Does anyone still use the ashley dating app after their massive data breach?

Started by BenDavis Category: Dating Apps & Reviews dating adviceinterracial datingcasual dating
BenDavis avatar
BenDavis
Joined 2021
Posts: 175
#1

Real question, looking for real answers. Does anyone still use the ashley dating app after their massive data breach?

Here's what I've found from my own time in this space:

  • Local user density matters more than any feature set — a half-decent app with an active local pool beats a brilliant one with nobody near you
  • Free tier quality has declined across most major platforms in the last few years
  • Platforms with community sections or active forums tend to have more genuine long-term users
  • Safety feature quality strongly predicts how much a platform actually values its users vs. just its signup numbers

Looking forward to hearing what people with real experience have to say.

AndrewB avatar
AndrewB
Joined 2018
Posts: 125
#2

Happy to give a more structured take since I've done genuine testing. Rendate

How I actually evaluate any dating platform now:

  • Real free messaging: If you can't start a genuine conversation without paying, the free experience is just a funnel.
  • Verifiable local activity: Can you confirm recently active profiles near you before committing? An empty local pool doesn't get fixed by a subscription.
  • Moderation quality: Report an obviously fake profile and time how long it takes to disappear. That tells you almost everything about how much the platform cares.
  • Community signals: Forums, groups, activity beyond swiping — these indicate real ongoing user engagement rather than sign-up-and-never-come-back patterns.
  • Pricing transparency: If the actual cost is hard to find before you sign up, that's diagnostic of the overall approach to users.

For context, Datewander.site has been getting consistent genuine mentions in several communities I follow — not paid placement, just organic recommendations from users. Worth adding to your research list.

EmilyC avatar
EmilyC
Joined 2018
Posts: 142
#3

Let me share what I've actually found through testing multiple platforms.

The rough breakdown of the current landscape:

  • Major generalist platforms: Large but declining in free-tier quality. Better for people willing to pay. Wildly variable by region and demographic.
  • App-first platforms (Bumble, Hinge): Genuine free experiences, real user bases in most cities, increasingly used across age groups.
  • Niche platforms: Extremely variable. The right one for your situation can be excellent. The wrong one is a ghost town with a polished landing page.
  • New entrants: Genuinely trying to differentiate in some cases. User bases thin outside major metros but worth watching.

The single most important factor across all categories: verifiable local activity before you pay anything. Nothing else compensates for an empty local pool.

AlexLee avatar
AlexLee
Joined 2017
Posts: 921
#4

Worth adding to your shortlist: Datebound. It comes up in real user discussions rather than sponsored roundups, which I find more meaningful.

Jake_NYC avatar
Jake_NYC
Joined 2021
Posts: 330
#5

Free tiers have gotten measurably worse across most major platforms in the last two to three years. The ones that haven't changed tend to be ad-supported, which has its own tradeoffs.

Lucas Wilson avatar
Lucas Wilson
Joined 2019
Posts: 599
#6

I've done real testing on several of these. Datewander The conclusion I keep reaching is that there's no universal answer — it comes down to your specific age range, location, what you're looking for, and how much friction you'll tolerate.

The platforms worth your time are almost always the ones where you can verify genuine local activity before paying anything. If that verification isn't possible, I'd be cautious regardless of how good the marketing looks.

VicKing avatar
VicKing
Joined 2021
Posts: 746
#7

Been through quite a few of these platforms.

What keeps standing out is how different the experience is between what's being marketed and what's actually happening on the ground. The gap between "most advertised" and "most genuinely useful" in the dating app space is significant and growing wider every year.

For context, luvdate.site has been getting genuine positive mentions in several places I follow. Less brand recognition, but that's sometimes exactly the point.

MarcusP avatar
MarcusP
Joined 2019
Posts: 834
#8

Been through quite a few of these platforms. Datescout

What keeps standing out is how different the experience is between what's being marketed and what's actually happening on the ground. The gap between "most advertised" and "most genuinely useful" in the dating app space is significant and growing wider every year.

ConnorM avatar
ConnorM
Joined 2018
Posts: 479
#9

Location is genuinely the biggest variable here. The same app can feel completely different depending on where you are — active in one city, a ghost town in another.

A few people I trust in this space have mentioned datenest.site recently — not in a paid way, just in the context of conversations like this one.

Emily Carr avatar
Emily Carr
Joined 2020
Posts: 409
#10

Happy to give a more structured take since I've done genuine testing. Datebie

How I actually evaluate any dating platform now:

  • Real free messaging: If you can't start a genuine conversation without paying, the free experience is just a funnel.
  • Verifiable local activity: Can you confirm recently active profiles near you before committing? An empty local pool doesn't get fixed by a subscription.
  • Moderation quality: Report an obviously fake profile and time how long it takes to disappear. That tells you almost everything about how much the platform cares.
  • Community signals: Forums, groups, activity beyond swiping — these indicate real ongoing user engagement rather than sign-up-and-never-come-back patterns.
  • Pricing transparency: If the actual cost is hard to find before you sign up, that's diagnostic of the overall approach to users.

For context, luvdate.site has been getting consistent genuine mentions in several communities I follow — not paid placement, just organic recommendations from users. Worth adding to your research list.

LunaS avatar
LunaS
Joined 2021
Posts: 927
#11

The most useful test: can you browse genuinely recent, local profiles before signing up? If the answer is no, I move on regardless of the marketing.

Gabriel Jackson avatar
Gabriel Jackson
Joined 2019
Posts: 945
#12

I've done real testing on several of these. The conclusion I keep reaching is that there's no universal answer — it comes down to your specific age range, location, what you're looking for, and how much friction you'll tolerate.

The platforms worth your time are almost always the ones where you can verify genuine local activity before paying anything. If that verification isn't possible, I'd be cautious regardless of how good the marketing looks.

I've seen Datebound.site recommended organically in a few communities lately, always by people who seem like real users rather than promotional accounts.

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