“They remember you, desire you and never log off.”
OhChat is a platform that merges artificial intelligence with adult entertainment, promising endless, personalised intimacy, without human interaction.
OhChat, which launched in the United States in October 2024, describes itself as the “lovechild between OnlyFans and OpenAI”.
The platform creates AI replicas of public figures, offering subscribers what its founder claims is an upgraded adult experience.
CEO Nic Young said: “You have literally unlimited passive income without having to do anything again.”
The avatars, designed to mimic the voice, personality and appearance of real-life creators, operate around the clock.
Young added: “They remember you, desire you and never log off.”
Unlike platforms like OnlyFans, where users communicate directly with content creators, OhChat’s AI-powered avatars respond autonomously and offer what Young called “infinite personalised content”.
“OhChat is an incredibly powerful tool, and tools can be used however the human behind it wants to be used.
“We could use this in a really scary way, but we’re using it in a really, I think, good, exciting way.”
To create a digital twin, OhChat asks creators to upload 30 images and speak to a bot for 30 minutes. Using Meta’s large language model, a replica is generated “within hours”.
Subscribers can choose from three tiers. For $4.99 a month, users get unlimited text interactions. $9.99 gives limited access to voice notes and images. The $29.99 VIP tier offers unlimited interaction.
Creators earn 80% of the revenue, with the rest kept by the platform.
Since launch, OhChat has signed 20 creators.
Notable names include Baywatch star Carmen Electra and former British glamour model Katie Price, also known as Jordan.
Jordan’s avatar is labelled a “level two” on the platform’s internal scale.
It engages in sexually suggestive chat and topless imagery, though it does not simulate sex acts or full nudity.
Young claimed some creators are earning thousands of dollars a month from their avatars.
Critics have raised concerns about the ethical implications of blurring the line between digital intimacy and consent, particularly when AI-generated replicas can act independently of their real-life counterparts.
Sandra Wachter, professor of technology and regulation at the University of Oxford, questioned whether it is “socially beneficial to incentivise and monetise human-computer interaction masquerading as emotional discourse”.
But OhChat’s model highlights a growing trend in AI-driven entertainment, where fame and fantasy are repackaged into 24/7, on-demand services.
Whether the technology will empower creators or erode boundaries remains to be seen.








