scottpeterson1
Member
I’ve been wondering about this lately because it feels like adult advertising has gotten a bit unpredictable. Not completely broken or anything, but definitely more tricky than it used to be. If you’re putting in a high budget, the stakes feel higher, and the margin for mistakes is smaller.
One thing that kept bothering me was the risk factor. Not just in terms of money, but also account bans, rejected creatives, and traffic quality. I’ve seen people in forums talk about campaigns getting shut down without much warning, especially on stricter platforms. That made me hesitate before scaling anything too aggressively.
From my own experience, I tried running a few adult advertising campaigns with a slightly higher budget than usual. At first, things looked promising. Good impressions, decent clicks, but conversions were inconsistent. What I noticed was that targeting played a huge role. Broad targeting burned through the budget fast, while more refined targeting gave better results, even if the volume was lower.
Another thing I learned the hard way is that creatives matter more than you think in this space. Not just visually, but also how “safe” or compliant they look. Even within adult advertising, there seems to be a line you shouldn’t cross if you want stability. When I adjusted my creatives to be a bit more subtle, my campaigns lasted longer and performed more consistently.
I also spent some time reading through guides and discussions to understand what others were doing differently. One resource that helped me get a clearer picture was this guide on adult advertising — it breaks things down in a way that actually makes sense if you’re trying to avoid common mistakes.
If I had to sum it up, I wouldn’t say adult advertising is too risky, even for high budgets. But it’s definitely not something you can run blindly anymore. You need to test small, watch performance closely, and scale slowly. Throwing a big budget at it without a plan is where most of the risk comes from.
So yeah, it’s still worth it in my opinion, but only if you treat it carefully and stay flexible with your approach.
One thing that kept bothering me was the risk factor. Not just in terms of money, but also account bans, rejected creatives, and traffic quality. I’ve seen people in forums talk about campaigns getting shut down without much warning, especially on stricter platforms. That made me hesitate before scaling anything too aggressively.
From my own experience, I tried running a few adult advertising campaigns with a slightly higher budget than usual. At first, things looked promising. Good impressions, decent clicks, but conversions were inconsistent. What I noticed was that targeting played a huge role. Broad targeting burned through the budget fast, while more refined targeting gave better results, even if the volume was lower.
Another thing I learned the hard way is that creatives matter more than you think in this space. Not just visually, but also how “safe” or compliant they look. Even within adult advertising, there seems to be a line you shouldn’t cross if you want stability. When I adjusted my creatives to be a bit more subtle, my campaigns lasted longer and performed more consistently.
I also spent some time reading through guides and discussions to understand what others were doing differently. One resource that helped me get a clearer picture was this guide on adult advertising — it breaks things down in a way that actually makes sense if you’re trying to avoid common mistakes.
If I had to sum it up, I wouldn’t say adult advertising is too risky, even for high budgets. But it’s definitely not something you can run blindly anymore. You need to test small, watch performance closely, and scale slowly. Throwing a big budget at it without a plan is where most of the risk comes from.
So yeah, it’s still worth it in my opinion, but only if you treat it carefully and stay flexible with your approach.