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The Male G Spot Isn’t One Place. It’s Two.
Body

The Male G Spot Isn’t One Place. It’s Two.

For something people talk about so confidently, the “male G spot” is surprisingly unclear.
Ask most people and you’ll get one answer: the prostate.

Which isn’t wrong. It’s just not the whole story.

Because what we’ve been calling the “male G spot” is actually two different things that got blended into one.

 

G spot vs P spot: what’s the difference?

Part of the confusion is language. People use “G spot” and “P spot” like they mean the same thing. They don’t.

The P spot is the prostate.
Internal. Slower. More about pressure and rhythm.

The G spot, in more recent discussions, is being linked to the frenular delta.
An external area that behaves completely differently.

Two zones.
Two types of sensation.

Same conversation… until now.

 

The frenular delta (the one most people miss)

The frenular delta sits on the underside of the penis, where the head meets the shaft. It’s small, easy to overlook, and rarely talked about but anatomically, it’s densely packed with nerve endings.

Some recent research, including work published in Andrology by Spanish researchers, suggests this area may play a much bigger role in male pleasure than previously understood.

What’s interesting is how it responds.

Not to force. Not to speed.
But to precision.

Small movements. Light pressure. Subtle changes. It’s the opposite of the “more is better” approach most people are used to.

 

The P spot (the one people know, but don’t always explore)

The prostate sits internally and has been widely referred to as the male G spot for years.
More accurately, it’s the P spot.

Medically, it’s a gland involved in reproductive function, but it’s also highly sensitive due to its nerve structure something noted by sources like the Cleveland Clinic.

The sensation here is different. Less pinpoint. More immersive. Something that builds over time rather than hits instantly.

And for a lot of people, it requires a shift in mindset to explore comfortably.

 

Why most people don’t experience either properly

The issue isn’t that these areas are hard to find. It’s that they’re approached the same way. More pressure. More speed. More intensity.

That works in some contexts. Here, it usually doesn’t.

The frenular delta responds to subtlety
The prostate responds to patience

Treat them the same, and neither really delivers.

 

 

The part that actually makes the difference

If there’s one thing that consistently shapes the experience, it’s this: friction

Too much of it, and the frenular delta becomes overstimulated in a way that just feels off. Too little support internally, and things quickly become uncomfortable.

This is where most people quietly adjust their approach. Not just how they touch, but what they use.

Oil based lubricants, for example, tend to create a smoother, more controlled glide and don’t dry out quickly. That makes it easier to slow down, stay relaxed, and actually feel what’s happening instead of constantly readjusting.

That’s part of the thinking behind Bum Oil.

Not to make anything more complicated but to remove the friction so the experience feels more natural, more comfortable, and more in sync with your body.

Because once that’s in place, everything else becomes easier to explore.

 

So what is the male G spot?

Probably not a single place. 
More like a simplified idea that stuck around longer than it should have.

Once you separate the G spot and the P spot, things start to make more sense.
Not because there’s a new answer but because there isn’t just one anymore.

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Brand

Meet the Makers: Behind the Scenes with Our Founders

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