feature data

Pornstars by platform: who's on OnlyFans, Instagram and Twitter

People look for performers sideways as often as by name: who's on OnlyFans, who actually posts on Twitter, which Instagram still exists. We had the data and nowhere to point it, so we shipped the first version of platform lists. There's a hub at /pornstars/on/ with seven lists under it (OnlyFans, Fansly, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok, YouTube, Reddit), each running the same filter bar as the rest of the site (search, ethnicity, hair, body, age, niche) but pre-scoped to one platform. Cards link to the full FapStarsDB profile, where the handle lives. It's a pilot, and we're honest about the catch: the handles aren't verified yet and there are no follower counts, so every list carries a freshness note and nothing wears a verified badge until it earns one.

People don’t only look for a performer by name. A lot of the time the search is sideways: who’s on OnlyFans, who actually posts on Twitter, which of these names has an Instagram that still exists. We had all of that data sitting in the database and nowhere to point it. So we built the first version of platform lists.

There’s a new hub at /pornstars/on/ with seven lists under it: OnlyFans, Fansly, Instagram, Twitter / X, TikTok, YouTube and Reddit. Each one is every performer in our index with a profile on file for that platform. A platform only gets a page once it has enough profiles to be worth one, so thin ones (a handful of Snapchat or ManyVids links) are held back for now.

Pornstars on OnlyFans listing page: heading, freshness note, and the standard FapStarsDB filter bar above a grid of performer cards
The OnlyFans list. Standard filter bar, scoped to one platform, with cards tuned to show the account link.

It’s the standard list, scoped to a platform

We didn’t build a bespoke page for this. These lists run the same filter bar that All Pornstars and the category pages use: search, ethnicity, hair, body, cup, career, age, niche. The only difference is that the list is pre-scoped to one platform, so “OnlyFans + Latina + active” is two dropdowns away. Sort by score, scenes or recency like anywhere else. Reusing the module means these pages behave exactly the way the rest of the site already taught you to expect.

Two destinations per card

The card on these pages is tuned for the job. The photo and name go where every card on the site goes: to her full FapStarsDB profile, with filmography, studios and bio. But there’s also a second, labelled link carrying the platform’s icon that goes straight to her account, because if you’re on the OnlyFans page that’s plausibly what you came for.

What we didn’t do is turn the whole thing into a wall of outbound links. The account link is one button, marked nofollow; the rest of the card is ours. A page made of two thousand bare external links to accounts that get banned weekly ages badly. This way it still holds up when a handle dies.

These links rot, and we’re not pretending otherwise

This is the part worth being honest about. The handles come from our enrichment pipeline and public profile sources, and adult accounts on Instagram and TikTok especially get renamed, shadow-banned, and deleted constantly. Right now we have not verified that any given link is still live, and we don’t have follower counts yet. So every list carries an amber note saying exactly that, and there’s no verified badge on anything, because nothing has been verified.

That note isn’t a disclaimer to cover ourselves. It’s the next chunk of work, stated up front. The schema behind each profile already has a slot for a follower count and a last-checked date. When the verification pass ships, a confirmed profile will show when we last looked and how big the account is, and dead ones drop out instead of sitting there as a broken link. Until then, treat a handle as the last one we recorded.

What’s next

Follower counts on the profiles, which turns these from a link list into something closer to a ranking. Live link-checking, so dead handles fall off on their own. And cam sites like Chaturbate, which are a different data source we don’t have wired in yet. If you want to see where this sits, the platform hub is the front door, and it’s linked from the footer under Browse. For a recent structural change in the same area, see the note on network hub pages.