The Liberty Leaf from Lola Games is a clitoral vibrator disguised as a pendant necklace, complete with a soft silicone leaf tip and ten vibration modes. Our testers explored it solo, in the shower, and even out at a bar, and came away charmed by the concept and divided on the buzz.
There is a particular kind of magic that happens when a sex toy stops looking like a sex toy. Not because there is anything wrong with the unapologetically phallic, the proudly fuchsia, or the obviously vibrational, but because sometimes you want a little secret to live on your sternum, dangling innocently against your collarbone while you order another drink. The Liberty Leaf, from Lola Games, is precisely that kind of secret: a silicone leaf-shaped vibrator strung on a chain, designed to be worn out loud and used in private.
Our two testers, one Female, 19, DK and one Non-binary, 40, DE, came at this toy from very different angles and life stages, and the resulting picture is one of genuine charm shadowed by a real, honest caveat about the vibrations themselves. Stick around, because the verdict here is more interesting than a simple thumbs up or thumbs down.

Unbox the Liberty Leaf and the first impression is unmistakably one of presentation. The packaging is treated as part of the experience rather than an afterthought, and the silicone itself has a velvety, slightly powdered finish that feels closer to a luxury skincare object than a typical sex toy. The leaf shape is the conceit: a softly pointed tip, gently curved sides, and a chain that lets it hang as a pendant. It is small, light, and, crucially, easy to mistake for jewellery at a glance.
"The packaging alone made me feel like I was unwrapping a piece of jewellery. The velvet-like silicone feels wonderful to hold and even better against the skin. The leaf-shaped tip is a genuinely different sensation from other vibrating toys — that little pointed tip creates something unique and very pleasant for vulval and clitoral stimulation."
The Non-binary, 40, DE tester returned to that leaf tip several times across the conversation, and it is worth pausing on. Where many compact bullet vibrators offer a rounded nub or a flat face, the Liberty Leaf's pointed tip creates a more focused, tongue-like contact point. That shape is part of why both testers found the toy pleasant to use externally on the vulva and clitoris, regardless of how the vibrations ultimately landed.
On the practical side, the toy is fully waterproof, charges magnetically, and runs through ten vibration modes via a simple control. Battery life, in the experience of our Female, 19, DK tester, was solid for a toy of this size, and the magnetic puck made topping it up a quick and uncomplicated affair. Cleaning, both testers agreed, is genuinely effortless, which is exactly what you want from something that is going to live around your neck and travel with you.
Here is where the review forks, and where it earns the word honest. The Female, 19, DK tester used the Liberty Leaf externally and in the shower and came away describing the vibrations as surprisingly powerful for the size of the toy, with the various modes giving her enough range to find something that worked. She praised how quiet it stayed, even at higher intensities, and felt the toy delivered far more than its tiny footprint suggested.
"I tested the Lola Games Liberty Leaf and was genuinely impressed. The silicone is incredibly soft against the skin, and the necklace design means you can wear it anywhere without a second glance. The ten vibration modes pack a real punch for such a compact toy, and it stays whisper-quiet throughout. The waterproof build held up perfectly in the shower too."
The Non-binary, 40, DE tester had a different experience, and it is one worth listening to closely if you are weighing this purchase. They tried the Liberty Leaf across three separate sessions, exploring it externally for clitoral and vulval stimulation as well as vaginally and anally, in case a different approach unlocked something. The sensation was consistently pleasant, but the type of vibration on offer, very fine and very high-frequency, did not work for their body. Instead of building toward something, the buzz tended to numb the clitoris over time, which is the opposite of what you want from a vibrator.
This is not the toy refusing to do its job. It is doing its job, just in a specific frequency register, and bodies vary enormously in how they respond to high-frequency versus deeper, rumblier vibrations. If you already know that buzzy, surface-level vibrations work for you, the Liberty Leaf will likely feel right at home. If you tend to gravitate toward thuddier, lower-frequency toys, you may find the Liberty Leaf a charming companion that never quite gets you across the finish line.

The most distinctive thing about the Liberty Leaf is not what it does, but where you can take it. Both testers were drawn to the wearable concept, and one of them actually field-tested it. The Non-binary, 40, DE tester took the necklace out to a live concert at a bar, with the leaf hidden under their T-shirt, and the simple fact of having it on their body added a flirtatious, in-on-the-secret thrill to the evening. Sharing the joke with a close friend made it even more fun.
When they considered slipping into the bathroom to actually switch it on, however, reality intervened. The toilets at this particular bar were not acoustically isolated, and the vibration noise, while perfectly acceptable for use at home, felt too audible for a public setting where someone could be standing on the other side of a thin door. They opted out. This is a useful piece of intelligence: the Liberty Leaf is quiet enough that you will not annoy a partner or a roommate, but it is not silent enough to be invisible in a tiled public restroom.
"What I love most is how truly wearable this is. I took it to a live concert at a bar — hidden under my T-shirt — and just having it on me felt playful and a little mischievous. I told a close friend and we both loved the idea. It adds a whole other dimension to what a vibrator can be."
The wearable concept still works, in other words; it just works best as anticipation rather than active use when you are in shared acoustic space. Wearing the necklace, knowing it is there, and using it later (at home, in a hotel, in a private space) seems to be the sweet spot. As a piece of erotic theatre, that is plenty.

Pulled back, there is a lot to like. The silicone is genuinely lovely, soft, supple, and skin-friendly in a way that consistently came up across both transcripts. The aesthetic does real work, transforming the act of carrying a sex toy from something furtive to something almost couture. Wearability is the headline feature and it delivers as concept, even if practical public use has its limits.
The toy is fully waterproof, which our Female, 19, DK tester confirmed in the shower. Cleaning is a non-event, which matters a great deal for something you intend to wear and use repeatedly. Magnetic charging keeps the process frictionless. And the leaf-shaped tip provides a contact point that genuinely feels different from the standard bullet vibrator, with a focused, almost tongue-like quality that both testers appreciated for external stimulation.
For at least one of our testers, the vibrations also delivered: strong for the size, varied across ten modes, and quiet enough to keep the experience private. That is not nothing, and it speaks to a real audience that this toy will serve well.
The most significant caveat is the vibration profile itself. For the Non-binary, 40, DE tester, the buzz was too fine and too high-frequency to build arousal, and despite three sessions and multiple positions and orifices, they did not reach orgasm with it. They were quick to point out that orgasm is not the only point of a sex toy, and that they had a good time with the Liberty Leaf overall, but the frustration of a pleasant sensation that never resolves is worth flagging clearly.
The other limitation is the acoustic one already noted: lovely at home, less so in a bar bathroom. If your fantasy of a wearable vibrator involves switching it on in public, you will want to either pick your venues carefully or accept that the Liberty Leaf is more about wearing the secret than activating it.
There is also a versatility question. Both testers stuck primarily to external use; the second tester explored internal use but did not find it transformative. This is fundamentally an external, clitoral toy in form factor and intent, and trying to stretch it into a versatile internal vibrator may set you up for disappointment.

This toy lands squarely in a particular sweet spot: beginners and intermediate users who prioritise aesthetics, discretion, and the pleasure of a beautifully made object as much as the orgasm itself. If you want a first vibrator that does not look like one, that you can travel with, take to the gym bag, or wear out for the night, the Liberty Leaf is a strong choice. If you already know that buzzy, high-frequency vibrations send you over the edge, even better.
It is probably not the right fit if you exclusively chase deep, rumbly vibrations, if you need a toy that reliably produces orgasm on its own, or if you want serious internal stimulation. There are more pointedly orgasm-focused tools out there if that is your priority, and you can always own the Liberty Leaf alongside one of them for different moods.
A future iteration could meaningfully widen this toy's appeal by addressing the two limitations our testers consistently raised. A lower-frequency, rumblier vibration mode (in addition to the existing buzzier options) would let the Liberty Leaf work for the substantial slice of bodies that simply do not respond to high-frequency vibration. A quieter motor at higher intensities would also unlock the public-wear fantasy in a way the current version cannot quite deliver. The concept is genuinely strong; a little engineering breadth on the motor side would let it serve a much wider audience without losing any of the elegance that defines it.
The Liberty Leaf is at its best a small, beautiful object that genuinely reimagines what a sex toy can look like and where it can go with you. The silicone is gorgeous, the packaging treats you like an adult buying something lovely, and the wearable concept is a real innovation rather than a gimmick. For our Female, 19, DK tester, it also delivered on the vibration front with surprising power and quiet operation, making it a strong recommendation for beginners looking for elegance and ease.
For our Non-binary, 40, DE tester, the vibration profile was the wrong frequency match for their body, and that is a useful, honest piece of information rather than a verdict on the toy itself. Bodies differ, and a vibrator that works beautifully for one person can fall flat for another, especially when the buzz lives at the finer, higher end of the spectrum.
What stays with you after reading both reviews is not the limitation but the charm: the velvety silicone, the leaf tip, the playful thrill of wearing a vibrator to a concert and sharing the secret with a friend, the way magnetic charging and waterproof construction make the whole thing effortless to live with. The Liberty Leaf is a stylish, discreet, well-built little object with a clear point of view, and for the right body and the right occasion, it is a small piece of jewellery you will be very glad to own.