Kyler Quinn — A 490-scene studio veteran who went independent — here's what her solo page actually delivers.
Kyler Quinn is a real, credentialed performer — not a name attached to a farmed-out account. Her studio track record (Adult Time, Evil Angel, Girlfriends Films, Nubiles, an AVN Award for Best VR Sex Scene) gives her indie page a legitimacy a lot of newer solo creators simply don't have yet.
The catch: going independent means her current output is smaller and more self-directed than the 490-title studio résumé suggests. You're paying for present-tense solo/custom content, not access to her back catalog, most of which is licensed to the studios that produced it and lives on their platforms, not hers.
If you want current, creator-controlled content from someone with an actually verifiable industry history, she clears the bar. If you're chasing a specific award-winning studio scene, you'll likely find it faster on the studio's own site or a scene-licensed platform than on her personal page.
Quinn debuted in the adult industry in August 2018 and built a genuinely prolific studio career, appearing in an estimated 490+ movies and scenes by 2023 across a wide roster of major labels — Adult Time, Bratty Sis, Devil's Film, Evil Angel, Girlfriends Films, Hussie Pass, Mile High, and Nubiles among them.
She picked up a Female Performer of the Year nomination in 2021 and won the AVN Award for Best Virtual Reality Sex Scene in 2023 for Dream Team, plus was part of an XRCO Award-winning production the same year. That's a real, juried-award résumé, not marketing copy.
Since roughly 2023 she's stepped back from studio scene work and shifted toward running her own subscription platform, describing the move as wanting more creative control over what she makes and releases. That's the same arc a lot of established performers eventually take, and it's the context every prospective subscriber should know going in.
Her current presence centers on a subscription platform (OnlyFans-style) plus a personal site and social accounts used to drive traffic to it. Expect solo and personal content, with customs typically available as an upsell, which is standard for creators at her experience level.
Because she has an established audience from her studio years, cadence tends to be steadier than a brand-new solo creator still figuring out a posting schedule — but we did not find a verified, current posts-per-week figure, so treat cadence claims (including ours) as directional until you check her live page.
Her studio-era scenes are not bundled into her subscription. If part of what draws you to her name is a specific studio title, you'll be looking at the studio's platform or a licensed aggregator, not her personal page.
The transition from studio performer to solo creator means less third-party quality control — no studio production values, no co-star variety, no scene-of-the-month marketing push. What you get is whatever she chooses to shoot and post, which is the tradeoff every performer makes when they go independent.
Public pricing and posting-frequency data for her current page is thin and changes often, which is true of most creator-platform accounts. We're not going to hand you a number we can't verify — check the price live before you subscribe.
If you're new to her and only know the name from studio-era clips, her solo page won't feel like "more of that." It's a different product: personal, creator-directed, and priced accordingly rather than studio-subsidized.
We don't invent subscription prices — creator platforms change tiers, run promos, and gate pricing behind account creation, so any number we quoted today could be stale tomorrow. Confirm the current price on her page at checkout before committing.
Weigh it against what you actually want: if it's her active involvement and new solo content, the subscription is the right purchase. If it's a specific award-nominated studio scene, that's often a one-time rental or a different platform's subscription — cheaper than committing to an ongoing sub you won't renew.
Because she has a substantial, verifiable pre-indie career, the usual "is this creator even real" risk is low. The actual risk with any creator subscription is auto-renewal and content pace outrunning your interest — check cancellation terms before you sign up, not after the second charge.
If you want current, self-directed content from a performer with a genuine, award-recognized studio career behind her, yes — she's more credentialed than most independent creators. If you're hoping her subscription includes her studio-era scenes, it doesn't; those live with the studios that produced them.
We don't post a fixed price here because creator-platform pricing changes and is often gated behind login. Confirm the current subscription price directly on her page at checkout — we recheck pricing signals periodically but won't state a number we can't verify in real time.
She runs a subscription-based creator platform along with a personal site and social accounts that link out to it. Her earlier studio scenes (Adult Time, Evil Angel, Girlfriends Films, Mile High, and others) are separately hosted on those studios' own platforms, not her personal page.
Subscribe through her official page or linked platform account, using a payment method the platform accepts; most creator platforms bill on a recurring cycle by default. To cancel, go to your active subscriptions in that platform's account settings and turn off auto-renew before your next billing date — canceling mid-cycle typically leaves access open until the period ends rather than refunding immediately.
Yes. She won the AVN Award for Best Virtual Reality Sex Scene in 2023 (for Dream Team) and was part of an XRCO Award-winning production the same year, on top of a 2021 Female Performer of the Year nomination — a legitimate track record from her studio-contract years.
Toys, wellness & essentials — from the Throbbs store. Free, discreet, fast.