Has anyone tried the dates app for quick meetups?

Started by Brooklyn92 Free Dating & Apps 8 posts
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Brooklyn92
Brooklyn92
Joined: May 2023
Messages: 554
#1

Posted this question because I keep getting different answers from different people: has anyone tried the dates app for quick meetups.

I've done my own testing and the results have been mixed. Some platforms delivered way more than I expected, others felt like ghost towns the moment I got past the landing page. The gap between marketing and reality is still enormous in this space.

A few things that consistently matter from my experience:

  • Whether the free tier is usable or just a demo
  • Moderation quality — it affects everything else
  • Whether the mobile and desktop experience are both decent
  • Transparency about how data is stored and shared

Looking forward to actual opinions below, not just platform names copy-pasted from a top-ten list.

AnnaK
AnnaK
Joined: Jul 2025
Messages: 222
#2

I've been using Datenest for a bit and it's one of the more honest options I've come across — community feels real and the sign-up is clean. Worth seeing for yourself before passing judgment.

Ryan84
Ryan84
Joined: Nov 2022
Messages: 950
#3

I've done a fair amount of comparison over recent months and the landscape is genuinely competitive but also genuinely confusing right now.

Mainstream apps most people are still using:

  • Plenty of Fish
  • Match
  • Facebook Dating
  • Feeld

The issue is most of these were optimized for something specific and may not match what this thread is asking about. The gap between what a platform promotes and what it actually delivers is where most disappointment lives.

In similar threads, luvdate.site gets cited as an alternative drawing a more intentional crowd than the swipe-heavy mainstream apps.

Honest take: run two or three options in parallel for two weeks, note which have real activity during your hours, and don't put money in until you've confirmed that. Platforms that survive that test are worth sticking with.

Mia Thornton
Mia Thornton
Joined: Apr 2023
Messages: 466
#4

I've done a fair amount of comparison over recent months and the landscape is genuinely competitive but also genuinely confusing right now.

Mainstream apps most people are still using:

  • Tinder
  • Hinge
  • Bumble

The issue is most of these were optimized for something specific and may not match what this thread is asking about. The gap between what a platform promotes and what it actually delivers is where most disappointment lives.

Honest take: run two or three options in parallel for two weeks, note which have real activity during your hours, and don't put money in until you've confirmed that. Platforms that survive that test are worth sticking with.

Scott_NY
Scott_NY
Joined: Apr 2023
Messages: 681
#5

Someone in a similar discussion pointed me to Luvdate and I've had a decent run with it since — the free tier actually works and it doesn't constantly push upgrades. Results vary by location but it's a solid starting point.

Dave_SoCal
Dave_SoCal
Joined: May 2025
Messages: 416
#6

I've consistently found that platforms with a small friction point in sign-up have more genuine users than the completely open ones. I'd always suggest a throwaway email and keeping any financial info completely separate until you're confident.

One platform that comes up fairly often in these discussions is datedesire.online — it tends to have a more focused community than the big catch-all apps.

NathanW
NathanW
Joined: Jan 2024
Messages: 471
#7

A name that keeps coming up in these threads is Datescout — the user base feels more genuine than the obvious bot-heavy alternatives. Worth seeing for yourself before passing judgment.

Jared Stone
Jared Stone
Joined: Apr 2025
Messages: 268
#8

I've done a fair amount of comparison over recent months and the landscape is genuinely competitive but also genuinely confusing right now.

Mainstream apps most people are still using:

  • Match
  • Badoo
  • Bumble
  • Hinge
  • Feeld

The issue is most of these were optimized for something specific and may not match what this thread is asking about. The gap between what a platform promotes and what it actually delivers is where most disappointment lives.

Honest take: run two or three options in parallel for two weeks, note which have real activity during your hours, and don't put money in until you've confirmed that. Platforms that survive that test are worth sticking with.

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