How can males improve sexual pleasure
Executive summary
Men seeking to improve sexual pleasure are being offered a mix of behavioral, relational, product-based and medical approaches in 2025 reporting: increased emphasis on communication and mindfulness (86.99% of regular communicators in a We‑Vibe survey reported always orgasming) and growth in non‑surgical medical/adjunct options such as PRP and device-assisted enhancement, plus broad uptake of lubes, supplements, pelvic‑floor work and sex toys [1] [2] [3]. Coverage is largely trend- and product-oriented rather than deep clinical guidance; available sources do not mention long-term randomized clinical outcomes for many new therapies (not found in current reporting).
1. Behavioral changes that the experts and surveys highlight
Open communication and focused, exploratory sex practices are the clearest, repeatedly cited levers for better pleasure: We‑Vibe’s 2025 report found couples who regularly talk about desires and needs had much higher orgasm consistency (86.99% of frequent communicators report orgasm every time) and linked communication to trust and intimacy [1]. Trend pieces push mindful masturbation, multisensory stimulation (sight, sound, taste, smell, touch), edging and deliberate “date‑night” exploration as practical techniques to broaden arousal and reduce performance pressure [4] [3] [5].
2. Devices, toys and topical products: more variety, more normalization
Industry coverage and product guides emphasize sex toys for men (prostate massagers, vibrators, cock rings) and arousal‑enhancing lubricants as accessible ways to discover new sensations, boost partner play and compensate for dysfunction during intercourse [6] [7] [3]. Marketing and trend reporting present toys and flavored or sensation lubes as low‑risk tools to increase pleasure, while noting that designers are making products more beginner‑friendly and inclusive [8] [3].
3. Supplements, topical treatments and emerging clinical options — promise vs. evidence
Wellness blogs and clinics promote herbal supplements (maca, ginseng, horny goat weed) and new medically framed interventions such as platelet‑rich plasma (PRP), stem‑cell‑adjacent approaches and devices promising improved blood flow or girth [5] [2] [9]. These sources frame such options as trending and non‑surgical, but they are trend articles rather than peer‑reviewed efficacy reports; therefore available sources do not provide definitive, long‑term randomized evidence for many of these treatments [2] [9].
4. Pelvic‑floor training, breathwork and body literacy as physiological foundations
Multiple outlets point to pelvic‑floor exercises and breathwork/mindfulness as safe, non‑invasive ways to improve control, sensation and orgasmic capacity—part of a broader “future‑proofing pleasure” emphasis that links sexual function to general health and body literacy [3] [8] [10]. Weill Cornell commentary frames sexual dysfunction as sometimes an early indicator of broader health issues (cardiovascular risk), which implies lifestyle and medical evaluation are relevant to improving pleasure [10].
5. Relationship context, consent and novelty: why psychology matters
Trend reporting stresses that erotic novelty, multisensory integration and mutual exploration amplify arousal by changing expectation and engaging emotional connection; sexologists quoted in popular outlets recommend combining attentive listening with new forms of touch to deepen shared pleasure [4] [11]. Industry surveys and reports also flag the normalization of diverse practices (anal play, sensation mapping) as expanding what people consider pleasurable [8] [12].
6. Conflicts of interest and commercial framing to watch for
Much of the coverage comes from clinics, product brands, and sex‑wellness marketers promoting services or items (PRP clinics, lubricant brands, toy makers) and so frames pleasure through what can be sold—non‑surgical procedures, supplements, devices and curated products dominate the narrative [2] [3] [9]. Readers should note this implicit agenda: trend pieces and press releases prioritize uptake and novelty rather than balanced clinical evidence [2] [1].
7. Practical, evidence‑aligned takeaways you can try now
Based on convergent reporting: prioritize open communication with partners and explicit consent to explore preferences [1]; experiment safely with lubricants, toys and edging to discover new sensations [4] [3] [6]; practice pelvic‑floor exercises and mindfulness to build control and awareness [3] [8]; and consult a healthcare professional if erectile problems or other medical issues arise, since sexual dysfunction can signal broader health risks [10]. For medical procedures or supplements, seek transparent evidence and medical counsel because trend pieces advertise promise more than proven outcomes [2] [9].
Limitations: the sources assembled are predominantly trend articles, brand blogs, press releases and survey reports; they provide recommendations and market direction but limited high‑quality clinical trial data on many newer therapies (not found in current reporting).