The 'Gamer Girl Bath Water' Saga Keeps Getting Stranger (2024)

Apparently, a lot of weird things can happen when you decide to sell “gamer girl bath water” on the internet. On July 1, Belle Delphine, a UK-based internet personality known for viral stunts and Patreon-supported NSFW content, announced on her Instagram that she would be selling her bath water to fans via her online store for $30 per jar. On its face, it’s pretty run-of-the-mill stuff; for years, people on the internet have been selling all manner of intimate items, from underwear to yes, bath water. Delphine’s decision to market her bath water as belonging to a “gamer girl” in particular is a little unusual. What’s more unusual, though, is how much controversy Delphine’s bath water sale has stirred up since she announced it.

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Part of this could be due to Delphine’s sale escaping the orbit of her usual followers. Twitter user @wsupden posted Delphine’s sale in a viral tweet, which likely exposed it to a wider audience. (Delphine would later announce that she sold out in two days’ time, something she said she “didn’t expect”.) Delphine’s sale also almost immediately inspired some vehement reactions, including accusations that her bath water was dangerous or a scam.

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Among the accusations were claims that Delphine had herpes and that she had infected those who purchased her bath water. These were fueled largely in part by the (now-suspended) Twitter user BakeRises who, per Snopes, impersonated the UK publication The Daily Mail in order to fabricate a headline about Delphine’s water sale having caused a herpes outbreak.

Yesterday, yet another viral tweet cited an anonymous “molecular biologist” who claimed that Delphine’s bath water was not, in fact, bath water, since it supposedly contains no traces of human DNA. This, the post went on, would mean that her customers had grounds for a class action lawsuit.

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Throughout all of this, YouTubers had been uploading videos claiming they had received Delphine’s bath water, although some (like the YouTuber Vito) admitted that they were just pulling a stunt of their own and did not actually have Delphine’s water.

According to Delphine’s social media, no one had the bath water anyway, because it hadn’t yet been shipped to customers when these accusations emerged. This morning, Delphine posted a response to the rumors on both Instagram and Twitter, in which she stated that “nobody has been hospitalised from my bath water, or have gotten sick. All of these memes were posted before I even shipped any out.”

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(Delphine did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

There’s one other thing that’s important to understand about Delphine. She is, as Patricia Hernandez noted over at Polygon, a troll. Three weeks ago, Delphine posted a (NSFW) photo on Instagram, writing in the caption that if it got 1 million likes, she’d open up a p*rnHub account. True to her word, once the post accrued the requisite likes, she did create a p*rnHub account—and then she proceeded to only post non-p*rnographic videos that had suggestive titles. It was a wildly successful stunt, one that even PewDiePie got involved in.

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It is not a huge stretch to assert that Delphine, who has built up a body of work that can be read as satirical, might be in the midst of some sort of long-term joke here, especially given her long list of stunts that all tend to subvert or toy with well-established fetish tropes. Even the notion of “gamer girl bath water” plays with all manner of stereotypes about women in games and how some men see them: as mythical unicorns to lust after. Coupled with the general contempt that mainstream culture holds for sex work and adjacent business practices like the selling of bath water, Delphine’s latest stunt is a perfect storm stirred up in the heart of an internet culture that is still content to objectify women and reacts with anger when said objectification makes the objectifiers the butt of a joke.

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Especially when it’s a really good joke.

The 'Gamer Girl Bath Water' Saga Keeps Getting Stranger (2024)

FAQs

What happened to the girl that sold her bath water? ›

Adult content creator Belle Delphine did a viral stunt in 2019 where she sold jars of her bathwater. She made about $90,000, but PayPal froze her account and kept the money as a fine for each sale. Five years later, PayPal returned her money after Business Insider asked the company about it.

How much money did Belle make from bath water? ›

Belle Delphine, the woman who went viral in 2019 for selling jars of her bathwater, revealed earlier this month that the stunt earned her $90K in profits.

How much does gamer girl bath water cost? ›

In the summer of 2019 Delphine started marketing her bath water for $30 per jar in a series of social media posts that went viral and became perfect fodder for internet engagement in the way that absurd, voyeuristic shenanigans that mix eroticism and parody often do. People bought the bath water.

Why do people buy used bath water? ›

Wanting to buy bathwater is entwined in sexual kink and internet 'simping,' or the online showcase of male subservience to beautiful women. The kink in question? Mysophilia, defined as a sexual interest in having contact with dirty objects or wanting to be unclean.

Who made gamer girl bath water? ›

In December, p*rnhub's annual statistics report listed Delphine as the most-searched celebrity in 2019; "Belle Delphine" was also the site's fourth-most-searched term in general during the year. On 1 July 2019, Delphine launched her online storefront, including a product dubbed "GamerGirl Bath Water."

How much does it cost to have 1 bath? ›

It's generally cheaper to take a shower instead of a bath.
Header Cell - Column 0Per useEvery day for a week
300-litre bath£2.80£19.60
100-litre bath£1.46£10.22
10-minute shower39.67p – 59.50p (average 49.56p)£3.47
5-minute shower19.83p – 29.75p (average 24.79p)£1.76
Nov 29, 2022

What uses more water a bath or a 30 minute shower? ›

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), a full bathtub requires about 70 gallons of water, while taking a five-minute shower uses 10 to 25 gallons. You might argue that very few people fill the tub to the top, but a simple calculation shows that either way, baths use more water.

Is it sanitary to reuse bath water? ›

While grey-water sourced from the bathtub is relatively clean, it can contain chemicals and bacteria which may be harmful to your children and pets. There are a number of clear instances where your bath grey-water should not be used in the household.

Why is a shower cheaper than a bath? ›

A short(ish) shower. Worcester Bosch's Bridges says: “A typical bath requires about 90 litres of water, split between 60 litres or so of hot water and 20 to 30 of cold. A normal thermostatic mixer shower head discharges about nine litres a minute, requiring about six litres of hot and three litres of cold.

What happens to used bath water? ›

The shower water drains into the sewer lines that eventually flow into waste water treatment plants. There the water is purified, usually a lot cleaner then when you used it, and then pumped back into the rivers or lakes where down stream users will repeat the cycle.

Do people still share bath water? ›

In a recent survey, we found that almost 1-in-5 of 35-44 year olds (Tyrone's age group) actually shared their bath water regularly. The figures drop off for younger (18-24) and elderly age groups (65+) – but it would seem sharing the bath water is not as uncommon as the Twittersphere would have us believe.

Did people used to share bath water? ›

To economize, bath water was shared by all family members. Indoor plumbing became more common in the 20th century and commercial advertising campaigns pushing new bath products began to influence public ideas about cleanliness, promoting the idea of a daily shower or bath.

What is special about the water in bath? ›

Bath exists because of the emergence of three natural springs in the heart of the city which deliver over 1 million litres of mineral-rich water every day. Uniquely in the UK, the mineral water is hot - it rises to the surface at a constant temperature of at least 45° C.

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