Njoy Review: The Pure Wand Changed My Life and I'm Not Being Dramatic
I bought the Njoy Pure Wand because the internet wouldn't shut up about it. Every forum, every subreddit, every sex educator with a blog: 'Get the Pure Wand.' I figured it was hype. It's a curved piece of stainless steel. How different could it be from the $30 G-spot vibrator in my drawer?
The answer is very, very different.
Njoy has been making stainless steel sex toys since 2005. Their product line is small: a few wands, a few plugs, one absurdly expensive art piece called the Eleven. Everything is 316-grade stainless steel, mirror-polished, and built to outlast the heat death of the universe. No batteries, no motors, no charging cables. Just metal, curves, and gravity.
The brand operates on a philosophy that borders on stubborn: the material IS the technology. While every other company is racing to add Bluetooth, app control, and AI-powered vibration patterns, Njoy is polishing steel and selling the same Pure Wand they designed two decades ago. And it still outsells most of the smart toys that were supposed to make it obsolete.
The Pure Wand
The Pure Wand is a double-ended S-curve made from solid stainless steel. One end has a large ball (about 1.5 inches diameter), the other has a smaller ball (about 1 inch). It weighs a pound and a half. It's 8 inches long. It looks like something you'd find in a modern art museum, and it hits the G-spot like it has GPS coordinates.
Here's what happens the first time you use it: you insert the large end, angle it toward your front wall, and apply rocking pressure. The weight of the steel does most of the work. You don't thrust with this thing. You rock it, press it, let the heavy curved ball find the right spot. And when it finds it, you will know. There is no ambiguity. The combination of rigid pressure, smooth surface, and concentrated weight on the G-spot creates a sensation that vibrators can't replicate. I'm not saying vibrators are bad. I'm saying they solve a different problem.
My first session with the Pure Wand lasted about four minutes before I had to put it down and process what just happened. That's not marketing copy. I sat on the edge of the bed and thought 'oh, so THAT'S what they were talking about.' The focused pressure on the G-spot, the weight doing the work, the way the curve locks into the right angle without you fighting to hold it there. Every other G-spot toy I own suddenly felt like it was guessing.
💡 Start with the small end. Seriously. The large ball is 1.5 inches across and solid steel with zero give. If you're not used to that kind of rigid pressure internally, the small end lets you learn the rocking motion and figure out your preferred angle before graduating to the larger side.
The double-ended design is practical, not just aesthetic. Small end for warm-up or for people who prefer less intensity. Large end for the main event. You can also use the small end for anal play with appropriate caution (the toy is body-safe and non-porous, but it's rigid, so go slow). The S-curve acts as a natural stopper that prevents over-insertion, which matters more with a heavy steel toy than with a flexible silicone one.
Complaints? One. This thing is heavy. After fifteen minutes of active use, my wrist was reminding me that I don't go to the gym enough. Some people solve this by using it in different positions (on your back with knees up gives the best angle and lets gravity assist). Some people just accept the arm workout. It's a real limitation for anyone with wrist issues, arthritis, or carpal tunnel.
Pure Plug (anal)
Njoy makes three sizes of Pure Plug: small (1 inch head width), medium (1.25 inch), and large (1.5 inch). Same mirror-polished stainless steel, same build-forever quality, with a T-bar base for anal safety. The weight is the selling point here too: a steel plug SITS. It doesn't shift, doesn't migrate, doesn't need adjusting. You put it in and it stays exactly where you left it through sheer mass.
The small Pure Plug weighs about 3 ounces. That doesn't sound like much until you compare it to a similarly-sized silicone plug that weighs maybe half an ounce. The difference in sensation is dramatic. b-Vibe's Snug Plug uses a similar weight-based approach but with silicone housing. The Njoy does it with solid steel, which means the weight is more concentrated and the plug itself is slimmer for its weight class.
For long-term wear, this is where opinions split. The rigidity of steel means the plug doesn't flex with your body. Silicone plugs conform slightly to anatomy during movement. Steel doesn't. Some people find this incredibly satisfying: the unyielding presence is the entire point. Others find it uncomfortable after an hour, especially during activity. Sitting in a desk chair with a steel plug is a different experience than sitting with a silicone one, and not everyone prefers the steel version.
The mirror polish works in the Pure Plug's favor for insertion. Zero texture, zero friction, just smooth metal that glides with minimal lube. The tapered shape combined with the polished surface makes the small Pure Plug one of the easiest anal toys to insert, despite its material. I'd still recommend proper lube (any type works with steel), but the amount you need is less than with silicone.
“I wore the small Pure Plug to a dinner party and forgot about it for two hours. Either it's the most comfortable plug I own or I need to recalibrate my baseline.”
— Sasha, on the Pure Plug
The Eleven
The Eleven costs $400. I need to say that upfront because everything else about this toy is secondary to that number. It's 2.75 pounds of mirror-polished stainless steel, 11 inches long, curved like a question mark. The name is exactly what it looks like: eleven inches of solid steel.
I've held one. I have not purchased one, because I refuse to spend $400 on a sex toy when my rent exists. But I've handled it at a trade show and it's a legitimately stunning object. The finish is flawless. The curves are precise. The weight distribution is balanced in a way that makes it feel intentional in your hand rather than unwieldy. As industrial design, it's exceptional.
The pleasure points along the shaft create subtle changes in pressure during use. Each ridge and curve contacts the vaginal wall at a slightly different angle, so slow insertion creates a rolling cascade of sensation rather than a uniform glide. It's clever design. Whether it's $400 clever is the question.
Njoy positions the Eleven as art that you can use. It ships in its own custom leather bag. It's sold at high-end boutiques and occasionally displayed in design exhibitions. If you're wealthy enough that $400 on a toy doesn't register as irresponsible, and you appreciate objects that are both functional and beautiful, the Eleven is that. For everyone else, the $150 Pure Wand delivers 90% of the functional experience at less than half the price.
Fun Wand & others
The Fun Wand is Njoy's simpler design and, at $110, the gentler entry into stainless steel. It's a simpler design than the Pure Wand: a single gentle curve with a bulbous head on one end and a tapered tip on the other. No double S-curve, less dramatic contouring, and about half the weight.
Think of it as the Pure Wand's younger sibling who didn't get the same genetic lottery. It works. The steel is the same grade, the polish is the same quality, and it introduces you to the 'rigid internal pressure' concept without the Pure Wand's weight commitment. But the curve is less aggressive, which means it doesn't lock onto the G-spot with the same authority. You have to work harder to find the angle, and the lighter weight means you provide more of the pressure yourself instead of letting gravity help.
For anal use, the Fun Wand is actually better suited than the Pure Wand in some ways. The gentler curve and tapered end are more comfortable for prostate stimulation, and the reduced weight is less intimidating for people new to steel toys. The Pure Wand's aggressive S-curve can feel like too much in the back door.
Njoy also makes the Pure Wand 2.0, which updates the original with a slightly different curve geometry and surface texturing on one end. Reviews are mixed. Some people prefer the updated curve; others say the original was already perfect and the changes are lateral moves at best. I've only used the original and I have zero complaints, so I'd start there.
💡 If you're buying your first Njoy product, start with the Pure Wand (not the Fun Wand). The Fun Wand is cheaper, but the Pure Wand is the product that made this company's reputation. The $40 price difference buys you a dramatically better G-spot experience.
Stainless steel
All Njoy products are made from 316-grade stainless steel, the same alloy used in surgical instruments, food processing equipment, and medical implants. It's called 'surgical steel' for a reason: it tolerates prolonged direct contact with human tissue, which is why surgeons hold it and implants are made from it. There is no safer material for a sex toy. Not silicone, not glass, not ABS plastic.
What makes 316 stainless superior to other metals? The molybdenum content (2-3%) gives it extreme resistance to corrosion, including from bodily fluids, acidic pH environments, and cleaning chemicals. It won't rust, pit, discolor, or degrade. A 316 stainless toy purchased in 2004 is chemically identical to one purchased today, assuming nobody took a belt sander to it. The chromium oxide layer on the surface reforms instantly if scratched, creating a perpetually self-healing barrier.
Non-porosity is the other major advantage. Stainless steel has zero porosity at the microscopic level. Body-safe silicone is non-porous too, but steel takes it further: there's literally nowhere for bacteria to hide. You can sterilize a steel toy in boiling water, in a 10% bleach solution, in an autoclave, or in your dishwasher (top rack, no detergent, sanitize cycle). Try putting a TPE toy in an autoclave and see what happens. Actually don't; the smell alone will ruin your week.
The mirror polish serves a functional purpose beyond aesthetics. A smoother surface means less friction against tissue, less lube required, and easier cleaning. Njoy's polish is seriously impressive; you can see your reflection in the Pure Wand clearly enough to check your mascara. That level of finish means there are no micro-scratches or texture variations where bacteria could theoretically accumulate, though even an unpolished stainless steel surface gives bacteria nowhere to live.
Temperature play is where steel becomes something silicone can't be. Run the Pure Wand under warm water for two minutes and it holds that warmth throughout use. Submerge it in ice water and it becomes bracingly cold. Steel transfers temperature efficiently and retains it longer than glass (which also works for temperature play but is more fragile and lighter). The thermal mass of a one-pound steel toy means it stays warm or cold for the duration of a session rather than quickly normalizing to body temperature.
⚠️ Never microwave a stainless steel toy. Never heat it with a flame or on a stove. Warm tap water or a bowl of warm water is all you need. Steel conducts heat efficiently, and an overheated metal toy against internal tissue can cause burns faster than you'd expect.
Care & maintenance
This is the shortest care section I'll ever write for a sex toy, because stainless steel requires almost nothing.
Wash it with soap and warm water. Done. That's the daily routine. If you want to sterilize it between partners or after anal use, boil it for three minutes, run it through a dishwasher cycle, or soak it in a 10% bleach solution and rinse. You cannot damage 316 stainless steel with any cleaning method that's safe for kitchen utensils. The material is impervious to basically everything you'd realistically expose it to.
Storage is equally uncomplicated. Unlike VixSkin silicone that needs individual bags and careful separation from other silicone toys, stainless steel can be stored anywhere. In a drawer loose with other toys, in a bag, on a shelf. It won't react with silicone, rubber, or any other material. It won't absorb odors. It won't degrade in sunlight. Throw it in a sock drawer and forget about it for six months; it'll be exactly the same when you find it again. (If your other toys aren't this low-maintenance, the storage guide has tips for those too.)
The only thing that can go wrong is cosmetic damage to the mirror finish. Dropping a Pure Wand on a tile floor might scratch the polish. Storing it loose in a bag with keys or metal jewelry could create surface marks. Njoy includes a pouch with most products, and using it protects the finish. But even if you scratch the surface, it's cosmetic only. The steel is still perfectly body-safe with scratches. It just won't look as pretty.
Compare this to the care requirements for silicone toys, which need lube-type awareness (no silicone lube on silicone toys), careful storage away from other silicone, and eventual replacement when the surface degrades. Steel doesn't degrade. Your grandchildren could theoretically use this toy. Whether you want to think about that is your business.
vs. the competition
Njoy vs. silicone dildos is the fundamental question, and the answer depends entirely on what sensation you're chasing. Silicone (whether single-density from Tantus or dual-density from Vixen Creations) is flexible, warm-feeling, and forgiving. Steel is rigid, heavy, and precise. They're solving completely different problems.
For G-spot stimulation specifically, the Pure Wand is unmatched. The rigidity means the pressure goes exactly where the curve directs it, with zero energy lost to flex. A silicone G-spot toy bends slightly under pressure, distributing the force across a wider area. Some people prefer that broader sensation. But if you want concentrated, 'I can feel exactly where this is touching me' precision, rigid beats flexible every time.
For general vaginal use where G-spot targeting isn't the priority, silicone is usually more comfortable. The give in the material, the warmer initial feel, the variety of textures and shapes available. Nobody is buying a Pure Wand for gentle, full-length thrusting. That's not its job.
Le Wand makes a stainless steel line (the Hoop, the Bow, the Contour) that competes directly with Njoy. The quality is good, the steel grade is comparable, and the designs offer different curve geometries. The Contour is probably the closest competitor to the Pure Wand in terms of G-spot targeting. I've tried the Hoop and it's a solid product. But the Pure Wand's specific S-curve, perfected over twenty years of production, hits differently. Le Wand's curves are good. Njoy's curve is iconic for a reason.
💡 Glass toys (like those from Prism or Crystal Delights) offer similar rigidity and temperature play benefits. But glass is lighter, meaning less internal pressure, and more fragile. A Pure Wand dropped on tile is still a Pure Wand. A glass dildo dropped on tile is a trip to the emergency room.
For anal play, stainless steel plugs compete with silicone plugs from b-Vibe, Tantus, and Fun Factory. The weight advantage of steel is real: heavy plugs stay put better. But the rigidity disadvantage is also real: your body shifts and moves, and a plug that doesn't flex at all can become uncomfortable during extended wear. My compromise is steel for shorter, intentional sessions and silicone for longer wear. Both have their place.
Pricing & value
The Fun Wand is $110. The Pure Wand runs $150. Pure Plugs range from $75 (small) to $95 (large). The Eleven is $400 and exists in a different reality.
For the Pure Wand at $150, you're getting a sex toy that will never break, never wear out, never need replacing, works with any lube, requires zero maintenance, and provides a sensation that no vibrator at any price can duplicate. I've spent more than that on vibrators that lived in my drawer for two years before I guiltily donated them. The Pure Wand has been in regular rotation since the week I bought it.
The value calculation for Njoy is unlike any other sex toy brand. Silicone toys last a long time but they do eventually degrade. Rechargeable batteries lose capacity. Motors burn out. Charging ports corrode. Stainless steel outlives all of it. If you divide $150 by the number of times you'll use the Pure Wand over, say, ten years, the per-use cost rounds to basically zero. That math makes it one of the best values in sex toys despite not being cheap upfront.
Where value gets questionable is the Eleven. At $400, no amount of 'cost per use' math makes it a sensible purchase for most people. It's a luxury object that happens to be functional. If that appeals to you and your budget supports it, great. But the Pure Wand delivers the core Njoy experience at a fraction of the price. The Eleven is for people who want art. The Pure Wand is for people who want results.
Who should buy from Njoy?
Verdict
Twenty years. That's how long the Pure Wand has been on the market, virtually unchanged, while hundreds of vibrators with Bluetooth and apps and AI have launched and died around it.
Njoy figured out something that most sex toy companies miss: sometimes the material IS the feature. Stainless steel provides weight, rigidity, temperature versatility, total body safety, and literal immortality. No battery to die, no motor to burn out, no app to discontinue. You're buying a product that works the same on day one as it will on day ten thousand.
The Pure Wand is the best G-spot toy I've ever used. Not best-for-the-price or best-of-its-type, just the best in the category. The focused pressure from that curved steel ball, assisted by its own weight, creates a sensation that I haven't found in any other toy at any price point. If you have a G-spot and you haven't tried the Pure Wand, you're leaving something on the table.
The rest of the lineup is more niche. Pure Plugs are excellent weighted anal toys but face stiff competition from silicone alternatives that offer flexibility. The Fun Wand is a fine introduction but lacks the Pure Wand's authority. The Eleven is a $400 art piece that I respect but cannot recommend to anyone who has to think about the price.
Get the Pure Wand. That's the review. Everything else Njoy makes is good; the Pure Wand is transcendent. At $150 for a toy that lasts forever and does something no other product can replicate, it's one of the most defensible purchases in the entire sex toy market.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Njoy Pure Wand really worth it for G-spot orgasms?▼
How do I clean stainless steel sex toys?▼
Can I use the Njoy Pure Wand for anal play?▼
Is the Njoy Eleven worth $400?▼
What lube works best with Njoy stainless steel?▼
Sasha is the lead reviewer at The Toy Slut, which she co-founded with Daniel. Affiliate commissions never affect scores.
Silk line is body-safe perfection. The Acute is a G-spot sniper. Been making safe toys since 1998.
VixSkin dual-density is the closest to real. Firm core, soft outer. Maverick is chef's kiss.
Pretty. Overpriced. Sona is good. The rest is paying for packaging. Sorry not sorry.