Lioness vibrator users take an average of four minutes and 19 seconds, and orgasm for a total of 24 seconds on average, according to a new data dump from the adult toy maker vibrator company.
In a more orgasm-focused spin on Spotify’s popular 2023 Wrapped (hell, even Duolingo is doing an annual ‘wrap’ nowadays) data roundup, Lioness revealed data trends from 29,430 vibrator usage sessions its customers had taken part in over the past year.
Lioness smart vibrators record orgasm data by measuring the intensity of pelvic floor contractions when they’re inserted into the vagina. You can check the data to help figure out which factors help you have more intense orgasms, and now the company has used this data for an ‘orgasm trend’ report, of sorts, which it calls Pleasure Wrapped.
The data showed that vibrator sessions, somewhat logically, tend to end a few seconds after orgasms occur. The average total vibrator session time—including the four minutes and 19 seconds it took on average to reach orgasm—was five minutes and nine seconds.
Sundays were revealed to be the most popular days for using the vibrators, with around 9pm being the most popular session time. Just over a third of the users providing the data usually had their vibrator motors switched off during their sessions, with Lioness saying they believe this is because many people use other sex toys alongside the Lioness, which can be used as a sort of measuring guide tool for the body.
Those of you wondering whether your orgasms have enough bite strength to destroy baked goods will be pleased to know that the data captures for vagina squeeze motions showed that they got up to 64.9 gram force. This is, according to Lioness, “about the strength to snap a hot Cheeto in half”.
“We’re giving people an opportunity to see how the data might have changed, what might have made it [orgasms] better, but also giving people the opportunity to normalize it,” Anna Lee, engineer and co-founder of Lioness, told SEXTECHGUIDE in 2022. “It’s just giving people a sense of comfort of being like, ‘This is just what your body looks like. And this is exactly how it works’.”
Lee also said she was planning to look into orgasm data further, to help understand which factors affect them better. “We’re hoping to continue doing different studies, whether it’s partnering with a cannabis company, like, ‘What does cannabis make people’s orgasms or arousal look like?’,” she said. “Or putting out more that are academic and medical research-focused.”
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