… Or useful. Because I entered badoo and it ask for an expensive fee just to talk with anyone.

  • Mothra@mander.xyz
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    3 months ago

    I think you should be able to get to use them somewhat effectively for free. I’ve never paid for any. Not sure how much this has changed, haven’t dated in a couple years.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 months ago

    Very. They’re all swipe boxes at this point, and that basically means it’s a slot machine that dispenses people. It’s designed to be addicting, not actually locate a compatible partner.

    No, I don’t really have a good alternative. Date-me docs are interesting, kind of a zine-y grassroots version of the app we wish we had, but they’re a small phenomenon and I don’t know how many people actually manage to meet through them. I heard something about fediverse dating, but that’s even more niche.

  • abrahambelch@programming.dev
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    3 months ago

    Im very well aware these apps are terrible in every aspect possible and only there to take advantage of people’s anxieties. Thus, I’m even more confused I met my girlfriend on Bumble and we’ve been a couple for two years now.

    To be fair, I’ve been trying my luck on tinder before and got so frustrated I deleted the app multiple times.

    As an introvert, finding people in real life can be a lot harder than for other people so you kinda have to rely on dating apps sometimes. This makes it even worse to see how they’re developing.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    3 months ago

    I use tinder, it’s been really good for me.

    The key is to use the app that is popular in your location.

    Attitude is a huge factor, think of it just like meeting random people, maybe having great discussions, maybe having an excuse to go to event with somebody, having a good adventure. No pressure no expectations. If you have a plan people love to join the plan. So the initial swipe match game is what it is. You can have a friend with a good camera take some nice photos, you can show interesting places, interesting things, let the app choose your most engaging photo for you automatically.

    When you talk to people find something interesting about them, ask them questions about it, have your own agenda, invite them to events you already have planned and no big deal if they don’t go. Surprisingly most people want to go and see what this cool thing you’re doing is. And then from there you know you can build up.

    The dating apps are just a meeting place of people who are interested in meeting people. If you treat it like that, just like a happy hour, you’re going to have a great time

      • B0rax@feddit.de
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        3 months ago

        No interesting hobbies? Have you been to interesting places? If no, do you want to change that? I know, it sounds boring to go alone, but it usually isn’t.

        • BlowMe@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          No and no. There’s nothing I’m interested or interesting here anyways and I can’t move out since I don’t have money.

          • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            Let me give you a different perspective, actually. It doesn’t matter as much that you do interesting things. What matters more is you manage to be funny and appear laid back enough that people won’t be put off. I don’t think I’ve ever mentioned anything in my profile that was a genuine interest. I answer any question as a joke, any time I send an opening message I try to make it a joke I find funny, and that usually works.

            Remember: those apps are banking on you staying on the app and spending money on Longer you’re there, the more likely they can get you to spend some money. Their business isn’t to successfully get you off the app. It’s to keep you on. So before you ever get too discouraged and down on yourself, remember that you’re working upstream against a soulless corporation.

            • BlowMe@lemmy.worldOP
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              3 months ago

              I’m not a funny person unfortunately. And I don’t see that fact changing, is my nature. I’m serious and don’t laugh at jokes that often.

          • Rinox@feddit.it
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            3 months ago

            So you spend your entire day either working/studying or staring at a blank wall?

            Btw, it doesn’t really matter if you do something actually interesting, it’s the attitude that counts. I’ve tried doing the same thing/going to the same event with different people, some very positive and outgoing, and some very negative, and the experience has been very very different.

            If your attitude is “I’m not interesting, and I don’t do anything interesting” then guess what, you won’t be interesting to anyone around you. Btw, going to the pub for a beer can be very interesting. Walking somewhere can be interesting.

            • BlowMe@lemmy.worldOP
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              3 months ago

              Then what am I supposed to do? Every time I go to walk alone or eat alone guess what I feel worse than being in my room. And it’s been for year now. Trust me when I’m telling you this: is not Interesting.

              • Rinox@feddit.it
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                3 months ago

                Then you need some friends. On the how to acquire one, there are a few ways. One of the most effective outside of school or work is to join some club, some class or some sport activity. For instance, I joined a latin dance class lately (salsa, bachata) and I’ve met lots of very friendly people. Every Friday they also organize a night out to some local clubs to dance, and there you can meet lots of other people with a similar interest. It’s just an example though, pick something interesting, join a group of people etc.

                You just need to be proactive. Staying all day in your room commiserating yourself is definitely not sexy

      • jet@hackertalks.com
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        3 months ago

        Should we examine your profile?

        Your username here is blow me, how is your dating app presence?

        Are you putting up any red flags, without realizing it?

        • BlowMe@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          I’m the boring nature type, I don’t have anything in my name, live with my family, but I’m loyal and respectful enough with the people I care. Isn’t that enough?

          I’m not even physically ugly.

          • Rinox@feddit.it
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            3 months ago

            I’m loyal and respectful enough with the people I care. Isn’t that enough?

            Nope, you need to actually meet people, do stuff, talk, go places etc. Simply existing and “being nice” is not enough.

          • SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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            3 months ago

            Harsh truth: No, it’s not enough. You have to convince somebody that their life will be better with you in it. Loyalty and respect are requisites for a good romantic relationship, not the reasons to get into one.

              • SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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                3 months ago

                Another harsh truth that I learned from existentialist writers, especially Albert Camus, is that we are cursed with freedom. How we choose to deal with what the world gives us is entirely up to us, and refusing to choose is also a choice. If we choose not to try to be somebody worth having as a partner, well, that is a choice.

                I also understand depression, and that making that effort may not be possible. Then, healthy alternative is to affirmatively make the choice not to try, and to own it. Sometimes, people call this, “owning your shit .” Paradoxically, it helps a lot by putting you back in control of your own life, instead of feeling like the universe’s chew toy.

                So, listen to me or not. It’s your choice.

    • B0rax@feddit.de
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      3 months ago

      Upvote for actually giving (I think) useful advice and adjusting expectations.

  • Daxtron2@startrek.website
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    3 months ago

    Free version? Almost useless, had 1 decent match in a year. Paid version, will definitely get you seen more but if you don’t know how to make a good profile, you’re not going to get more matches.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    Dating programs will always be useless as long as people will have a will to misuse them. For example, the asexual ones get phoned-in complaints on a daily basis that the people that end up meeting the other person aren’t asexual and want to get in bed with their date as soon as night comes. Much of this also comes from culture, in the case of asexuality because it’s ingrained in some people that asexuality doesn’t exist or that it’s absolute.

  • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    They aren’t great, but they aren’t totally useless either. I met my amazing fiance through one, but I had to wade through a ton of shit first.

  • Jeena@piefed.jeena.net
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    3 months ago

    It depends. For years I had either no or bad matches at home, always the same people showing up there, etc…

    But then one day while on a business trip abroad I installed a new app, payed the fee (for some reason, normally I never did) and matched with the most amazing person who made me move half way across the globe for her and now almost four years later we still live together, have a 1.5 years old son and plan finally to marry (there were some practical problems we had to fix first).

    For me it worked out, but that’s survival bias I guess.

  • alyth@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    As a man: Prepare to be rejected over and over, to feel disposible and useless, unwanted and nobody likes you and you will never be as good as other men and you might as well end it now.

    As a woman: Prepare to meet men who have the biggest mommy issues, to be called an entitled bitch and everybody who likes you will promptly abandon you once they figure out who you really are.

    These apps prey on your worst anxieties about yourself, and then sell you the remedy: An outrageously expensive subscription to skip past the chaff and find your true life mate. Except, then you’d leave the platform, and you’d stop paying up. Match group is busy gobbling up every dating app they can get their hands on and they will stop at nothing to turn them all into the same steaming pile of shit.

    • joelfromaus@aussie.zone
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      3 months ago

      As a man this sums up my experience.

      Speaking to a woman who found their spouse via dating apps she said not to sweat it, pretend you’re in a job interview and trying to get to know the other person. Since then I’ve realised she was right, but as a man I’m the one being interviewed. Just like a job interview; it’s stressful, frustrating and often you’ll never know where you’ve gone wrong when they turn you down.

  • Senseless@feddit.org
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    3 months ago

    Below average, nerdy, niche hetero guy here with no desire to every have any kids. I’m using dating apps since about November now.

    OkCupid: Not that common in my country, which is why I tend to get all kinds of “likes” from people all over the world. Mostly Africa. It has some - as I call it - “FOMO features” included. Meaning: I rarely get any likes when I use premium. The second(!) I don’t have premium any more and can’t check the people that swiped me, there are suddenly 7 likes. It’s a money grab, nothing more. The only interesting thing about it, is the vast amount of questions you can answer and compare with people you swipe.

    Bumble: It’s basically the same hell hole everyone says tinder is. Also FOMO-features.

    Hinge: The profiles are somewhat limited, compared to other apps. There are some premium plans, but no FOMO-features. The only two dates I ever had came from this app.

    blindmate: It’s a very small new app. Not even sure if it’s already available in another language other than German. You can upload up to 6 pictures, set what you’re looking for (age, sex, type of relationship). All other things are done by friends you invite. They answer questions about you (max. 7/day) as well as swipe for you (max. 30/day). If your friends and the friends of the person your friends swiped for both give their okay, you’re matched. At first the main profile pic is pixeled until you exchanged a few messages. You can use Icebreakers which consist of answers of you and your match the friends have given. After a few more messages you can choose to unlock your profile for the match. I have 4 friends that swipe for me for months, 5300+ in total with a total of 28 matches. I’m starting to think that I am the issue here.

  • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I met my wife on Tinder years ago before there was a premium version. I also used OkCupid. Both were bought by Match which ruined them. Badoo has always been filled with scammer from what I remember.

    From what I have heard, dating apps are way worse nowadays. That sucks for lots of people who are shit picking people up in person. There are also fewer third places where it is obvious that single people are open to being social rather than getting annoyed that they are being approached.

    A better alternative might be to find a hobby group and try to meet people there.

            • BlowMe@lemmy.worldOP
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              3 months ago

              The gamer girl that’s into gamers is a myth yeah, but what I’m supposed to do. That’s all I care about. That and listening my music. I can’t fake interest in things I don’t care about

              • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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                3 months ago

                The gamer girl that’s into gamers is a myth yeah, but what I’m supposed to do.

                Maybe don’t have this toxic attitude. That will absolutely come across when talking with women.

              • Jeena@piefed.jeena.net
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                3 months ago

                Perhaps it’s time to find better hobbies? It’s a chore and difficult because you don’t know what you like/don’t like before you try it for some time.

                Independent of finding girls it’s also good for your own psyche to get away from the screen. And if it has to be gaming perhaps you can find people who are into board games?