BiSexDating vs Bumble

Bumble is known for putting women in control of the first message, a structure that works well for a broad, general dating audience. BiSexDating takes a different starting point: instead of one feature aimed at a wide audience, the entire platform is shaped around bisexual, bi-curious, and couple daters from the ground up.

At a glance

BiSexDating

Built specifically around bisexual, bi-curious, and couple daters. Being bi is the default, not a feature layered on top.

Bumble

A general-purpose app best known for its women-message-first structure, serving singles of every orientation.

Structure versus shared context

Bumble's messaging structure solves a specific problem for a general audience. BiSexDating solves a different one: instead of governing who messages first, it makes sure everyone on the platform already shares an understanding of what it means to be attracted to more than one gender before a conversation even starts.

Matching philosophy

Bumble optimizes for a wide, fast-moving pool with structured first contact. BiSexDating optimizes for a smaller, more intentional pool where the shared starting point does a lot of the compatibility work already, which often means conversations get real faster.

Couples-friendly by design

General swipe apps are typically built with individual daters in mind first. BiSexDating's browsing and profile options are built to work naturally for couples looking to meet someone together, not just individual singles.

Start where the understanding already exists

If you're looking for a platform where you don't have to introduce your orientation before the actual conversation begins, that's the specific problem BiSexDating solves.