When Maddi Miller glanced at her boyfriend’s phone one night, she didn’t expect to find heartbreak waiting for her. What she saw wasn’t a message or a photo — it was a subscription to another woman’s OFs page. And in that quiet moment, her trust shattered.
For Maddi, a 20-year-old content creator from Perth, Australia, it wasn’t about jealousy. It was about betrayal. She’s part of the same industry herself, earning a living through her own OFs account. But this — this was different. “It wasn’t the content,” she said softly. “It was the secrecy. That’s what hurt.”

She explained that if her partner had been open — even curious — she might’ve understood. “If he had just talked to me, maybe we could’ve watched together,” she admitted. “But instead, he hid it. That’s betrayal.”
When she found out he had subscribed to multiple women, some she personally knew, Maddi’s world tilted. The trust she built with him, and with men in general, cracked deeply. For her, it wasn’t about a website — it was about being replaced, even virtually.

Surprisingly, Maddi isn’t alone in her feelings. A recent Australian survey found that over half of women believe subscribing to explicit content counts as cheating, while many men say it depends on context. As one expert put it, “Relationships today require more honesty than ever — and emotional cheating is still cheating.”
Maddi’s story reminds us how fragile trust can be — not always broken by touch, but sometimes by a single click.