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How to Tell It's Really Me

One rule beats every impersonator: this site is the source of truth.

By Raven Belle · Updated 2026-07-10

Impersonation is a constant, boring fact of life for adult creators, and I'd rather arm you against it than pretend it doesn't happen. Here's how to verify you're actually dealing with me, and not a lookalike account monetizing my face.

The single rule that beats every scam: this website is the source of truth. Ravenbellexxx.com is mine. Every official platform, handle, and link I have is listed here — the subscribe page carries the full set. If a handle, store, or "backup account" is not linked from this site, treat it as fake. That one habit filters out essentially every impersonator, because scammers can fake a profile but they can't edit my website.

The official handles, for the record:

  • OnlyFans: @ravenbelle1. That exact spelling.
  • Fansly: @Ravenbelle. If you've seen a lookalike handle elsewhere, that isn't me.
  • ManyVids: the store linked from this site. Similar stores under similar names aren't mine.
  • Chaturbate: kurvybbw.
  • The name itself: I perform as Raven Belle, and some platforms list me as Raven Bell. Both spellings appear on my verified pages; that part is normal.

How the common scams actually look, so you recognize them:

  • The "personal" DM from a second account. Someone with my photos messages you claiming their main account got banned, or that this is their "private" profile. My accounts are the ones listed here. A new one would be announced here first, not whispered to you in a DM.
  • The too-good deal. Fake accounts love pricing that undercuts reality to rush you into paying off-platform. If someone claiming to be me asks for payment through a channel this site doesn't list, walk away.
  • The re-upload storefront. Whole catalogs of stolen clips sold under a near-miss name. Check the store against my ManyVids link before buying anything.

Why this matters beyond your wallet: every dollar an impersonator collects is a fan who thinks they supported me and didn't. The person most hurt by the scam is usually the fan — you paid, you got stolen content or nothing, and the real me never even knew you existed. Verification isn't paranoia; it's making sure your support lands.

If you do hit a fake, two useful moves. Report it on the platform — impersonation reports from fans get action faster than you'd expect, especially in volume. And if you're unsure whether something is me, ask through a channel you already trust: the DMs on my verified OnlyFans or Fansly, or the contact email on this site. I would genuinely rather answer ten "is this you?" messages than have one fan scammed under my name.

Bookmark the site. Check unfamiliar handles against it. That's the whole system, and it works.

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