Skip to main content
  1. Contributor Content
  2. Features

Dating Apps Are Evolving Beyond the Swipe To AI Agents 

Add as a preferred source on Google
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone
Yeet Team

Online dating apps have long been dominated by “the swipe,” but as the digital landscape evolves, people are demanding more from the dating platforms. Individuals are no longer satisfied with just scrolling and swiping on potential partners. The action is increasingly seen as repetitive and gamified, and doesn’t feel meaningful to users. Because of the low stakes, some users aren’t as invested in the process, resulting in common frustrations like ghosting and stalled conversations.  

Dating apps are entering a post-swipe phase in response to the cultural shift, with some platforms beginning to introduce AI agents that take a more active role in how interactions unfold, such as Yeeta, developed by the dating app Yeet. 

Recommended Videos

According to the team behind the dating app, Yeet, “the problem isn’t that people don’t know how to talk. It’s that swipe-based dating often results in low-investment or short-lived interactions that never fully begin. When interactions are easy to enter and just as easy to abandon, where ghosting is common, users often report fatigue over time.” 

The Evolution of AI in Dating 

Swiping left or right may have once felt efficient, but now many users feel it is often an exhausting and fruitless endeavor. They are burned out from scrolling through endless profiles, opening conversations that stall out, and a lack of emotional engagement from others.  

In response, many dating apps have adopted artificial intelligence (AI) and implemented features that help users polish their profiles by enhancing photos, suggesting attention-grabbing openers, and making user biographies more interesting. Updating profiles to make them more compelling still doesn’t address the issue of how difficult it is to have meaningful exchanges with other users on the apps. 

Some dating apps are now using AI to help users reach out to those they’re interested in connecting with by suggesting opening messages and helping with conversation prompts.  This is a shift away from focusing on presentation and concentrating on making real, true connections. 

The Move Toward AI-Mediated Interaction 

The dating app, Yeet, has introduced Yeeta, an AI agent that not only helps set up interactions but also participates. Yeeta engages with users on the app to facilitate social interactions and helps smooth out any social awkwardness or friction. It works with users before, during, and after live conversations. It doesn’t speak on behalf of users, but helps them through prompts.  

The AI agents observe and respond to the conversation, analyzing emotional signals and guiding users by explaining how they are perceived. The AI assists in shaping real-time conversations between users to prevent them from dropping off or ghosting.  

Instead of first judging profiles, AI removes swiping and supports real-time match and chat. This urges users to meet in person before deciding whether there’s chemistry. 

What This Shift Could Mean for Dating 

This interaction-first model changes how people meet through apps, emphasizing communication over swiping through profiles. For a long time, the apps were focused on selection through scrolling and swiping, but are now evolving to emphasize real-time interactions in hopes of creating true connections between individuals.  

The concept behind AI agents helping maintain conversations is simple. By helping users stay in chats with subtle prompts, individuals can overcome their initial awkwardness and see whether there is chemistry to build on.  

Digital Trends partners with external contributors. All contributor content is reviewed by the Digital Trends editorial staff.
DT Staff
Digital Trends has a simple mission: to help readers easily understand how tech affects the way they live. We are your…
Topics
How VRURC Is Adapting to the Rise of Mobile Power in an Always-On World 
How Portable Charging Became a Daily Essential
Electronics, Speaker, Tape

The constant reliance on smartphones and wearable tech has reset expectations for daily life. Battery anxiety, when a low power warning appears during a commute, a meeting, or while using navigation, has become a common experience. Early versions of the portable charger were often bulky, slow, and inconvenient to carry. Over time, the power bank has evolved into a more practical tool, with smaller designs and improved performance that better match daily routines and constant connectivity. 

Today, brands like VRURC are focusing on making portable charging more practical for everyday use, with designs that prioritize portability and simplicity. 

Read more
Ready or Not, “Embodied AI” Is Leaving the Lab and Entering Infrastructure
Robotics, or “embodied AI,” is steadily moving toward useful adoption and placing new demands on data architecture.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Robotics already has applications in many industries, from manufacturing to healthcare. That is to say, this futuristic technology has been deployed and proven its capabilities; what comes next is the socioeconomic response. In the same way that the early internet and smartphone technology were normalized in local and international culture, such a level of transformation may be seen in robotics.

The Shift From Novel to Normal

Read more
The Return of Spatial Computing in Gaming
Hardware-free 3D is becoming more common in gaming and other entertainment.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Spatial computing in gaming has been bound to head-mounted devices for the past several years. While virtual reality (VR) headsets, augmented reality (AR) glasses, and mixed-reality wearables have dominated the marketplace in virtual gaming, many continue to suffer the problems their early counterparts had, which include the complexity of setup, the comfort of the device, and the isolation one must be in when using the device.

Today’s engineers and designers in the display industry are looking to bypass wearable hardware entirely. An example of this comes from the ZIMO1 interactive light-field display by Zondision, which utilizes screen-based options for 3D visualization.

Read more