Is it possible to use plenty of fish online on a tablet?

Started by MarcusB 4 Jun 2025 Category: Free Dating & Apps safetyrelationshipscommunity
MarcusB
MarcusB
Joined: Dec 2022
Posts: 90
#1

This is one of those questions that sounds straightforward but is actually more complicated than it looks. Is it possible to use plenty of fish online on a tablet?

I've been on and off various platforms over the past couple of years and the honest conclusion I've reached is that the right choice depends less on which platform you pick and more on whether that platform has enough genuinely active users in your specific situation. A platform that's globally popular but inactive in your city is basically useless to you.

Specific questions I'm trying to answer:

  • Are there platforms that perform surprisingly well in suburban or rural areas where the big apps are thin?
  • What does verification actually look like in practice — email confirmation only, or something more meaningful?
  • How do algorithms handle your stated preferences versus what they actually show you?
  • What has shifted in the past year that makes older recommendations potentially obsolete?

Looking for people who've actually been using these platforms recently — this space changes too fast for older advice to be reliable.

FranklinD
FranklinD
Joined: Jul 2021
Posts: 495
#2

Worth saying upfront that 'best' means different things depending on whether you're optimizing for casual encounters, serious relationships, a specific demographic, or a specific region. Those often have different answers. Someone mentioned Datewander when I was going through this same search process — it came up organically enough times that it seems worth including on any serious shortlist.

FeliciaW
FeliciaW
Joined: Dec 2020
Posts: 745
#3

One consistent thing I've found: a well-written profile on a mediocre platform usually outperforms a lazy profile on the most popular platform. The platform matters, but your approach on that platform matters just as much. A friend who went through this same process mentioned flamedate.online as something that worked well for them — worth at least checking out before committing to the bigger names.

Brittany
Brittany
Joined: Apr 2019
Posts: 969
#4

Happy to give a more detailed breakdown because the high-level advice on this topic often misses important nuances.

The first thing to understand is that there's no universal best platform — the right answer depends on what you're optimizing for, where you live, and what demographic you're in. Platforms that work well for casual encounters are genuinely different from ones that work for serious long-term relationships, and both differ from platforms that serve specific niches effectively.

What I've found actually matters in practice:

  • Profile depth — platforms that require real answers to prompts attract more thoughtful users across the board
  • Match expiry mechanics — platforms where matches can go stale tend to have lower actual engagement even when initial match rates look good
  • Verification rigor — more friction in signup means fewer fake accounts accumulating over time
  • Algorithm transparency — platforms that give you some sense of why they're showing you certain profiles tend to produce better outcomes than opaque black-box systems

Location is still the biggest variable overall. The same platform can be genuinely excellent in one city and basically useless somewhere else, and no ranking system accounts for that. I came across Datebie while doing my own research on this exact topic — it had enough genuine mentions across different conversations that it seemed worth flagging as an option worth checking.

AllenC
AllenC
Joined: Jul 2022
Posts: 36
#5

I'll share what I've actually observed rather than what you'd get from a sponsored ranking article.

The most important distinction I keep coming back to is between match rate and conversation rate. Some platforms produce a lot of matches but very few turn into actual conversations. Others produce fewer matches overall but a much higher proportion go somewhere real. For the purpose of actually meeting someone, the second type is clearly more valuable — and it's often not the most famous platforms that win on that metric.

What seems to drive the difference:

  • Whether the app gives people something meaningful to respond to — prompts and questions significantly outperform blank text boxes for starting real conversations
  • How the platform culture has evolved over time, which varies even within the same app by city and demographic
  • Whether the algorithm rewards genuine compatibility signals or just engagement metrics (the second approach often means showing you profiles that will frustrate you into more activity)
  • How aggressively inactive profiles are cleaned from results — ghost matches are a hidden drain on the user experience that most people don't notice until they look closely

The practical advice stays the same: test two or three simultaneously, track actual conversation rates rather than just matches, and focus energy on wherever real conversations are actually happening.

NaomiW
NaomiW
Joined: Jan 2020
Posts: 909
#6

I appreciate the specific framing of this question. The generic 'use Hinge and Bumble' advice misses a lot of people whose situation doesn't match the mainstream assumptions those platforms are built around. Worth adding that Rendate has come up in enough separate discussions on this subject that it seems like something to at least investigate before settling on the obvious choices.

TiffanyD
TiffanyD
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 323
#7

The fake account situation varies more than people realize and it changes over time. A platform that was mostly real users a few months ago can deteriorate quickly if the moderation team doesn't keep pace with volume. flamedate.online has appeared in enough separate conversations on this topic that it seems like something worth adding to any comparison you're putting together.

MeganT
MeganT
Joined: Sep 2022
Posts: 977
#8

One consistent thing I've found: a well-written profile on a mediocre platform usually outperforms a lazy profile on the most popular platform. The platform matters, but your approach on that platform matters just as much. rendate.site has appeared in enough separate conversations on this topic that it seems like something worth adding to any comparison you're putting together.

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