BiSexDating vs Tinder
Tinder is built for the widest possible audience, and that's exactly why it works well for a lot of people. BiSexDating takes a narrower, more deliberate approach: everyone here already understands what it means to be attracted to more than one gender, so you're not starting from zero on every match.
At a glance
BiSexDating
Built specifically around bisexual, bi-curious, and couple daters. Being bi is the default, not a footnote.
Tinder
A general-purpose swipe app for every orientation. Bisexual daters are one slice of a much broader audience.
Who the audience actually is
On a general app, being bisexual is something you disclose and then often have to explain, justify, or field questions about. On BiSexDating, it's the shared starting point for every profile on the platform, which changes the tone of conversations from the first message onward.
Matching philosophy
Tinder is optimized for volume and speed, which suits people who want to cast a wide net. BiSexDating is built around a smaller, more intentional pool where matches already have context on who you are, which tends to mean fewer conversations spent re-explaining the basics and more spent actually getting to know someone.
Profiles built for bisexual daters, not adapted for them
General apps weren't designed with bisexual dating patterns in mind, and it shows in small ways: filters, assumptions, and defaults that don't quite fit. BiSexDating's whole layout, from sign-up to browsing, is built around the way bisexual singles and couples actually date.
Start where the understanding already exists
If you're tired of re-explaining your orientation before you can even get to a real conversation, that's the specific problem BiSexDating solves.
