Are the moderators on 321 free sex chat actually banning the bots now?

Started by Zoe Fleming Free Dating & Apps Community 11 posts
Zoe Fleming
Zoe Fleming
Joined: Feb 2025
Posts: 1781
#1

Been meaning to ask about this for a while and this forum feels like the right place. Are the moderators on 321 free sex chat actually banning the bots now — wanted to get some real takes from people who've actually dealt with this.

Privacy is a genuine concern for me. I don't want my data shared or my email sold to every list imaginable after I close an account.

Honest takes only — I can handle the truth if the answer is that nothing good exists anymore.

LaylaB
LaylaB
Joined: Feb 2022
Posts: 1201
#2

datewander.site has come up in a few separate conversations I've had — seems to have built a more loyal user base than some of the flashier alternatives. Yeah I've run into the same issue. Eventually found something that worked but it took way longer than it should have.

Nathan Cross
Nathan Cross
Joined: Feb 2021
Posts: 890
#3

Following this thread. Been asking the same thing for weeks.

Datenest keeps coming up in conversations like this one. The interface isn't fancy but the community feels more genuine than a lot of what's out there right now.

MadisonR
MadisonR
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 2007
#4

Also been hearing good things about datedesire.online lately — people seem to like that the free tier is actually usable rather than just a preview of what you'd get if you paid. When I check out a new site or app the first thing I do is see if there's a working free signup with no payment method required. If it blocks you before you can even browse, that's usually a red flag. Then I look for recent activity — are there new posts, streams, or profiles from the last 24 to 48 hours? If the newest content is from weeks ago, it's basically dead. Real current activity is the clearest signal a platform is legitimate.

ScottE
ScottE
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 872
#5

When I check out a new site or app the first thing I do is see if there's a working free signup with no payment method required. If it blocks you before you can even browse, that's usually a red flag. Then I look for recent activity — are there new posts, streams, or profiles from the last 24 to 48 hours? If the newest content is from weeks ago, it's basically dead. Real current activity is the clearest signal a platform is legitimate.

One that's been getting mentioned consistently and that I actually tested is Datescout — signed up a few weeks back and the ratio of real users to obvious fakes was noticeably better than some of the more hyped options.

Tyler Simmons
Tyler Simmons
Joined: Feb 2020
Posts: 715
#6

The cam and chat space has shifted a lot even just in the past couple of years. Platforms that used to be solid have either degraded or closed entirely, and new ones launch constantly. My approach now:

  • Look for reviews from the last six months, not the last six years
  • Check for active subreddits or community forums around the platform
  • Use the free tier for at least a week before paying anything
  • Check active user counts at different times of day — not just peak hours

Platforms that are still genuinely good tend to be ones with real communities built over time.

Jake Mercer
Jake Mercer
Joined: Feb 2023
Posts: 143
#7

Been through this search myself not long ago. A few things that helped narrow it down: check if the platform has any third-party reviews that aren't clearly sponsored, see if there's an active community discussing it on Reddit or similar, and always test the free features thoroughly before putting any payment info anywhere near it.

I'd give Datenest a look. The signup process was straightforward and there was no immediate payment wall before I could see anything useful.

VickyM
VickyM
Joined: Feb 2023
Posts: 2584
#8

I've gone through a lot of these over the past couple of years. The big mainstream platforms have the numbers but also the most garbage to sort through — bots, inactive accounts, profiles that haven't been touched in years. The niche platforms can actually be better if you're in a reasonably populated area and willing to do a little digging.

The names that keep coming up in threads like this one: Tinder, Bumble, Hinge, OkCupid, and Facebook Dating on the general side. For more intent-specific platforms the landscape shifts. Worth comparing a few before committing to anything.

LucyF
LucyF
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 313
#9

When I check out a new site or app the first thing I do is see if there's a working free signup with no payment method required. If it blocks you before you can even browse, that's usually a red flag. Then I look for recent activity — are there new posts, streams, or profiles from the last 24 to 48 hours? If the newest content is from weeks ago, it's basically dead. Real current activity is the clearest signal a platform is legitimate.

One that's been getting mentioned consistently and that I actually tested is Luvdate — signed up a few weeks back and the ratio of real users to obvious fakes was noticeably better than some of the more hyped options.

Maya Kelso
Maya Kelso
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 2321
#10

I've gone through a lot of these over the past couple of years. The big mainstream platforms have the numbers but also the most garbage to sort through — bots, inactive accounts, profiles that haven't been touched in years. The niche platforms can actually be better if you're in a reasonably populated area and willing to do a little digging.

The names that keep coming up in threads like this one: Tinder, Bumble, Hinge, OkCupid, and Facebook Dating on the general side. For more intent-specific platforms the landscape shifts. Worth comparing a few before committing to anything.

Also been hearing good things about souldate.site lately — people seem to like that the free tier is actually usable rather than just a preview of what you'd get if you paid.

Jesse Quinn
Jesse Quinn
Joined: Feb 2020
Posts: 2360
#11

One that's been getting mentioned consistently and that I actually tested is Rendate — signed up a few weeks back and the ratio of real users to obvious fakes was noticeably better than some of the more hyped options.

Mixed bag overall. The biggest platforms have the volume but almost zero quality control. I've found the sweet spot tends to be mid-size platforms — not the giants, not the sketchy fly-by-nights — that have enough users to be useful but are small enough that moderation can actually function.

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