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Lovense Fizz Review: A Powerful App-Controlled Clit Sucker

Here’s my confession upfront: I could never orgasm with the Tenera. Or the Tenera 2. So for two product generations, the best app-controlled sex toy ecosystem on the planet had exactly zero clit suction toys worth recommending.

The Lovense Fizz changed that. I orgasmed. Reliably. Sometimes embarrassingly fast.

But—and if you’re a regular reader, you know there’s always a “but” with me—the orgasm the Fizz delivers is a fundamentally different animal than what I get from my Womanizers or Melt. And that difference is the single most important thing I can tell you about this toy, because no spec sheet, no marketing copy, and no five-star review that says “OMG amazing” is going to prepare you for what I mean.

So let’s talk about it. Honestly and messily.

Lovense Fizz clitoral suction and tapping vibrator displayed alongside its packaging and USB charging cable, with the LED base light illuminated in soft pink

The 30-Second Verdict (For Those in a Rush—Which, Ironically, Is When This Toy Shines)

The Lovense Fizz is the first Lovense air-pulse toy that I could reliably orgasm with. It’s powerful, dual-ended, app-controlled, and genuinely innovative with its tapping function. But its intensity—even on the lowest settings—produces fast, “pushed” orgasms rather than the slow, wave-like, full-body climaxes that gentler clit suckers can build. For power users, long-distance couples, and people who sometimes just need to get there fast, it’s a strong buy at ~$149. For sensitive-to-moderate users like me, it’s a special-occasion toy, not a daily driver.

What Is the Lovense Fizz? (And Why It’s Not Just Another Clit Sucker)

Most quick-glance reviews miss this: the Lovense Fizz is a dual-ended toy. One end is an air-pulse stimulator—what most people call “clit sucker.” The other end is a tapping membrane that delivers focused, percussive strikes. That second end isn’t a vibrator motor pretending to tap. It’s a small, firm membrane that physically hits outward in rapid, rhythmic pulses.

That dual-function design makes this genuinely different from nearly everything else in the category. Whether it makes it better depends entirely on what your body needs, which is what most of this review is about.

Specs at a glance:

FeatureDetails
Length~4.7 inches (12 cm)
Weight4.6 oz (130 g)
WaterproofIPX7 (fully submersible)
Mouth opening0.47 x 0.71 inches (1.2 x 1.8 cm)
Mouth depth0.63 inches (1.6 cm)
Rim softness18 Shore A (very soft)
Max pressure (air-pulse)1.0 PSI
Airflow range40–100 FPM
Tapping force range0.25 N (low) to 1.2 N (max)
Tapping membrane diameter0.22 inches (5.5 mm)
Charge time~1 hour
Battery life~2 hours continuous
Noise at max67 dB (in a 40 dB room)
ConnectivityBluetooth, Lovense app
Price~$149

Design & Ergonomics: Looks Nothing Like a Clit Sucker (In a Good Way)

The problem with most air-pulse designs: They’re either bulbous penguin-shaped things that scream “sex toy” from across the room, or sleek teardrops that still look distinctly… intentional on your nightstand. The Lovense Fizz doesn’t have that problem.

It’s shaped like a slim cylinder—my first impression was “tiny flashlight.” There’s a matte body, tactile buttons positioned exactly where your fingers naturally rest, and a color-changing LED ring at the base that you can customize through the app or kill entirely. The LED might sound gimmicky, but during low-light sessions or video calls for long-distance play, it adds genuine atmospheric value. Is it necessary for orgasms? Not even slightly. Did I burn fifteen minutes cycling through color options during my first session instead of actually using the toy? I plead the fifth.

At 4.6 oz (130 g), it’s lighter than most competitors and sits naturally in a closed fist. The controls are easy to click mid-use without fumbling—a problem I’ve had with more toys than my dignity allows me to admit.

The real ergonomic win: At roughly the width of a thick marker, the Fizz is slim enough to slide between bodies during penetrative sex without feeling like you’re performing an engineering intervention. Wider suction toys make partner play feel like a negotiation. The Fizz just fits.

One gripe: No textured grip area. When things get slippery (and they will), you might need to adjust your hold. Keep a towel within arm’s reach. I speak from experience.

the Lovense Fizz demonstrating its slim cylindrical shape and natural finger placement on the side-mounted control buttons

The Air-Pulse End: Yes, It Works. But the Orgasm Is Different Than You Expect.

This is the section that matters most. This is what most reviews get wrong—or at least, incomplete. So let me give it to you straight.

The Raw Power Numbers

The Lovense Fizz measured 1.0 PSI maximum pressure in my testing. That ties it with the LELO Sona 2 Cruise for the highest pressure I’ve ever recorded on a clitoral air-pulse toy. Here’s how that stacks up:

  • We-Vibe Melt 2: 0.66 PSI
  • Womanizer Premium 2: 0.53 PSI
  • Satisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3: 0.65 PSI
  • Lovense Tenera 2: 0.65 PSI
  • Lovense Tenera: 0.63 PSI

The Fizz delivers nearly double the Womanizer Premium 2’s pressure and roughly 50% more than the We-Vibe Melt 2.

Airflow ranges from 40 to 100 FPM. And this is the number that defines everything about the Fizz experience: the lowest setting starts at 40 FPM. For context:

  • We-Vibe Melt 2 starts at 7 FPM
  • Womanizer Premium 2 starts at 15 FPM
  • Satisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3 starts at 1 FPM
  • The Fizz starts at 40 FPM

The Fizz’s minimum is already at the mid-to-upper range of most competitors’ entire intensity spectrum. There is no whisper mode. There is no gentle warm-up. You turn it on, and it’s already going.

What Does That Actually Mean for the Orgasm?

Here’s where I need to get personal, because this is the thing nobody’s telling you.

Combined interpretation: High airflow + very high pressure + medium mouth + very soft rim = a deep, pulling, substantial sensation that is intense from level one.

The pulses don’t flutter gently at the surface. They pull. Tissue gets drawn into the mouth with each cycle, creating a forceful, rhythmic suction-and-release. The pressure gives it a pulling depth that’s among the most substantial in the category—more pulling force than the We-Vibe Melt 2, the Womanizer Premium 2, and every Satisfyer I’ve measured.

And because the lowest level already hits hard, here’s what happens to someone on the sensitive-to-moderate side (which is where I am): the orgasm comes fast, it comes intense, and it feels pushed rather than built.

Let me explain what I mean by that, because this distinction matters enormously.

With my Womanizer W500 on the lower settings, I can start at a whisper. The sensation builds gradually. Warmth spreads from my clitoris outward. The arousal climbs in layers. When the orgasm finally arrives, it’s a wave—it rolls through my entire body, from head to toes, and when it subsides, I can usually ride another one. And another. Those slow-build, whole-body, multi-orgasm sessions are what I reach for most nights.

The Lovense Fizz doesn’t do that.

The Fizz grabs you by the clitoris at level one and says, “We’re going. Now.” The arousal spikes fast. The orgasm arrives quickly—reliably under five minutes for me, often closer to two. But it feels concentrated. Localized. Intense in a way that’s almost aggressive. It’s a sharp, peaked climax rather than a rolling wave. And after it hits? I’m done. Not “satisfied and glowing” done—more like “my clit is overstimulated and another orgasm would tip into overwhelming” done. Everything feels too tense, too heightened. My body says “that’s enough” in a way it doesn’t after a Womanizer session.

This isn’t a flaw, exactly. It’s a characteristic. And for some people, in some situations, it’s exactly right.

Those nights when I’m tired and just want to get off before sleep? Perfect. Those “I have ten minutes before I need to be somewhere” moments? The Lovense Fizz is unmatched. Sometimes I don’t want a slow, languorous build. Sometimes I want an express ticket, and the Fizz punches that ticket faster than anything else in my drawer.

But it’s not the toy I reach for when I want to melt into the mattress and lose myself for half an hour. It’s not the one I use when I’m craving that full-body, toe-curling, multi-wave experience. For those sessions, my Womanizers still sits in the top drawer.

One tester’s perspective that mirrors mine: An early adopter on Reddit noted that the air-pulse side is “very intense” and that she “climaxes much easier with the tapping”—suggesting even among fans of the toy, the air-pulse power is something users navigate around rather than simply enjoy at face value. Another tester I spoke with, who runs at a higher sensitivity threshold than I do, had no issues with the intensity and found the orgasm quality satisfying without the “pushed” feeling I describe. Body differences are real, and they matter here more than with most toys.

Frontal view of Lovense Fizz air-pulse clitoral stimulator with the mouth visible

Who Will Love This Power?

If you regularly use your Womanizer Premium 2 or We-Vibe Melt 2 at the upper half of their intensity range and sometimes wish they went harder? The Lovense Fizz will feel like the upgrade you’ve been waiting for. That 1.0 PSI pressure and 40–100 FPM airflow is designed for bodies that eat moderate power for breakfast.

If you love the LELO Sona 2 Cruise’s intensity (which also hits 1.0 PSI), the Fizz operates in that same power tier—but with app control and the tapping function that the Sona 2 doesn’t offer.

If you’re like me—sensitive to moderate, lover of slow builds and multiple orgasms—the Fizz works, but it works differently. It’s a specialty tool, not your everyday go-to.

The Mouth: Soft, Smart, and Surprisingly Forgiving

Despite the raw power, Lovense made a genuinely clever design choice with the mouth. At 18 Shore A, the silicone rim is among the softest in the category—softer than the Womanizer Premium 2 (46 Shore A), the Satisfyer Penguin (50 Shore A), and most Womanizer models. Only the We-Vibe Melt 2 (15 Shore A) and LELO Sona 3 (13 Shore A) are softer.

Why this matters at this power level:

  1. Seal quality: The soft rim conforms to your anatomy beautifully. I found it sealed on the first placement almost every time—a sharp contrast to harder-rimmed toys that demand surgical precision to form a complete seal.
  2. Comfort despite intensity: At 1.0 PSI, you do not want a rigid rim grinding into sensitive tissue. The soft silicone distributes contact pressure and stays comfortable even when the motor is working hard.
  3. The compression trick (my favorite discovery): The Fizz’s mouth compresses approximately 0.24 inches (6 mm) against the body—that’s a lot for this category. Press the toy more firmly and the pulsation intensity gets physically muffled. Press lighter and the full force hits. This gave me an intuitive way to moderate the power without fumbling for buttons, which became my primary intensity control during actual use. For a toy this powerful, having a physical modulation method is genuinely valuable.

Mouth fit: The opening measures 0.47 x 0.71 inches (1.2 x 1.8 cm) with a depth of 0.63 inches (1.6 cm). Slightly oval, narrower than the Satisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3 (0.59 x 0.71 inches) and wider than the Womanizer Premium 2 (0.43 x 0.55 inches). It fits a small to medium-sized exposed clitoris comfortably with room for some hood tissue. If you have a very large or prominent clitoral glans, the narrower 0.47-inch dimension might feel tight—the soft rim helps but has limits. If you have a very small, deeply hooded clitoris, the mouth is broad enough that sensation might feel slightly less pinpointed than the more targeted Womanizer Premium 2 opening.

The lube rule applies double here: Water-based lube around the rim isn’t optional—it’s essential. The seal improvement transforms “pretty good” into “oh, that’s what this thing can do.” A dime-sized drop. Every time. Don’t learn this lesson the hard way like I almost did.

Detailed close-up of the Lovense Fizz air-pulse silicone mouth, showing the soft oval rim measuring approximately 0.47 by 0.71 inches with visible rim flexibility

The Tapping End: The Feature That Surprised Me Most

Who this is for: Experienced users hunting for genuinely new sensations. People who’ve exhausted every buzz-rumble-suck combination and want something that feels unfamiliar. Adventurous couples. Anyone who’s bored.

Who this is NOT for: Anyone who wants predictable, plug-and-play stimulation. People without patience for a learning curve.

How the Tapping Actually Works

Flip the Fizz around and you’ll find a small membrane—just 0.22 inches (5.5 mm) across—that physically strikes outward in rapid, rhythmic hits. Not vibration. Not oscillation. Actual percussive tapping. If the air-pulse end is a rhythmic pull, the tapping end is a rhythmic flick.

Force ranges from 0.25 N at the lowest setting to 1.2 N at maximum. That 1.2 N through just 24 square millimeters of surface area is concentrated. At max speed, it’s frankly aggressive—a rapid-fire percussive assault that most users will find too intense for direct clitoral contact.

What It Feels Like (And the Mistake Everyone Makes)

Here’s the critical thing no one tells you: the tapping membrane needs space to move. If you press it against your body like every other toy you own, the membrane physically can’t strike—it just stops. This isn’t a flaw; it’s physics. But the first time you press it against your clit and get nothing, you’ll feel confused and mildly betrayed.

The sweet spot is hovering it with barely-there contact, or resting it with almost zero pressure. Finding that distance takes 2–3 sessions of deliberate experimentation. I fumbled through my first two sessions before the third one clicked—literally.

Low settings (1–3): A curious, almost ticklish tapping. Surprisingly assertive even here.

Mid-range (4–7): Where I found my clitoral sweet spot. Enough force to build toward something, rhythmic enough to sustain arousal, not so intense I needed to stop.

Maximum: I couldn’t sustain direct contact here. It crossed from stimulation into something closer to percussive overwhelm. One Reddit user put it well: “I don’t get a lot of ‘suck’ [from the tapping end] but that side can get very intense.”

Interestingly, one early adopter found that she “climaxes much easier with the tapping” and prefers to “start with the suction and switch to tapping for the best experience.” I tried this technique—air-pulse to build arousal, flip to tapping for the finish—and the orgasm quality was actually different from either end alone. Less “pushed” than pure air-pulse, more focused than the tapping by itself. Worth experimenting with.

Beyond the Clitoris

The tapping end earns serious versatility points here:

  • Nipples: Multiple testers, including me, found mid-range tapping on nipples genuinely wonderful. One Reddit user recommended the second-to-last or last setting over a nipple and called it “honestly incredible.” I preferred levels 5–7. Start low, work up—nipple sensitivity varies wildly between people and even between your own nipples.
  • Partner play on the penis: My partner found max-speed tapping pleasurable on his frenulum. Completely unexpected. The focused percussive force on that nerve-dense area apparently translates well across anatomy.
  • Other erogenous zones: Inner thighs, perineum, behind the ears—the tapping turns the Fizz into a whole-body exploration device. Not every zone will respond, but the ones that do are genuine discoveries.

App tip that saved me: Set a maximum speed cap for the tapping function in the Lovense app. If anything above level 8 is too much, cap it there so you can’t accidentally blast yourself during an enthusiastic session. I wish I’d done this before my first try, not my third.

Close-up of the Lovense Fizz tapping end showing the small 5.5mm percussive membrane surrounded by the toy's silicone body

The Lovense App: The Real Reason This Toy Exists

The problem nobody else solves well enough: If you want a clit sucker with reliable, full-featured app control for long-distance use, your options are painfully thin. Most Womanizer models don’t even have apps. The We-Vibe Melt 2 has one, but the ecosystem is smaller and connection dropouts are a running complaint. The Satisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3 technically has an app, but let’s just say “technically” is doing heavy lifting in that sentence.

Lovense’s app platform is in a different weight class. Not perfect, but the most mature, stable, and feature-rich sex toy app available. And this is what makes the Fizz more than just another powerful suction toy.

What the app gives you:

  • Fine-grained intensity control: Far more precise than the physical buttons. For the tapping function especially, app control is borderline essential—the difference between “perfect” and “ow” can be a single level.
  • Unlimited custom patterns: Build your own intensity curves, save them, share them. The built-in pattern library is already deep. One Reddit user noted that “the suction/tap has so many levels and patterns just built in, which is honestly amazing because you don’t need to spend a lot of time finding the perfect pattern.”
  • Long-distance partner control: Hand the reins to someone anywhere in the world. Connection stability that Lovense has refined over years of iteration is meaningfully better than what competitors offer.
  • Sound-reactive patterns: Sync to music, voice, or ambient sound.
  • Max speed limits: Set a ceiling for each function so you can’t overshoot your comfort zone—genuinely useful given how powerful this toy gets.
  • LED customization: Change the base light or kill it entirely.
  • Ecosystem integration: Already own a Lush, Hush, Domi, Nora, or Max? The Fizz slots into the family. Sync multiple toys, create paired patterns, control everything from one interface.

Who actually needs the app?

  • Long-distance couples: This is the best app-controlled toy with air-pulse stimulation on the market. The combination of Lovense’s connection reliability and the Fizz’s dual-function performance makes it uniquely suited for remote intimacy. Nothing else comes close.
  • Cam models and content creators: Lovense is already the industry standard for interactive content. The Fizz fills a gap in the lineup—a clit-focused toy that actually works, unlike the Tenera series.
  • Pattern tweakers: If you want to dial in exactly the right rhythm, ramp speed, and intensity curve, the app is where this toy reaches its ceiling.

The flip side: If you don’t care about remote control or app features? You’re paying a $149 premium for an ecosystem you won’t use. The physical buttons work fine for basic use, but you’d get comparable or better air-pulse performance from cheaper toys. More on that below.

The Noise Problem: Let’s Not Pretend

The Lovense Fizz is loud.

At maximum, I measured 67 dB in a room with 40 dB ambient noise. Lovense claims under 70 dB, which is technically accurate in the same way that jumping off a one-story building is “technically” not skydiving. 67 dB is louder than a normal conversation. It’s one of the loudest air-pulse toys I’ve tested.

What this means practically:

  • Thick blanket + closed door + TV at normal volume = manageable in a shared household
  • Thin sheet + closed door + quiet house = your roommate is politely pretending not to hear
  • Open door at any speed above 3 = a lifestyle choice I won’t judge but will acknowledge

At lower and mid settings, the noise drops to something less alarming. The tapping end runs somewhat quieter than the air-pulse end at equivalent intensity. But if discretion is anywhere on your priority list, know what you’re signing up for.

The We-Vibe Melt 2 and Womanizer Premium 2 are both significantly quieter at max. If stealth matters, the Fizz isn’t your toy.

Precise measurement of the Lovense Fizz mouth demonstrated

Real-World Sessions: How I Actually Used This Thing

Solo – When I Need to Get There Fast

This became the Lovense Fizz’s primary role in my rotation. Those nights when I’m exhausted but wired, when I have ten minutes and not thirty, when I just want the release without the ritual—the Fizz delivers. Water-based lube on the rim, position, turn on, and the lowest level is already doing something. Orgasm typically arrives in two to four minutes. It’s reliable, it’s efficient, and some nights that’s exactly what I need.

But—and here’s the honest trade-off I keep coming back to—after that orgasm, I’m done. Not the satisfied, glowing “done” where I could go again if I wanted. More the clenched, overstimulated “done” where my clitoris says “absolutely not” to the idea of round two. The intensity of the climax, even at lower settings, creates a tension in my body that doesn’t invite continuation. I’ve tried waiting a few minutes and going again. It just feels like too much.

Compare this with a session on my Womanizer Premium 2 at levels 3–4, where I can ride wave after wave, each orgasm rolling through my whole body and subsiding gently enough that another one builds naturally. Those are the sessions I crave most. The Fizz can’t replicate that experience. It’s not trying to.

Solo – Air-Pulse Plus Tapping Combo

The technique that one Reddit user described—start with air-pulse, switch to tapping for the finish—became my preferred Fizz method. Beginning with the air-pulse builds arousal, and switching to the tapping end for the final climb produces an orgasm that feels less “pushed” than air-pulse alone. It’s not the wave-like quality of a Womanizer, but it’s closer to something I’d seek out for enjoyment rather than efficiency. If you buy the Fizz, try this approach before deciding how you feel about the toy.

Solo – Tapping for Nipple Play

The tapping end on nipples at mid-range settings is genuinely delightful foreplay, whether I’m planning to use the other end or a different toy entirely. It’s become an unexpected part of my warm-up routine even on nights when the Fizz itself isn’t the main event.

Partnered – During Penetrative Sex

The slim profile works between bodies. It’s easier to position than bulkier suction toys and doesn’t require the geometric negotiations I’ve endured with wider models. The air-pulse end maintained a reasonable seal during missionary and modified doggy, though movement does break it occasionally—the soft rim re-seals faster than harder alternatives when this happens.

My partner noted vibration transfer through the toy body as “a buzzy sensation at the base, not unpleasant.” Between partners’ bodies, the noise also becomes more noticeable. Not a dealbreaker, but worth knowing.

Long-Distance Control

Connection was stable, response was near-instant, and switching between air-pulse and tapping via the app worked without hiccups. For couples separated by distance, this is the use case that most clearly justifies the Fizz’s existence and price. The Lovense platform’s reliability gives it a genuine competitive moat here.

Head-to-Head: How the Fizz Compares

Lovense Fizz vs. We-Vibe Melt 2

Lovense Fizz vs We-Vibe Melt 2 demonstration

Lovense FizzWe-Vibe Melt 2
Max PSI1.0~0.66
Airflow40–100 FPM7–40 FPM
Mouth opening0.47 x 0.71 in0.51 x 0.67 in
Rim softness18 Shore A15 Shore A
Mouth depth0.63 in0.55 in
AppLovense (robust)We-Vibe (decent)
NoiseLoud (67 dB)Quieter

The real difference isn’t in the specs. The Melt 2, starting at 7 FPM, allows a slow build that lets arousal unfold gradually. The orgasms I get from it feel broader, more full-body, and more repeatable. The Fizz hits harder and deeper, but that intensity drives a faster, more concentrated climax. If you use your Melt 2 primarily at higher settings and wish it went further, the Fizz delivers. If you love the Melt 2’s ability to start as a whisper and build into a wave, the Fizz can’t replicate that.

Choose the Melt 2 if: You’re sensitive to moderate, want slow-build orgasms, need quiet operation, or prefer the wave-like orgasm quality.

Choose the Fizz if: You want more raw power, better app control, long-distance features, the tapping function, or you run through the Melt 2’s upper levels and want more headroom.

Lovense Fizz vs. Satisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3

Lovense Fizz vs Satisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3 demonstration

Lovense FizzSatisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3
Max PSI1.00.65
Airflow40–100 FPM1–58 FPM
Mouth opening0.47 x 0.71 in0.59 x 0.71 in
Mouth depth0.63 in0.87 in
Price~$149~$50–60

The Satisfyer starts at 1 FPM—essentially silent pulsing—giving highly sensitive users a real starting point. Its wider, deeper mouth accommodates larger anatomy more comfortably. And it costs roughly a third of the Fizz.

Choose the Satisfyer if: Budget matters, you need a gentle on-ramp, you have larger anatomy, or app features aren’t important.

Choose the Fizz if: You need reliable app control, want maximum intensity, or the tapping function appeals to you—and the budget works.

Lovense Fizz vs. Womanizer Premium 2

Lovense Fizz vs Womanzier Premium 2 demonstration

The Premium 2 is quieter, starts gentler (15 FPM), and has a smaller, more precise mouth (0.43 x 0.55 inches) for targeted stimulation. Its harder rim (46 Shore A) focuses sensation sharply but seals less easily. The Fizz nearly doubles its pressure (1.0 vs. 0.53 PSI).

But here’s the thing: the Premium 2 gives me the kind of orgasm I want most of the time. The slow build, the full-body wave, the ability to go again. The Fizz gives me the kind of orgasm I want sometimes. They’re different tools for different needs, and “more powerful” doesn’t automatically mean “better.”

Choose the Premium 2 if: Orgasm quality matters more to you than raw power. You want slow builds, multiple orgasms, and quiet operation.

Choose the Fizz if: You want app control the Premium 2 doesn’t offer, you use the Premium 2 at max and want more, or you value the tapping function and partner-play versatility.

Lovense Fizz vs. Lovense Tenera 2

Not a contest. The Fizz is better in every measurable way: nearly 6x the airflow range (40–100 vs. 12–18 FPM), higher pressure (1.0 vs. 0.65 PSI), softer rim (18 vs. 26 Shore A), deeper mouth, and the entirely new tapping function. The Tenera 2 was a disappointment. The Fizz is the correction. If you bought a Tenera 2 and were let down, the Fizz is what you were hoping that toy would be.

Cleaning & Battery: The Practical Stuff

Cleaning

IPX7 waterproof + full-silicone body = warm water and mild soap, rinse, done. Simple.

The annoyance: The head is not detachable. You’re washing and drying the entire toy every time. On models like the Womanizer Premium 2 where the tip pops off, cleaning is quicker and more discreet. With the Fizz, you’re in the bathroom drying a very obvious device. Minor, but real if discretion matters.

Tip: Shake out water trapped in the air-pulse mouth and tapping chamber after rinsing, then stand upright to air dry. Trapped moisture temporarily affects air-pulse performance until it evaporates.

Lovense Fizz connected to its magnetic charger

Battery

  • Charge time: ~1 hour
  • Playtime: ~2 hours continuous
  • Standby: Excellent—I charged mine over a week before testing and it still had adequate charge. Minimal standby drain.

Given that my typical Fizz session runs under ten minutes (it’s a fast worker, remember), battery life is a non-issue. Even a 20-minute emergency top-up will carry you through.

Who Should Buy the Lovense Fizz (And Who Shouldn’t)

Buy It If:

You’re a power user who runs through the upper settings of the We-Vibe Melt 2 or Womanizer Premium 2 and wants more intensity. The Fizz’s floor is most toys’ ceiling.

You’re in a long-distance relationship and want the most reliable, feature-rich app-controlled air-pulse toy available. Nothing else in this category matches the Lovense ecosystem.

You’re a cam model or content creator needing Lovense ecosystem integration with a clit-focused toy that actually performs. The Tenera series wasn’t it. The Fizz is.

You already own Lovense toys and want a clitoral air-pulse device that integrates into your existing setup.

You sometimes need a fast orgasm. Genuinely. If there are nights where efficiency trumps artistry and you want to get there in three minutes flat, the Fizz is purpose-built for that.

You’re experienced and curious about the tapping function—a genuinely novel sensation type that’s worth exploring on its own merits.

Don’t Buy It If:

You’re a beginner. The lowest setting is already mid-range on most competitors. There’s no gentle introduction here.

You’re on the sensitive side and value slow-build, wave-like orgasms. The Fizz produces fast, intense, concentrated climaxes. If multi-wave, full-body orgasms are what you’re after, a Womanizer Premium 2 or We-Vibe Melt 2 at lower settings will serve you better.

Noise is a dealbreaker. 67 dB max. Enough said.

You don’t need app features. At ~$149, the Lovense ecosystem is a significant portion of what you’re paying for. Physical-button-only users can find comparable air-pulse performance for far less.

You want a wide, anatomically generous mouth. The narrower dimension of 0.47 inches may feel restrictive for larger anatomy. The Satisfyer Pro 2 Gen 3 offers more room.

Lovense Fizz: The Final Verdict

After two Lovense air-pulse toys that couldn’t get me across the finish line, the Fizz does. That alone is worth acknowledging. It’s powerful—measurably, tangibly, sometimes startlingly powerful. The dual-ended design adds a tapping function unlike anything else at this price. The app integration is best-in-class. The soft silicone mouth seals beautifully and gives you physical intensity modulation through compression. For long-distance couples and cam models, there’s simply nothing else combining this level of performance with this caliber of connectivity.

But I’d be doing you a disservice if I left it there.

The orgasm the Fizz delivers is a fast, concentrated, “pushed” climax—not the slow-building, wave-like, whole-body experience that gentler air-pulse toys can create. For me, as a sensitive-to-moderate user, that makes the Fizz a special-occasion tool. The toy I reach for when I need efficiency, when I want something intense and fast, when I’m in the mood for that specific kind of release. It’s not the toy I reach for on a slow Saturday night when I want to lose myself for forty-five minutes and see how many times my body will crest.

Both of those needs are real. Both are valid. The Fizz serves one of them exceptionally well.

For power users who live at the top end of their current toys—people who wish their Womanizer went harder, who’ve maxed out their Melt 2, who found the LELO Sona 2 Cruise’s intensity appealing—the Fizz will feel like coming home. The orgasm quality I describe as “pushed” might feel perfectly natural and satisfying to bodies that need that level of force to get where they’re going.

For everyone else? Know what you’re getting. The Fizz is not a do-everything toy. It’s a powerful, specialized, app-connected tool that does what it does with impressive force and genuine innovation. Whether that’s what your body wants is a question only you can answer—but now, at least, you know the right question to ask.

Rating: 3.9 / 5 — Strong marks for raw performance, app ecosystem, dual-ended innovation, and that gorgeous soft silicone mouth. Docked for noise, the absence of a truly gentle starting point, non-detachable head, and an orgasm quality that will thrill power users but leave sensitive-to-moderate users reaching for something else most nights.

Amie Dawson, Ph.D.

Amie Dawson, Ph.D.

As a certified sex educator and sex toy reviewer, Amie has spent her career empowering individuals and couples to embrace their sexuality.

With a Ph.D. in Human Sexuality and an ever-growing collection of over 200 vibrators, she's got the knowledge and experience to guide you on your pleasure-seeking journey.

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