Past, Present & Future
Twenty-seven years of live streaming, late nights, trade shows, and the most interesting people on the internet. This is what building something you believe in looks like over the long run.



We believe the adult industry deserves good technology. Not rushed ports or half-built platforms — real engineering from people who respect the work and the people doing it.





Sex work is real work. The performers, operators, and creators who built this industry into what it is deserve platforms that treat them as professionals. That has been our starting point since day one.






XBIZ, Las Vegas. Every January we were on the floor — meeting operators, watching the industry argue about the next big thing, and quietly shipping software that worked. The hallway conversations were worth more than the keynotes.






Webdreams — the reality TV series produced by Gala Film that documented life inside the adult internet — featured 2MUCH.NET across both seasons. Cameras in the office, at the trade shows, in the middle of it all.






Internext brought together the people who were actually building things. We never missed it. The friendships made in those conference rooms and after-parties have lasted decades.






WebRTC, RTMP, H.264, HLS — we have been through every streaming format shift since Real Media and Windows Media. Each one looked like the future until the next one arrived.






Over the years we have been featured in Fubar Webmasters, Payout Magazine, XBIZ, AVN, and the Montreal Gazette. CBC covered the story too. It turns out building live video infrastructure in 1998 was genuinely newsworthy.







AVN Adult Entertainment Expo — Las Vegas in January meant two shows back to back. Days of business, nights of celebration. The adult industry knows how to mark a milestone.







In 1998, a live video chat session over a 56K modem was genuinely magical. We have been chasing that moment of connection — just with better compression — ever since.







The parties were real. Webcam models, operators, and the customers who supported them — we celebrated together. Growth in this industry is personal. The people who made it happen deserved to be celebrated in person.







The adult internet built technologies that mainstream companies adopted years later: micropayments, streaming video, age verification, subscription billing. We were in the room when that happened.







Good culture builds good software. A team that respects performers, values autonomy, and takes consent seriously writes code that reflects those values. The two are not separate things.







Qwebec Expo brought it home — literally. A Montreal industry event that felt like a reunion every year. Local roots, international reach. The adult web had a real community, and this was where you felt it.






























































































































































































Let’s build something together.
27+ years in the adult industry. We know what it takes to build platforms that perform.
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