There is a walk a lot of women know. The parking garage after a late shift. The block between the bus stop and the front door when the streetlight is out. The moment you feel somebody behind you and your hand goes straight to your phone — not to call anyone, just to have something in your hand. Something that makes you feel less alone out there. What if that something actually had teeth? This device is built around one smart idea: a predator who doesn’t know what you’re carrying can’t take it from you before you use it. It looks exactly like a smartphone — same shape, same size, same weight in your hand. You can hold it on the bus, walk with it through a parking lot, and nobody gives it a second look. But press that button and you’ve got 14,000,000 volts, a 120-decibel alarm that stops a block cold, and a 50-lumen flashlight cutting through the dark. Who This Is Built For Women who work night shifts and walk to their cars alone. College students navigating campus after dark. Rideshare drivers who need something within reach that doesn’t announce itself. Women who’ve been told to carry protection but don’t want to look like they’re carrying protection. If you’ve ever felt that specific kind of alert — not quite fear, just awareness — this was made with you in mind. If you want something you can carry openly in any situation without drawing attention, and you want real stopping capability in a familiar form factor, this is your answer. If you need something that works without practice or special technique, this is it. You don’t have to aim for a pressure point. You don’t have to remember a sequence. You press, it works. Key Features and What They Mean for You 14,000,000-Volt Stun Capability — Delivers a serious, disorienting shock that buys you the seconds you need to get away from a threat. Realistic Smartphone Disguise — Looks like an ordinary cell phone in your hand, so you can carry it openly without telegraphing your protection to anyone nearby. 120dB Built-In Alarm — Louder than a car horn. Draws immediate attention in any crowded or semi-crowded space, which is often enough on its own. 50-Lumen Flashlight — Practical for parking lots, stairwells, or anywhere the light isn’t what it should be. USB Rechargeable — No hunting for batteries. Plug it in like any other device. Keeps it ready without a second thought. How It Compares Feature This Device Standard Stun Gun Personal Alarm Only Disguised Design Yes — looks like a smartphone No — visible as a weapon N/A Stun Capability 14,000,000V Varies, typically similar None Built-In Alarm 120dB Rarely included 120–130dB typical Ease of Carry Blends in anywhere Requires concealment Small, clip-on Practical Details This stun gun is legal in most U.S. states, but stun device laws vary by location — check your city and state regulations before carrying. It charges via USB, so keep it topped off the same way you charge your phone. The package includes the stun gun unit and charging cable. No external batteries required. Wipe clean with a dry cloth; do not submerge. It is priced at $24.95, which is a real tool at a real price. I have recommended things that cost five times this to people who had five times the budget. This holds its own. Add it to your cart and carry it tonight. That walk you know — you deserve to make it without your heart in your throat. Questions People Ask Before They Buy Will people really think it’s an actual phone?Yes. The design is built to pass a casual glance — and a casual glance is all most situations give anyone. It won’t fool someone who picks it up and examines it, but the whole point is that nobody gets that close before you’ve already made your move. How do I know when it needs charging?Check it regularly — once a week is a good habit, the same way you’d check the batteries in a smoke detector. USB charging means it’s easy to top off any time you’re near a port. A charged device is the only device that helps you when it counts. Is it hard to activate under stress?No. That’s the design. There’s no complicated sequence. One motion, one button, immediate response. Practice it at home so your hands know what to do before your brain catches up. Muscle memory matters in a real moment. Is this legal where I live?Stun guns are legal in most U.S. states, but some cities and states have restrictions. Hawaii, Rhode Island, and a handful of municipalities have specific rules. Take five minutes to look up your local laws — that’s always time well spent before you carry any self-defense tool.