Skip to main content

You can now video call your Tinder matches within the app

In the age of online dating during quarantine, Tinder is now officially getting into the face chat game with one-on-one video calls. 

The video call feature was announced in May as an effort by Tinder to keep people within the app when they want to video chat with a potential date. Face-to-face video is now available to try, but only to members in Virginia, Illinois, Georgia, and Colorado for now. The feature will expand to members in other states after Tinder evaluates the initial testing of video calls. 

Some of the features of Tinder’s take on FaceTime include callers agreeing to ground rules, the option to enable or disable the feature, a 50/50 split screen, and Tinder asking how the call went after you both hangup. 

Tinder

Tinder said that it surveyed their members and found that half of them had a video call with one of their matches within the last month. And while video chatting has become an essential activity during quarantine these past few months, Tinder also wants to enable the option post-pandemic so matches can get a feel for each other before meeting in person. 

Like many online services, Tinder witnessed remarkable upswings in its engagement figures since quarantine began earlier this year, according to Match Group’s first quarter earnings release. Tinder’s average number of daily messages climbed by 27% in April compared to the last week of February. Plus, it said daily active users and swipes “reached all-time highs.”

While the feature is new to Tinder, it’s not the first dating app to add video calls. Bumble introduced in-app video and voice calls about a year ago. Facebook has also said that it plans to integrate Messenger’s video-calling feature directly on its dating platform.

Editors' Recommendations

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
WhatsApp now lets you make voice and video calls from your computer
WhatsApp messaging app

WhatsApp is now rolling out voice and video calling to desktop users, the company announced today. The messaging service, used by over a billion people worldwide, is improving the feature set of its desktop apps to match both its Facebook Messenger counterpart, as well as rivals from Apple's FaceTime and Microsoft's Skype.

WhatsApp says it is making this change due to a growth in voice and video calling that has happened over the past year. Due to the ongoing pandemic, a mix of social isolation, and lockdowns, more and more people have used the app to stay in touch in place of face-to-face communication. WhatsApp says this has reflected in "significant" growth, citing 1.4 billion voice and video calls made on New Year's Eve alone.

Read more
You can now ask Google Assistant to tie your shoes with expanded app actions
Nike Adapt BB

Google Assistant might be most known for its abilities and functionality within the Google Home and Nest series of devices, but Google is now making it possible to use Google Assistant to perform even more actions within your favorite mobile apps. You can now search and open any apps through Google Assistant on an Android device -- a particularly useful feature if you have more apps installed than you know what to do with. We're not just talking about simple actions like opening apps, but other detailed commands to achieve things like asking Google Assistant to tighten the lace on your sneakers.

If you own a pair of Nike Adapt sneakers, for example, you can ask Google Assistant to tighten the laces for you. Saying "Hey, Google, tighten my shoes with Nike Adapt" will make your shoelaces tighten. If that feels a bit too long to say effectively, you can create voice shortcuts to help streamline the process. The previous command can be shortened to, "Hey, Google, tie my shoes."

Read more
Google Duo now lets you share your Android screen in video calls
google duo adds four new features for better video calls

Google’s latest update for its internet calling app, Duo, lets you share your phone’s screen in video calls. The feature is only available for Android users for now, and restricted to one-on-one chats. Incidentally, back in 2018, Google had rolled out a similar functionality for Duo but it was mysteriously removed after three months.

https://twitter.com/madebygoogle/status/1305925894326816768

Read more