Everything on Yemada's OnlyFans Before You Subscribe + Freebies
The OnlyFans Creator Everyone Is Subscribing To
Including Free Alternatives From Top-Tier Models

Why Fans Love Yemada
Discover what thousands of fans already know
Personal and welcoming so you can feel at home.
Loves anime, gaming, and being in front of the camera.
Provides content fans really want to see with lots of effort.
Keeps it fun and comfortable, always real. Text me!
Who Is Yemada?
Yamada Yang goes by a lot of names online. Most people find her as @snuggiedumpling on Instagram, some land on @yemeverse on TikTok, and her OnlyFans subscribers know her simply as @yemada. Same person, different corners of the internet, slightly different energy in each.
She's 24, US-based, and from what's visible on her public @yemada Instagram, her last name is Yang — which points to Chinese heritage, though she hasn't confirmed her ethnicity publicly and doesn't seem particularly interested in making that part of her brand.
What she has made part of her brand: long dark hair, oversized glasses, a dry sense of humor, a humanoid robot that shows up in her living room, and a pretty deliberate gap between what she posts for free and what she charges for.
She runs two separate Instagram accounts. @snuggiedumpling sits at 303K followers and is where most of her personality content lives — the funny videos, the cosplay-adjacent looks, the reaction stuff. @yemada has 639K followers and far fewer posts, suggesting she treats it as something closer to a curated landing page than an active feed. Both link back to each other. It's a weird setup until you realize it's actually pretty smart: one account does the work of building audience, the other funnels them somewhere.
Her first TikTok went up June 26, 2024. Less than two years later, she had 300K+ followers on two separate Instagram accounts, a TikTok with millions of likes, and an OnlyFans sitting at $19.99 a month with 147K likes across 225 photos.
That's not a slow build. That's a very fast one.
From First TikTok to 12 Million Views — How She Actually Blew Up
The first video she ever posted on TikTok was an outfit reveal. Her glasses slipped down her nose mid-video. That's it. That's the origin story.
It sounds like nothing, but that kind of unpolished moment is exactly what gets traction on TikTok because it reads as real. She didn't look like she was performing. She looked like a person filming herself in an apartment, and the algorithm rewarded it.
From there she kept posting — outfits, lifestyle, deadpan commentary — and a specific subset of her comment section started doing something interesting. People kept saying she looked like Ada Wong.
The Ada Wong Effect
Ada Wong is a Resident Evil character. She's East Asian, has long dark hair, dresses in a very specific way, and has a following that borders on parasocial. When TikTok comments started comparing Yemada to her, two things happened: the Resident Evil community found her account, and she leaned into it.
She didn't do a full-on cosplay necessarily, but the visual overlap was real enough that the comparison kept circulating. Her Instagram grid includes posts where the captions reference the Ada Wong comments directly. It gave her existing fans a reference point and pulled in new ones who weren't following her yet.
The Robot Era
Somewhere in 2024, a humanoid robot started appearing in her videos.
Not as a one-off prop. Consistently. Videos with the robot clocked 88.7K, 182.9K, 252.8K, 254K, and 760K views on her TikTok. She captioned one of them "all this robot does is just be there." Another: "me and my robot when our creators are of the same descent."
The robot content did something her solo outfit videos couldn't do on their own: it crossed her over into general TikTok. People who weren't looking for attractive creators started watching because the setup was genuinely funny. Once they were watching, they were in her orbit.
12 Million Views
Her biggest single video is still the IShowSpeed "countertop POV" clip, pinned at the top of her @yemeverse TikTok. It sits at 12 million views, which is roughly 47 times the size of her follower count on that account. The format is simple — it's shot from the POV of her kitchen countertop, with IShowSpeed tagged in the caption. It worked.
That video is probably responsible for a significant chunk of her subscriber conversions. When something hits 12M views on a creator's page, the people who click through to their profile are already warm. She had her OnlyFans link in her bio. The math on that moment was good.
From TikTok to OnlyFans in Under a Year
By the time she had @yemeverse at 256.5K followers and 4.8M likes, she was already operating a multi-platform setup: two TikTok accounts (she directs people from @yemeverse to her "main" @yemada account), two Instagram accounts, a YouTube channel, and an OnlyFans. All of it built inside of about twelve months from that first glasses-slip video.
Her YouTube channel (@yemadajpeg) has 3.75K subscribers and 31 videos. The bio just says "professional thought daughter." Her most-viewed video there is a bikini haul she titled "bikini haul (unserious)" — 29K views, and it gives a pretty clear preview of where the paid content goes.
The Robot Was Not a Bit — It Was a Branding Move
Most creators at Yemada's follower count run a pretty predictable playbook. Attractive person, good lighting, OOTD content, Instagram feed that trends toward beach or gym, OnlyFans link in bio. It works. It's also what everyone else is doing.
Yemada added a robot.
What the Robot Actually Is
The robot that appears in her videos looks like a humanoid companion unit — the kind of thing you'd see in a tech demo. It stands in her living room, shows up in her kitchen, and sometimes just... exists in the frame while she's doing something else. One caption she used: "all this robot does is just be there." Another one frames their dynamic around having "creators of the same descent," which is both a joke about AI origins and a way of making the robot feel like a character rather than a prop.
That distinction matters. A prop is something you use once or twice. A character is something your audience starts expecting to see.
Why It Works Commercially
The robot content pulls in viewers who would not otherwise be looking for an attractive creator's TikTok. Someone curious about humanoid robots, or someone who saw the "just be there" caption on their for-you page, ends up on her profile. Now they're watching her other videos too. Her follower count goes up. Her OnlyFans link is right there.
Her YouTube video titled "say no to low cortisol" features the robot. Her TikTok captions around the robot content are consistently dry and specific rather than trying too hard. She's playing the same character across every platform, which makes the whole thing feel coherent.
The view counts on robot-featuring videos ranged from 88K to 760K. That spread suggests the content works reliably, not just as a one-off. Six separate videos in that range means she's done this enough to know it converts.
The Balance She's Running
Yemada's feed sits in an interesting middle zone. There's the funny stuff — the robot, the Ada Wong comments, the deadpan captions. And there's the clearly more attention-directed content: tight outfits, the bikini haul video, the dancing clips on Instagram that rack up 6K+ likes.
Both versions of her exist on the same accounts. She doesn't separate "comedy creator" from "OnlyFans creator" into different personas. That's actually unusual. Most creators in her position either go full personality or go full thirst-trap. She's doing both from the same handle, and the audience for one keeps bumping into the content for the other.
Yemada's OnlyFans — What's the Subscription Actually Like?

The page has 225 photos and 147K total likes. There are no listed videos in the data, which is worth talking about.
What 147K Likes Actually Means
147K likes across 225 photos works out to roughly 653 likes per photo on average. For context, that's a meaningful number. A creator with 303K Instagram followers and 639K on a second account generating 650+ likes per photo on a paid platform suggests her subscribers are genuinely engaging with what she's posting, not just subscribing and forgetting about it.
Retention is the harder metric to fake on OnlyFans. Anyone can buy a short-term subscriber spike. Getting people to actually interact with content after they've paid requires that the content is worth opening. Her engagement average points toward a page that's delivering on what her public content promises.
No Videos — Strategy or Gap?
The zero listed videos is the unusual detail here. Most OnlyFans pages in her category mix photos with video content because video tends to command higher PPV prices and is harder to screenshot and redistribute than photos.
There are two ways to read this. One: she's deliberately running a photo-only page, which keeps production simpler and relies on volume and quality of stills. Two: the data is incomplete and videos exist but aren't being captured in the count, possibly because they're PPV (pay-per-view) unlockables rather than included in the base subscription.
Given that one source mentions her OnlyFans offering "PPV videos," the second explanation is more likely. It's a common model: subscription covers photo access, video content is sold separately. That setup lets creators double-dip — subscription revenue plus individual video sales — and gives subscribers a reason to keep paying even once they've seen the photo catalog.
What Her Public Content Signals
Her YouTube channel has a video called "bikini haul (unserious)" that hit 29K views. Her Instagram includes posts in revealing outfits that regularly pull 6K+ likes. Her TikTok features dance content, fashion content, and the occasional more suggestive framing.
None of this is explicit by nature, but it's clearly building toward something. The public-facing content functions as a preview reel. People who click through from her TikTok or Instagram already know roughly what they're getting. The $19.99 price point is asking for a commitment from people who are already interested — which is a better conversion situation than trying to sell cold.
How She Drives Traffic to It
She links her OnlyFans through her bio on multiple platforms and uses a linktree-style setup (getallmylinks.com/yemada) to make the jump simple. The 12M-view IShowSpeed video alone would have pushed a lot of curious viewers through that link. Her ongoing robot content and Instagram dancing posts keep the pipeline moving.
She's not hiding the OnlyFans. It's front and center. That directness, combined with a public feed that people actually want to follow on its own, is the setup that tends to produce consistent subscriber numbers rather than one-time spikes.
Instagram — @snuggiedumpling vs @yemada, What's the Difference?

@snuggiedumpling — Where the Personality Lives
This is the active one. 303K followers, 109 posts, 99 following. It's where she puts the content that built her audience: the Ada Wong reaction videos, the robot duos, the outfit posts, the glasses looks, the dancing clips. If you want to understand why people follow her, this account is the answer.
The grid from her @snuggiedumpling reads like a mood board for a very specific aesthetic. Long dark hair. Red and black outfits. Striped tops paired with plaid skirts. Occasional all-black looks that land somewhere between baddie and cosplay. She holds a skeleton prop in one post, poses with the robot in several others, and throws in reaction-style videos where comments from her followers get turned into content.
Her fans in the comments describe her as having "elite skin" and regularly cosign the Ada Wong comparison. One commenter even suggested she cosplay the character directly, which she's clearly been playing with visually for a while. There's a character quality to how she presents herself on this account that goes beyond just posting outfits.
A January dancing video with her friend @justaminali pulled 6,834 likes. For a 303K account, that's a healthy engagement rate. It also shows that her audience isn't just following her for a specific content type — they show up for her generally.
@yemada — The Bigger, Quieter Account
This one is harder to explain. 639K followers, 30 posts, 558 following. More than double the followers of @snuggiedumpling, but a fraction of the posts. She links @snuggiedumpling from it with "✧ @snuggiedumpling" in the bio.
The low post count with a high follower number suggests this account grew differently — possibly from people finding the @yemada username through her OnlyFans or TikTok handle, rather than through the content itself. She treats it more like a directory than a feed. It exists, it points somewhere, it doesn't need to do much heavy lifting.
The Aesthetic, For Anyone Still Figuring It Out
Across both accounts, her look lands in a specific zone. ABG (Asian Baby Girl) is probably the closest TikTok shorthand, but that doesn't fully cover it. She mixes thrifted-looking pieces with more put-together outfits, uses glasses as a recurring visual anchor, and shifts between looks that feel casual and looks that are clearly styled. The result is an aesthetic that reads as intentional without looking like it tried too hard — which is its own kind of skill.
TikTok, YouTube, and X — The Full Platform Picture
TikTok
She has two accounts here too. @yemeverse is where most people find her — 256.5K followers, 4.8M likes, bio that says "other account: @YEMADA." Her @yemada TikTok is the one she considers her main, though @yemeverse is where the biggest viral moments live, including the pinned 12M-view IShowSpeed video.
Her TikTok content style covers a lot of ground. There are outfit videos, comment-response videos, robot content, dance clips, and the occasional post that's just her looking at the camera with a caption doing the comedic work. She also duets and tags other creators, which is how the IShowSpeed moment happened. That strategy of pulling in bigger names through @-mentions and collabs is a fast way to cross audiences, and she's clearly aware of it.
Comment sections on her TikToks are genuinely active. She replies with video responses, which turns her audience's questions and jokes into new content. That loop — fan comments become videos become more comments — is what keeps TikTok pages feeling alive between posting windows.
YouTube
@yemadajpeg has 3.75K subscribers and 31 videos. The bio says "professional thought daughter," which is either a joke or a very efficient personal statement, possibly both.
The content here is less polished than her TikTok output, which actually works in its favor. Her bikini haul video, titled "bikini haul (unserious)," has 29K views and reads exactly as described — someone filming a haul for fun, not for a brand deal. Other uploads include "ai has got to stop," "this is ragebait bt...," and "say no to low cortisol" (which features the robot). The YouTube channel functions less as a growth engine and more as an archive and overflow space for content that doesn't fit neatly into a short-form format.
X
She's at @yemadajpeg on X, same handle as YouTube. It's a lighter presence — she's not building there the way she builds on TikTok and Instagram. For now it functions as a backup channel and a place for her existing audience to find her if they look.
What Makes Her Content Actually Work
There's a pretty simple answer and a more honest one.
The simple answer is that she's attractive, posts consistently, and linked her OnlyFans from accounts that get real traffic. That's true, but it also describes about ten thousand other creators who are not pulling 12M-view videos or 6,800-like Instagram posts.
The more honest answer is that she built a character before she built a following.
The Character, Specifically
Her @snuggiedumpling username is doing more work than it looks like. It's cute. It's slightly absurd. It doesn't take itself seriously. That sets a tone before someone even sees a video — and the content backs it up. She's funny. The robot captions are dry in a way that doesn't feel forced. When she replies to Ada Wong comparisons, she's not dismissing them or leaning in too hard. She just plays with it.
The result is that people in her comment sections talk about her like she's a character they follow, not just a creator they watch. The Ada Wong thread, the "elite skin" label, the robot as a known entity — these are inside jokes that require context to understand, which means the people making them have been paying attention.
That kind of audience isn't built by posting good photos. It's built by being consistent enough and specific enough that people feel like they know what to expect from you.
The Mix of Planned and Unpolished
Her content doesn't feel uniform. Some of it is clearly staged — the robot videos require planning, the outfit transitions are deliberate, the cosplay-adjacent looks don't just happen. But she leaves room for the unpolished version too: bedroom-shot photos, casual dancing clips, the original glasses-slip TikTok that started everything.
That mix matters because it keeps the planned content from feeling corporate. If everything looked like a shoot, her audience would relate to her differently. The messier moments create the impression that there's an actual person behind the account, not just a content machine.
Her Labubu/Soymilk plush follows the same logic. It appears in videos across platforms, fans recognize it, and that tiny recurring detail functions like a signature. People track it. That's not accidental.
Why the OnlyFans Fits the Brand
She doesn't treat her OnlyFans as a separate identity that she has to explain or justify. It's just another link in the bio, the same way YouTube or TikTok would be. Her public content trends toward revealing without crossing a line, which means by the time someone clicks to her OnlyFans, they've already made a decision. She's not selling to cold traffic. She's converting warm followers who've been watching her for weeks or months.
That's the setup that produces 147K likes on a paid platform. Not a one-time spike, but an audience that showed up because they wanted to.
Yemada FAQs
How old is Yemada?
She was born in 2001, which puts her at 24 as of 2026. She hasn't shared her exact birthday publicly.
What is Yemada's real name?
She goes by Yamada Yang on her @yemada Instagram. That's the closest thing to a confirmed name she's put out publicly. She hasn't shared more than that.
What nationality is Yemada?
She's based in the US. Her surname Yang, along with what's visible in her content, points toward Chinese-American heritage, but she hasn't confirmed her ethnicity publicly and doesn't make it a part of her content.
How much does Yemada's OnlyFans cost?
$19.99 per month. Her page is at @yemada on OnlyFans. Some sources suggest she also sells PPV video content separately on top of the base subscription.
What's on Yemada's OnlyFans?
The page has 225 photos and 147K total likes. Based on her public content — bikini hauls, fashion content trending toward revealing, OOTD posts — the page leans photo-focused. PPV videos may exist as separate unlockables beyond the base subscription.
What's Yemada's most viewed video?
Her "countertop POV" TikTok tagging IShowSpeed, pinned at the top of her @yemeverse page. It has 12 million views, which is by far her biggest single video.
Why does Yemada have a robot?
It started appearing in her content sometime in 2024 and became a recurring presence. Several robot videos have hit between 250K and 760K views on TikTok. She treats it like a co-star rather than a prop, and her audience has started expecting to see it. At this point it's just part of the brand.
What is @snuggiedumpling?
That's her main Instagram account for personality and content — 303K followers, where she posts outfit videos, reaction content, and everything else that built her following. Her larger Instagram account (@yemada, 639K followers) is more minimal and mostly points back to @snuggiedumpling.
Does Yemada have a boyfriend?
She hasn't said anything publicly about a relationship. A caption on one of her Instagram posts reading "shawty is @justaminali meenie miny mo" appears to be a joke caption on a dancing video with a friend, not any kind of relationship announcement.
What is Yemada's aesthetic?
Somewhere between ABG, e-girl, and soft baddie. Long dark hair, glasses as a recurring accessory, a mix of thrifted and put-together outfits, occasional cosplay-adjacent looks. Her fans describe her as "elite skin" and regularly compare her to Ada Wong from Resident Evil. She described her own style once as "thrift-store chic," which is probably the most accurate short answer.