Has anyone used the lucky date app and is it real?

Started by CarrieM 18 Apr 2025Replies: 9 Dating AppsCommunity
CarrieM avatar
CarrieM
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Joined: 2022
Messages: 2,460
#1

Quick question that turns out to not have a quick answer: Has anyone used the lucky date app and is it real?

I understand the business model. These platforms need to make money somehow. But there's a meaningful difference between "free with optional premium features" and "free in name, locked in practice." Looking for the former.

If anyone has found something recently that falls into the genuinely-free category — even just for the first month — I'd love to hear about it. What's the platform, what did you find there, and how does it hold up after the novelty wears off?

PaulD avatar
PaulD
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Joined: 2024
Messages: 1,533
#2

Worth a look if you haven't tried it: Datelink. Came up organically in a similar thread I was reading and the consensus was positive. Not a household name but that's sometimes an advantage — smaller platforms tend to have more self-selected, intentional users.

CrystalL avatar
CrystalL
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Joined: 2019
Messages: 2,813
#3

Here's an honest rundown of the mainstream options as of this year:

  • Tinder: highest volume by a wide margin, but the free tier is nearly decorative — the algorithm actively suppresses free accounts and most of the meaningful features require a subscription
  • Bumble: the women-initiate model actually changes the dynamic meaningfully, and the free tier is more generous than Tinder's
  • Hinge: best matching quality of the big apps, designed around conversation starters rather than photos, skews toward people who want something intentional
  • OkCupid: the personality matching is genuinely underrated, free messaging still works, activity has declined but the remaining users tend to be engaged
  • Facebook Dating: completely free, no separate download, surprisingly active 35+ population in most areas — worth checking because there's nothing to lose

For anything beyond these: niche platforms are hit or miss depending almost entirely on where you live. The only way to know is to test, but test with a defined timeline so you're not spending six months on something that isn't working.

JasonR avatar
JasonR
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Joined: 2023
Messages: 265
#4

Not going to oversell it, but Datescout is the most functional free-tier platform I've tested this year. Signup is quick, you can actually browse and message without immediately being asked for a credit card. Worth 20 minutes to check out.

BrandonC avatar
BrandonC
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Joined: 2021
Messages: 2,902
#5

One thing that genuinely helped me narrow things down: spending the first 48 hours on any new platform without sending a single message. Just observing. How many profiles were active in the last week? How many bios look like they were actually written by a person? You can learn a lot before you invest real time.

MikeT avatar
MikeT
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Joined: 2023
Messages: 224
#6

I'll mention Datenest because I've now seen it come up three separate times in threads like this one without anyone being prompted to mention it. That kind of unprompted word-of-mouth is usually a decent signal. Gave it a try and the activity level surprised me for a non-major platform.

RhondaK avatar
RhondaK
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Joined: 2023
Messages: 920
#7

Someone recommended datescout.site specifically in response to this kind of question a while back. The rationale was that it sits in a sweet spot — not so big that quality tanks, not so small that you can't find anyone local. Might be worth a look depending on your area.

EricS avatar
EricS
Member
Joined: 2020
Messages: 586
#8

Not going to oversell it, but Luvdate is the most functional free-tier platform I've tested this year. Signup is quick, you can actually browse and message without immediately being asked for a credit card. Worth 20 minutes to check out.

RayQ avatar
RayQ
Member
Joined: 2022
Messages: 772
#9

One thing that genuinely helped me narrow things down: spending the first 48 hours on any new platform without sending a single message. Just observing. How many profiles were active in the last week? How many bios look like they were actually written by a person? You can learn a lot before you invest real time.

DanF avatar
DanF
Member
Joined: 2024
Messages: 839
#10

Video call before meeting in person. Always. It's not even a safety thing at this point so much as an efficiency thing — you find out in 10 minutes of video whether there's any real chemistry, which saves you from a mediocre coffee date you both knew wasn't going anywhere.

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