A new dating app called Cheers is designed to allow your friends to set you up on dates with their friends.
Launched last month as a New York City-focused, invite-only platform and focused for now on South Asian people, Cheers is in some ways not unlike other dating apps: It asks users to say where they went to school, if they drink, and so on.
What makes Cheers unique is that you can add your contacts to your profile section. This is where it starts to take the shape of Instagram. Your contacts can post pictures and tag you in them, meaning people who “follow” your contacts can see you in their pictures, go to your profile, and message you. Think of it, says founder Sahil Ahuja, as Instagram meets Hinge. (To that end, Cheers also has an AI tool where a user can take a screenshot of their Hinge profile and the tool will use the screenshot to fill in the blanks on their Cheers account.)
“[We were] brainstorming ideas around, you know, how can we make it easier to meet people through friends and family in a way that’s not awkward?” Ahuja says, speaking about the app’s origins.
Cheers is meant for people of all relationship statuses. When you first sign up, it will ask if you’re single and looking for yourself, or taken and just looking to set up your friends. If you are just there for your friends you get the fun of swiping for them to try and set them up with people you know.
“What’s nice about it is it’s not random people, because the friends on there are your contacts,” says Ahuja. “So it’s a little bit more of a smaller network than if you’re using Instagram followers or Facebook friends, for example, because the contacts are people that are you know, you actually feel comfortable reaching out to because you have their number.”
Forbes reported that 79% of Gen Z and 80% of millenials are experiencing dating app burnout. These stats don’t scare Ahuja, though—they motivate him. “I’m excited to build something that Gen Z feels excited about,” says Ahuja. “It feels a little bit more like mirroring what people do on Instagram or in real life.”
Cheers is currently available on iOS.
Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen
Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

As AI evolves, the world of work is getting even better for the most c

It has, to date, been a calm hurricane season in the state of Florida, but any resident of the Southeast will tell you that the deeper into summer we go, the more dangerous it becomes.
T

TikTok has become obsessed with an alleged shoplifter who spent seven straight hou

Apple says the upcoming iOS 26, expected in a polished “release” version in September, will support devices back to the iPhone 11 from September 2019 and second-generation iPhone SE from April 202

“India is on the moon,” S. Somanath, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organization, announced in


Good news: Vine might be coming back. Bad news: in AI form, courtesy o