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[Hot] Be 2 online dating 2025

Posted: Sun Mar 29, 2026 11:52 am
by evasingle
Hello, visitor!

Article:
I recently asked men in the BuzzFeed community to share their experiences and struggles with using dating apps. The results were interesting to see how other guys view the social mingling of looking for love in all the tech places: 1. I've always been chunky, glasses, balding, and had only a factory line of dates using apps.

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This was in the 2015-2017 era, though. I had a lot of things working 'against' me, but I always had them coming back. The only 'hard part' was when you would create great conversation over a few days, and then when you went in to set up a day to go on a date, they completely ghosted you. I never understood that. I changed my info to say, 'If you never plan on actually meeting up, then don’t match,' and I never had the problem again." 2. "It seems so silly, but I hate that apps make you pay for perks, and it's not like it guarantees a date. I mean, it shouldn't, but still, what's the point? If you don't have a face someone likes, paying for extra perks isn't really going to help." 3. "Self-confidence. Being on them made me feel incredibly insignificant and unworthy as I rarely matched with people I was interested in getting to know. Even if we met for one date, it has never been a second date. Unfortunately, the common denominator is me, so I have tried to evolve, change, and become more successful, but still nothing. But, you also can't talk about these feelings as a man because then you're too emotional, even though men are supposed to be emotionally available. So my confidence has lessened even more than before dating apps." 4. "The lack of any response or interaction from the women on the apps. that's the struggle." 5. "Whenever I go on dating apps, more than half the women I match with are either single mothers, polyamorous people, or people who only want alcohol-based dates. none of them were remotely right for me. I did get one decent year-long relationship out of a Tinder date, but our age gap was a bit uncomfortable for me, so I ended it." "Very glad I'm not on them anymore." 6. "Dating apps have completely ruined my self-esteem." "I'm only five feet tall, but my height never bothered me until I started using dating apps. I add photos of my doing activities and visiting places and fill my bio with fun facts about me and my interests. I also added my height to my profile because I know most women prefer taller men, and I thought that if they swiped right, then they would be okay with my height. I used dating apps for over a year and a half across four platforms and only got two matches that promptly unmatched me. No matter how often I updated my profile with new pictures or revised my bio, nothing changed, and I got no matches. This put me in a dark place, and I had to stop using dating apps and start to go to therapy because of it. I understand that five feet as a man is abnormally short, but it feels like I'm not worthy of love, no matter how much I try to improve myself. I stopped using dating apps and tried to meet people in person, but I heard that some women think that being approached by someone they don't know is creepy, and you could get posted on social media or get into legal trouble for approaching someone. Unfortunately, I don't think dating apps will go away. According to a paper by Michael J. Rosenfeld, almost 40% of couples meet through dating apps, which seems to get higher and higher. I hope to find someone who can look past my height (no pun intended)." 7. "I'm overweight, poor, and not blessed with good looks. I like to think I have a good heart and can carry on a halfway decent conversation. My problem: All you see of me on Tinder, Hinge, or Bumble is my face. My face will not be a selling point on any first date. So, every time I log on to those apps, I have to wonder if sending a message is worth the inevitable silent and empty inbox." 8. "Online dating has been disheartening, to say the least, but I hope others will read this, connect, and maybe have clearer intentions and more confidence before entering the game. "I used Hinge. My friends (men and women) told me that's where the serious potential partners were. I read each profile before swiping, and the women I matched with 'checked all the boxes': kind, well-educated, independent, ambitious, and adventurous. After two months, I had over 70 matches (a great boost for my self-esteem). But of that number, only about half of the conversations went anywhere past one or two texts. Usually, I'd ask a question and be left to read. I offered first dates to 20 (and I'm talking simple first dates, like dinner, coffee, or a walk in the park.) Three asked for rain checks but never followed up, two said yes but flaked before the date, and six stopped texting altogether. That left nine first dates. They were all nice women, but most lacked any previous dating experience. It's not like that's a prerequisite —I've just found my self-awareness and expectations were very different after some long-term dating. I saw two of the matches for a while until it was clear that our long-term values didn't match (and it was the same issue: I want kids someday vs. she wanted no kids whatsoever). We ended things amicably. All in all, I'm not upset with the women I dated. Rather, it's the ones who made no effort after matching on a dating app. If you're not really going to meet me, why did we match? Better yet, why are we still talking? Why are you here if you don't want to go out? No one likes these apps. So let's meet in person to determine if we want to be together. But the Hinge penpal game is such a waste of time and energy. I don't think it's a gender issue, either —sometimes I feel like my age group has learned to live their lives on the sidelines. "Situationships" and nonconfrontation are the rule, not the exception.













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