AD4X — Quebec's longest-running casting studio finally has a membership worth crossing the border for.
AD4X is the largest adult production house in Quebec, and they're not shy about saying so. Twenty-five years of casting, shooting, and distributing out of Montreal gives them a catalog — 3,000+ HD videos and over 10,000 photos — that most single-studio sites can't touch. The content formula is casting-first: real auditions, casting parties held at actual Quebec venues, and a steady pipeline of mostly francophone performers you won't find anywhere else. That specificity is both the main draw and the ceiling.
This is not a site you join for variety of genre. It's a site you join because the Quebec-amateur-goes-professional pipeline is genuinely interesting, bilingual (English and French throughout), and produced with consistent studio quality. For viewers who've exhausted the usual US and EU lineups, AD4X is a legitimate left turn.
The core product is two content types: individual casting sessions — one performer, one audition, camera rolling — and the Casting Party series, group events filmed at bars and venues across Quebec with multiple performers per shoot. Think of it as a documentary-reality hybrid with, uh, more happening on camera. The casting party format went semi-viral in Canadian news when municipal authorities took issue with the logistics, which tells you something about how real the shoots are.
Performers include female, male, and transgender talent, with female-led content making up the bulk of the catalog. Over 250 performers are indexed with full profiles, photo sets, and sortable filmographies. The site is genuinely bilingual — you can browse and read in English or French — which is a small but meaningful touch for non-francophones curious about the content.
The production quality punches above indie weight. These are not phone-cam shoots — the Montreal studio clearly invests in lighting and audio, and HD delivery holds up on a big screen. Weekly content updates mean the library is actually growing, not coasting on a decade-old catalog. The casting-party format creates a recurring series structure (Casting Party Vol. 1 through 7+ at the time of writing) that gives members something to binge in order, like a docuseries.
The pricing structure is one of the more honest in the space. A monthly sub runs $23.95, a 90-day plan drops to about $20/month equivalent at $59.95, and the annual plan at $99.95 works out to under $8.40 a month — legitimately cheap for a studio-grade HD library of this size. There's also a $9.95 seven-day trial that converts to $29.95/month if you forget to cancel (read: remember to cancel). Individual videos can also be purchased à la carte at $15 each if you only want specific scenes.
Billing runs through Epoch, which is one of the most established adult billers in the business — widely recognized on credit card statements as a neutral descriptor, which matters to a lot of members.
The site is genuinely niche, and that cuts both ways. If you're not already interested in the Quebec casting lane, there's nothing here to pull you in — no curated discovery, no algorithmic recommendations, no community features. The interface is functional but not modern; it does the job without any of the polish you'd get from a MindGeek property or a well-funded US network.
The Casting Party trial drama — city fines, neighborhood complaints, a limousine with tinted windows outside a bar — is entertaining backstory but also a signal that AD4X operates close to the regulatory edge in ways that larger studios don't. Not a dealbreaker, but context worth having.
Outside Quebec and Canadian forums, independent reviews are nearly nonexistent. The site's low web profile makes it harder to verify long-term member experience, support responsiveness, or cancellation friction. That opacity costs them a tick on trust.
Annual plan at $99.95 is the move if you're in. That's $8.33/month for 3,000+ videos and weekly updates — comparable to a single Blu-ray purchase per month. The monthly at $23.95 is fair for a test drive beyond the trial week. The trial at $9.95 is genuinely low-risk as long as you set a calendar reminder to cancel before it rolls to $29.95/month. No hidden fees visible on the join page; Epoch handles billing with a clean checkout.
If Quebec casting and francophone amateur-to-pro content is your niche, yes — especially on the annual plan at under $8.50/month for 3,000+ HD videos. If you're looking for variety across genres and studios, a network pass elsewhere will serve you better.
A 7-day trial runs $9.95 (converts to $29.95/month if not cancelled). Monthly is $23.95, 90-day is $59.95, and the annual 'Best Deal' plan is $99.95. Individual videos can also be purchased à la carte for $15 each.
Unlimited streaming access to 3,000+ HD videos, 10,000+ photos, profiles for 250+ performers, the full Casting Party series, and weekly new content drops. Both English and French are supported throughout the site.
Billing runs through Epoch. You can cancel via your Epoch account portal or contact Epoch customer support directly — the biller's contact details appear on your credit card statement. Cancel before the 7-day trial ends to avoid the $29.95 monthly charge.
Yes — it's a 25-year-old Montreal-based production company with an established catalog, Epoch billing (one of the industry's oldest processors), and enough public press coverage (including CBC News) to confirm it's a real operation.
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