WusFeetLinks Review
wusfeetlinks.com
Wu’s Feet Links: The Grandfather of Foot Fetish Directories
Before FeetFinder existed. Before WikiFeet had its first upload. Before OnlyFans turned every woman with a decent pedicure into a small business owner. Before the algorithm decided foot content was worth suppressing. Before any of that, there was Wu. Whoever Wu is — and the operator has maintained the kind of personal mystery that most people only achieve by dying — they registered wusfeetlinks.com in March of the year 2000, built a directory of links to female foot fetish sites, and apparently decided that this was exactly what they wanted to be doing for the next quarter century without significantly changing the approach at any point along the way. The result is the oldest, most comprehensive and most completely unbothered foot fetish link directory on the internet, a site that has watched the entire adult web transform around it while continuing to do its one specific thing in a design framework that would have looked slightly dated in 2003 and now looks like visiting a museum dedicated to early internet aesthetics while trying to find somewhere to look at feet.
The foot fetish community, for context, represents one of the most consistently popular sexual interests on the internet, reliably appearing in the top fetish searches on every major tube site and generating a dedicated commercial ecosystem of content sites, clip stores, celebrity databases and vendor marketplaces that did not exist in any organised form until people like Wu started building directories to catalogue it. The fact that a site built by one person in their spare time at the turn of the millennium is still operating as a meaningful reference point for foot fetishists in 2025 says something both about Wu’s dedication and about how comprehensively this particular corner of the internet has failed to produce anything better at the core directory function. There are flashier foot sites. There are bigger traffic foot platforms. None of them have replaced Wu’s Feet Links as the place you go when you want to find literally everything that exists in this niche, rated or categorised or at minimum listed.
What Wu’s Feet Links Actually Is: A Directory, Not a Tube
Important clarification upfront for anyone arriving expecting a gallery of arches and toes to scroll through immediately. Wu’s Feet Links is a curated directory of links to other sites, not a content host in its own right. This distinction matters because the browsing experience is fundamentally different from a tube site and the value proposition is different too. You come here to find things, specifically to find the best free foot fetish sites, the celebrity feet resources, the membership sites worth paying for, the vendors selling foot-related content and merchandise, and the community spaces where fellow enthusiasts congregate to discuss their appreciation for a well-turned ankle in exhaustive detail. You don’t come here to watch a video directly. You come here to find where the video is and then go there.
The directory is organised across categories that cover more ground than you’d expect if you thought foot fetishism was a simple monolithic interest. Free sites separated from paid sites. Celebrity feet given their own section, because apparently a significant portion of foot fetishists want specifically the feet of famous women rather than anonymous women, which raises interesting questions about the psychology of parasocial attraction that nobody in this review is qualified to answer. Vendors listed separately for anyone looking to purchase content, custom content or the kind of worn footwear items that represent a genuinely thriving secondary market. Message boards and chatrooms for community discussion. The breadth of that category structure reflects decades of someone paying close attention to what the foot fetish community actually wants and building the navigation around those real interests rather than guessing.
The Content Quality Problem: Some of These Links Are as Old as the Site
Here is the honest problem with a 25-year-old link directory in an industry where sites launch, get popular, get monetised aggressively, decline and then quietly stop updating with the regularity of a subscription that forgot to cancel itself. A meaningful proportion of the outbound links on Wu’s Feet Links point at sites that no longer exist at their original URL, have pivoted to something unrelated, have been bought by domain squatters, or are still online but haven’t added content since the Obama administration. The directory has clearly received maintenance over the years — it hasn’t been completely frozen since 2000 — but the curation quality is inconsistent enough that clicking through the listings involves a meaningful percentage of dead ends that a properly maintained contemporary directory would have pruned.
The lack of ratings or reviews on most listed sites compounds this problem. You can see a site is listed in a category and get a brief description, but you can’t tell from the directory entry whether it’s actively updated, whether the free content has been replaced with paywalls since listing, whether the quality is worth your time, or whether the site has changed hands and is now serving malware alongside foot content. WikiFeet and FeetFinder have solved this problem for their specific formats through user reviews and active moderation. Wu’s Feet Links is operating on the honour system and the honour of some of those listed sites has deteriorated significantly since listing.
The Celebrity Feet Section: Actually Delivering What It Promises
One area where Wu’s Feet Links consistently earns its reputation is the celebrity feet coverage, which pre-dates WikiFeet and covers a broader range of sources than any single celebrity feet database manages independently. The logic of celebrity foot fetishism, which involves finding existing photos of famous women that happen to show their feet in satisfying detail, means the directory approach is genuinely useful here because the content is distributed across entertainment sites, red carpet photographers, fan archives and dedicated celebrity feet databases rather than concentrated in any one place. Wu’s aggregation of those sources is legitimately useful for someone who wants to find the best celebrity feet content rather than spending their own time hunting across the internet.
WikiFeet is the more famous celebrity feet reference at this point and has a better user interface and ratings system, but Wu’s coverage predates it and in some categories where WikiFeet’s crowdsourced database has gaps, the older curated links fill them usefully. These two resources are complements rather than competitors for the dedicated enthusiast, which is a niche sentence to write but accurately describes how the foot fetish community appears to use them.
The Design: A Functioning Archaeological Site
Wu’s Feet Links looks exactly like a website built in 2000 by someone who was genuinely good at building websites in 2000. The layout is text-heavy, link-dense and built for desktop browsers at resolutions that haven’t been standard for fifteen years. The colour scheme and typography communicate a specific era of internet design with the kind of period accuracy that would be impressive if it were intentional retro aesthetics and is instead simply the result of nothing having been updated. On a phone you will zoom, scroll horizontally, squint at small text and generally have an experience that makes the content harder to access than it should be given that the majority of internet browsing now happens on mobile devices.
The broken SSL certificate is the most practically concerning technical issue. Browsers throw security warnings before loading the site, which for casual visitors is enough to make them leave immediately, and for foot fetishists determined to access Wu’s comprehensive directory is an annoying hurdle to clear on the way to whatever they came for. For a 25-year-old site with a loyal audience it’s a fixable maintenance failure and the fact that it’s unfixed suggests either the operator doesn’t know or doesn’t particularly care, both of which are fine for Wu personally and unfortunate for the site’s accessibility to new visitors.
Final Verdict
Wu’s Feet Links is the internet’s foot fetish institution, built before the industry had institutions, maintained for longer than most adult sites survive and still the most comprehensive link directory in the niche despite never having been properly modernised. If you want to find everything that exists in the foot fetish content universe, categorised and collected in one place, there is genuinely nowhere better. If you want a smooth, modern, mobile-friendly experience with active quality control and reliably live links, Wu’s Feet Links will frustrate you in proportion to how much you care about those things. The broken SSL, the dated design and the link rot are real problems. The 25-year archive of curated foot fetish content across every conceivable sub-niche is a real achievement that the site’s successors haven’t managed to match even with better funding and better technology. Wu built something that endures. Wu just hasn’t touched the CSS since Blair was in power and it shows.
- The original and still the biggest foot fetish directory online
- 25 years of curated links covering every toe-curling niche
- Celebrity feet section that WikiFeet wishes it thought of first
- Free sites properly separated from paid membership sites
- Forums and message board for the community to get weird together
- Genuinely comprehensive vendor listings for buying foot-related content
- Design is a love letter to the year 2000 and nothing else
- Session duration of under 90 seconds suggests people grab links and bolt
- No mobile optimisation whatsoever prepare to zoom and squint
- Half the outbound links are dead or pointing at abandoned sites