Mofos — The reality-and-amateur network that fakes "homemade" better than most — steady, deep, and a genuine bargain on promo.
Here's the Mofos trick in one sentence: it's a professional studio doing a very good impression of your neighbor's camcorder. That's the whole pitch, and it mostly lands. If you want the loose, handheld, "this feels real" energy without the chaos of actual user-uploaded sites, Mofos is one of the smarter buys in the amateur-and-reality lane — especially when you catch the promo, which drops it to bargain-bin money. So is Mofos worth it? For the right taste, yes. Just know exactly what you're paying for before you click, because the fine print has teeth.
Mofos is a network, not a single site — one membership, one login, and a stack of themed channels underneath it. It launched back in 2008 as a spin-off from Brazzers and today lives under Aylo (the company formerly known as MindGeek), the same house that runs Reality Kings and Brazzers itself. So this isn't some fly-by-night operation; it's a two-decade brand with a corporate parent and the infrastructure that implies.
Who's it for? People who like the feel of amateur — spontaneous, low-gloss, POV, reality-style setups — but who've been burned by genuinely user-submitted sites where the quality is a coin flip. Mofos is scripted and shot by pros pretending not to be pros, which means you get the amateur aesthetic with a floor under the production. If your heart is set on truly authentic, real-people, nobody-got-paid content, this isn't that, and I'd rather tell you now than have you feel misled later.
The library is the headline. You're looking at 13-plus channels and north of 4,000 scenes, organized by theme so you're not fishing blind — public-setting stuff, POV, reality skits, the usual reality-genre lineup. It's broad enough that you can pick a lane and actually stay in it for a while, which is the real test of whether a network earns its monthly fee.
Two honest caveats on the "what's inside" front. First, most of the catalog streams in 1080p HD, not the native 4K you'd get from the flagship Brazzers tier — perfectly sharp on a laptop or phone, a little less so if you're throwing it up on a big screen. Second, because Mofos content is decades deep and widely syndicated, some scenes turn up on free tube sites. That doesn't make the membership worthless — the archive, the organization, and the steady new drops are what you're paying for — but "100% exclusive" is not a claim this network can honestly make, and you shouldn't buy it thinking otherwise.
This is where Mofos quietly beats a lot of its "amateur" rivals. The network ships roughly 3-4 new videos every week — not the firehose Brazzers turns on, but a steady, reliable drip that keeps the library growing instead of coasting. Update cadence is the single best predictor of whether you'll still feel good about a subscription six months in, and a few fresh scenes a week is a healthy, sustainable number. It's the difference between a living site and a dusty archive you already finished.
Let's do the arithmetic, because this is where Mofos gets interesting. The standard monthly is $29.99, and like every Aylo property it's a rebill — it renews on its own until you tell it to stop, so treat it like a gym membership and set a reminder. That $29.99 is fine, not thrilling.
The move is the promo. On the annual plan you're looking at roughly $9.99/mo (about $119.95 up front), and monthly promo codes floating around the aggregators go as low as $7.99. There are also low-commitment tasters — a $1 two-day and a $7 seven-day — if you want to kick the tires before committing. Do the math and the annual is the obvious value play: at under ten bucks a month for a 4,000-scene network with weekly updates, the per-scene cost is pocket change.
One asterisk, and it's a real one: no plan includes downloads. Everything is stream-only. If you like to keep a personal library or you're often somewhere without solid Wi-Fi, that's a genuine dealbreaker to weigh — you're renting access, not owning files. Priced accordingly, though, it's still a strong deal. Because these promo numbers wobble between sources, we've flagged the price as rechecking and re-verify against the live join page — the number on this page is honest about its own uncertainty, which is more than most coupon farms will give you.
A whole network for one login — 13-plus channels and 4,000-plus reality/amateur scenes, organized by theme.
Steady weekly updates — 3-4 new videos a week keeps the library alive, not frozen.
Cheap on promo — often under $10/mo on the annual, with $1 and $7 trials to test-drive first.
Stream-only, no downloads on any tier — you're renting, not keeping.
Mostly 1080p, not native 4K, and not fully exclusive — some scenes appear on free tubes.
For fans of the amateur-and-reality style who want consistency over pot-luck, yes — particularly on the annual promo, where the per-scene cost is trivial. If you demand true 4K, downloadable files, or genuinely user-submitted authenticity, look elsewhere in our reviews.
Standard is $29.99/mo (a rebill). The value play is the annual at roughly $9.99/mo (~$119.95/yr), with $1 two-day and $7 seven-day trials available. Promo monthly rates run $7.99-$9.99 depending on the source — we re-verify against the live page.
It's a legitimate, long-running network launched in 2008 and owned by Aylo (formerly MindGeek), billed through CCBill — the same infrastructure behind Brazzers and Reality Kings. It's an established brand, not a scam site.
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