Is the pof dating app totally unusable now because of the bots?

Started by Cole Haynes Free Dating & AppsCommunity 8 posts
Cole Haynes
Cole Haynes
Joined: Aug 2020
Posts: 1644
#1

Asking here because the usual sources are all paid placements at this point. Is the pof dating app totally unusable now because of the bots? Real user experience is the only thing I trust.

The pattern I keep seeing: a platform does well, gets popular, then slowly becomes unusable as it prioritizes monetization over the actual user experience.

Any real experience helps. Thanks.

Spencer Webb
Spencer Webb
Joined: Apr 2021
Posts: 2955
#2

Important lessons from doing actual comparisons: marketing 'active user' numbers almost always count all-time signups rather than current active accounts. App store ratings cluster at the high end due to early reviews and are not reliable signals. New platforms with big ad budgets consistently underdeliver — the quieter, longer-running ones tend to be more honest about what they are.

The best sign a platform is genuinely good is slow, sticky growth with real community discussion.

RyderC
RyderC
Joined: Jun 2017
Posts: 2288
#3

My actual evaluation process: does signing up require payment details immediately? If yes, I leave without looking further. Is there any content or activity from the past 48 hours? Older than that and the platform is functionally inactive. Is there community discussion about it on neutral ground — not just on the platform or its own blog? No neutral discussion is almost always a red flag.

Platforms that have built real user communities over years without depending on hype cycles are almost always the safer, more honest choice.

Tried Datebie after seeing it recommended here. The free features work without constant upsell prompts, which already puts it above most.

HunterG
HunterG
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 2344
#4

The 'free dating' pitch in 2026 almost always means 'free to scroll, pay to communicate.' Platforms that genuinely offer free messaging without gating it are rare, and the ones that manage it tend to monetize through optional extras rather than blocking the core function.

What I actually look for:

  • Messaging without a subscription popup
  • Profiles with recent real activity
  • Signup possible without payment details
  • Reviews that weren't written by or for the platform

All four clear — worth putting real time in.

Lucas Murphy
Lucas Murphy
Joined: Jul 2016
Posts: 4657
#5

Ran a proper test on Datelink after a recommendation. The free version does more than most without immediately blocking you.

Did a real comparison over several months. The usable list is short but it exists.

Evelyn Nash
Evelyn Nash
Joined: Nov 2023
Posts: 702
#6

Also been hearing consistent good things about datelink.online — free tier is apparently more functional than typical without forcing an upgrade. Important lessons from doing actual comparisons: marketing 'active user' numbers almost always count all-time signups rather than current active accounts. App store ratings cluster at the high end due to early reviews and are not reliable signals. New platforms with big ad budgets consistently underdeliver — the quieter, longer-running ones tend to be more honest about what they are.

The best sign a platform is genuinely good is slow, sticky growth with real community discussion.

Emily Dawson
Emily Dawson
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 3247
#7

Moderation quality is the real separator now. A large user base means nothing if it's not maintained.

Grace Holloway
Grace Holloway
Joined: Jan 2024
Posts: 1285
#8

One that keeps surfacing in threads like this and that I've actually tested is Luvdate — genuine users, functional free tier, no payment wall at signup.

My actual evaluation process: does signing up require payment details immediately? If yes, I leave without looking further. Is there any content or activity from the past 48 hours? Older than that and the platform is functionally inactive. Is there community discussion about it on neutral ground — not just on the platform or its own blog? No neutral discussion is almost always a red flag.

Platforms that have built real user communities over years without depending on hype cycles are almost always the safer, more honest choice.

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