The Aneros Progasm Ice is the largest and most aggressive of Aneros's hands-free prostate massager lineup — a $39.95 (sale, regularly $59.95) thermoplastic device with a transparent glass-like finish, designed for intermediate to advanced users who already know what they want from a P-spot toy. It's the muscle-driven sibling to the Aneros MGX Trident (the beginner standby) and Helix Syn Trident (the silicone intermediate option), both of which we've already covered in this guide.

Why It Matters

The prostate massager category has been one of the quietest growth stories in male sex toys — destigmatized partly by mainstream wellness coverage of "P-spot orgasms" and partly by the proliferation of app-controlled options from Lovense (Edge 2, Ridge), Lelo (Hugo 2, Loki Wave 2), and We-Vibe (Vector). Aneros remains the brand that proved you can build a genuinely effective prostate device with no motor at all. The Progasm Ice is the upgrade path for users who started with the MGX or Helix and want more — and at $40, it's the cheapest way to experience Aneros's full-size design.

What makes the Progasm Ice distinct is the size and the material. The angled head is 1.28 inches wide and 1.15 inches deep, mid-ridge is 1.13 x 1.25 inches, with a 4-inch insertable length — substantially larger than the MGX or Helix. The thermoplastic construction creates a rigid, low-friction surface with embedded air bubbles in the body that make every device visually unique (hence "Ice"). Aneros's pitch is that the rigid material transmits pelvic-floor contractions more efficiently than silicone, converting natural Kegel motions into deeper multi-directional motion against the prostate.

Like all Aneros toys, the Progasm Ice is a no-batteries device — there's no motor, no app, no buttons. Stimulation comes entirely from the user's pelvic floor contractions and breathing, which the four-point contact loop (dual internal arms plus front and rear external tabs) translates into pressure across the prostate, anal canal, perineum, and lower back. Aneros's marketing pitches this as a "wellness circuit" — and the company's user community on the Aneros forums is genuinely one of the deepest in the prostate-massager category, with multi-thousand-post threads on technique.

A few important caveats. The Progasm Ice is not recommended as a first prostate toy. Most reviewers — and Aneros itself — point new users to the Progasm Jr. (a smaller "Ice" variant) or the Helix Syn Trident first. The non-silicone material is non-porous and easy to clean, but it doesn't have the give of silicone, which makes proper warm-up and lubrication essential. Buy it from aneros.com, Amazon, or specialty retailers like Organic Loven. At under $40 on sale, it's one of the cheapest entry points into Aneros's full lineup if you've already graduated from the Helix.

Sources


Update — 2026-05-01

Initial entry — added to the Section T guide as the advanced-tier hands-free prostate option.