is actually current and treating you like a customer rather than a billing event. If you spend here, you spend on the top of the category at the best price the category currently offers. That’s the bar. Lovescape, CreateHentai, LeakifyHub, FlirtCam – those are some of the names that, today, clear it.
I’ll do this exercise again in a few months. Some of the names I just praised will need to be re-evaluated. That’s the deal in this space. The day I stop being willing to put platforms in this column is the day aigenerationporn stops being useful, and for now I have no plans to let that happen.




