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Kiiroo has put the Keon 2 up for pre-order as the sequel to the original Keon, which we reviewed back in 2020, with deliveries set to begin in July 2026.

The new Keon 2, released on May 26, 2026, sells for $239 (or $289 packaged with a Kiiroo Feel Stroker sleeve), placing it at the premium end of the penis stroker market, where the Keon has been a dominant device for years. The new device isn’t a drastic departure from the original in design, but it pushes the performance with more stroke speed and range.

Keon 2 Lifestyle 2 copy

The Keon 2 has a maximum stroke speed of 684 millimeters per second, which it can achieve when in ‘finisher mode’. This is a huge 164 percent increase on the Keon’s maximum stroke speed of 259 millimeters per second.

The maximum stroke length of the Keon 2 is 95 millimeters, up from 70 millimeters for the Keon. The new device can connect and sync to content through both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, whereas the Keon can only do so with Bluetooth.

The flagship gets a sequel

The Keon has been Kiiroo’s flagship sextech device since its launch six years ago, and has become known as one of the industry’s most prominent masturbator motor devices. It’s designed to be used with a Kiiroo Feel sleeve, which moves up and down within the Keon motor. Other brands’ sleeves can be used via a fitting attachment, and the Keon has long sat at the high end of the interactive stroker market alongside the Handy.

The new Keon 2 will also allow third-party penis sleeves to be attached to the main device, via a strap cradle accessory that Kiiroo is selling separately.

Like the Keon, the Keon 2 is a hefty piece of kit, weighing 996 grams and being 218 millimeters long at its longest section. Kiiroo says the mount system, which enables hands-free use, has been optimized to make the device quieter than the Keon. We’ll reserve judgment on the noise claim until we’ve had one on the desk.

Keon 2 Lifestyle 1 copy scaled

The Keon 2 runs for up to three hours between charges, and works while plugged into a mains socket for unlimited use. It has six front-facing buttons. In manual mode the device has four sleeve positions and eight speed levels. It also has a mode with three predefined stroke patterns.

Like the Keon, the Keon 2 is designed for remote couples play as well as solo use. Partners can connect a Keon 2 and other Kiiroo devices through the FeelConnect app for teledildonics, either controlling each other’s devices or having them interact in sync. Connected toys mean an app, an account, and a data trail, so the usual privacy caveats apply, and the FeelMe AI tie-in means scene-syncing potentially routes your viewing habits through Kiiroo’s systems too.

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The Keon 2 can also use the FeelMe AI system to sync to online scenes that don’t already have funscripts, the scripts that tell a sextech device how to match the action on-screen. This means that the Keon 2 can, in theory, be synced to almost any video.

Kiiroo says it will announce details about games compatible with the new Keon 2 soon, a kind of teased-but-unnamed roadmap. Existing Kiiroo titles already include the RPG Wild Life.

The launch of the Keon 2 comes hot on the heels of the Handy 2, another similarly priced masturbator motor device, made by the Norway-based Ohdoki, whose own rollout has been bumpy, with 619 units stolen in transit and backers still waiting on a Kickstarter for an already-established product.

Seems like we’re officially entering the second age of the premium penis stroker.

Written by

News Editor

Jamie F is a freelance writer, contributing to outlets such as The Guardian, The Times, The Telegraph, CNN and Vice, among others. He is also the creative force behind the Audible podcast Beast Master.

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