The Hot Octopuss JETT is the British brand's entry-level "guybrator" — a hands-free, sleeve-style penis vibrator that uses the same PulsePlate oscillation philosophy as the premium Pulse line but in a radically simpler and cheaper form factor. Priced at around £49.95 in the UK and $59–$75 in the US, it's one of the very few penis vibrators available for under $60 from a reputable brand with a genuine track record in the category.

Why It Matters

The penis-vibrator category has always been the underfunded cousin of the clit-vibrator category — there are roughly ten bullet vibrators for every male-focused vibrating toy on the market. Hot Octopuss essentially created the "guybrator" label with the original Pulse in 2013, and the JETT is their attempt to bring that category's best idea (dual-motor, hands-free, works while flaccid) down to the price point where curious buyers will actually take the plunge. For the male-sex-toy category's market math to work, products at the JETT's price point have to exist.

The JETT uses two separate bullet vibrators — a "Treble" bullet with high-frequency, buzzy vibrations and a "Bass" bullet with deeper, rumbly vibrations — that sit in a flexible stretchy sleeve you slip over the penis. The two bullets offer 10 vibration frequencies that can be mixed and matched. Because it's sleeve-based (rather than the enclosed chamber of the Pulse Solo), the JETT works whether flaccid or erect, making it accessible for users with erectile dysfunction as well as a useful assistive device for disability and accessibility purposes. It's battery-powered (2x AAA per bullet) rather than rechargeable, which keeps the price down but limits long-session use.

Reviewers at Kelvin Sparks, The Bator Blog, and multiple YouTube testers consistently position the JETT as "the entry-level guybrator" — the toy to buy before committing to a $150+ Pulse Solo or $100+ AMO. The most common praise: the Bass bullet produces genuinely deep, penetrating vibrations, and the hands-free design is a category rarity. The most common complaints: the stretchy sleeve can feel tight on larger users, the battery-powered buzzers don't stop smoothly when changing patterns, and the TPE-blend sleeve is porous compared to silicone. At this price, those trade-offs are expected.

The Bottom Line

Best entry point to the male vibrator category for buyers under $70. Great for users with erectile dysfunction or mobility limitations where a stroking motion is impractical. Skip it if you already know you want rechargeable batteries, silicone (not TPE), or a fully enclosed chamber — step up to the Hot Octopuss AMO ($50) for a clit-style bullet or the Pulse Solo Essential (~$100) for a luxury guybrator.

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Update — 2026-04-21

Initial entry — story first created.