If you’re single and not online dating, then you should be. But take heed! Not all are homo-friendly. So before you get going, here’s what you need to know about the best (and worst) available –
Overall – This newbie app has stormed onto the scene, it’s famous « swipe right » concept asking you to essentially thumbs up or thumbs down women in your area. You set the « prowl-o-meter » to how long you’re willing to go to find your girl, then start flicking through endless pictures, vapidly deciding which ones you may or may not like based on their face. Like you don’t even have to fill in any boxes. Just sync and go.
Best Feature – Linked to Facebook. Now although this makes many of us cringe they honestly don’t post « I AM INCREDIBLY DESPERATE » all over your page. In fact they don’t touch it at all. Which, depressingly, resulted in me being matched with my own twin sister, begging the question; Why did we both swipe right?!
Also – Tinder is bisexual friendly. So if you choose to be sent pictures of male genitalia via your iPhone then you are free as a bird to do so.
They just use your info to match you via some clever Tinder spell
(I’m not joking, this is all men do. It’s astounding how men feel that the reasonable online equivalent of a handshake is a selfie of their premium product. If you weren’t lesbian before, then you sure as hell will be after seeing an array of your local members. Members. Consider yourself warned.)
You know when you’re in a gay club, and the best you can usually hope for is a few fleeting yet purposeful glances from interested women, before they quickly flick their eyes away when you catch them at it? Like, no one goes and talks to each other, we all just stand in a room in various huddles looking out of the corners of our eyes until we’re all drunk enough for the « feel each other up on the dancefloor » portion of the evening. Who says romance is dead, eh?
Just an inbox full of women who have said « Yes! » to each other, but now no-one is actually making the first move. It’s hilarious, too, because you BOTH KNOW you are interested. It’s essentially a never ending game of chicken. We may as well all post pictures of the nonchalant sides of our far-too-cool faces as our profile pictures and save ourselves the trouble. I’ve resorted to using it to send my sister lesbian themed hashtags I find hilarious, ie #KeepYourYuletideGay and #YourFaceOrMine.
Overall – This lesbian specific app is based on a Facebook-style profile idea where you post and preen on a news feed style system until someone talks to you. HER (Daatch) is completely for women, and you have to give it to them, they know lesbians. No hiding in the corner here. if you’ve shown interest in someone, they’re going to know about it. Everything you do or click on comes up as a notification, so browse wisely
Best Feature – OK, so they do know lesbians, and well. There’s a lot to do within the actual app, as it encourages users to create an up to date profile that moves and interacts just like a Facebook page, plus an online blog written by the team themselves with some pretty decent content. Cleverly, this keeps you and the person you’re chatting to logged on within the actual app so that dialogue becomes smoother and more instant. As opposed to the usual « I’ll check that on the bus, read it, then reply when I’m ignoring the washing up two hours later ». Which is NOT how to make a gal feel special.
Worst Feature – Blockless. Although you can block users from contacting you, their profile still remains on your « radar » and so your exes face will be smiling up at you no matter how many buttons you press. Tears on your smartphone screen do not a happy lesbian make, but Daatch’s « Relationship Mode » helpfully enables users to stay live while in a relationship, making the exes presence on it even more deliriously painful as she showcases pictures of her and her new girlfriend getting cats or matching tattoos. How soothing.
Overall – PoF ranks you with your fellow lady-loving-ladies via your answers to a generic questionnaire, then matches you with those it feels are best suited interest and goal-wise.
Best Feature – Their « Near You » section, which via the app allows you to see how many lesbians are in your area at any given time. Like almost as an actual chart or map. It’s incredible. As well as allowing me to spend many a fun night GPS tracking the future love-of-my-life, this feature is also very handy for seeing who lives locally and most active online.
Worst Feature – Their « You both like the same films and are therefore soulmates » fast-food approach to dating is slightly off base. Also, Not Bisexual Friendly. You have to pick whether you’re in to men or women, as the brain-trust over at PoF have clearly decided that your bisexual ways should not be tolerated on the internet (even though that’s probably where they started).
Overall – It’s beastly boasting about « Behavioural Matchmaking » makes you feel like a stud dog and it’s promise to allow you to « Browse profiles for free » before paying sends us straight to the Close Window button. This outdated and almost specifically un-LBGT-friendly app is about as much fun as stabbing yourself repeatedly in the eye with the pointy end of your rainbow coloured flag.
Worst Feature – It will connect you to Facebook, and although it won’t tell your Wall about it, you will be used in their side-ways marketing scheme via use of the « your friend is using Zoosk » sponsored plugs in your friend’s New Feed. Not cool, Zoosk. Not cool https://kissbrides.com/russian-women/astrakhan/ at all. I do not want my God-Mother or Vicar knowing I am trawling for women on the internet. It’s far more fun getting drunk and telling them myself at weddings.
Well, Tinder is the internet equivalent of this phenomenon
So there you have it, the best and worst of the bunch. Now don’t be discouraged! At the end of the day if the right woman is out there, no amount of firewall settings or horribly set up matching algorithms are going to keep you apart. So have at it and Happy Homo-Hunting.