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Bumble drops swipes, bets on AI assistant Bee

Bumble is abandoning its signature swipe system. Instead, the app is betting on AI assistant Bee, which will recommend matches and help with conversations. CEO

Bumble drops swipes, bets on AI assistant Bee
Source: TechCrunch. Collage: Hamidun News.
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Bumble is ditching swipes — making a bet on AI assistant Bee

Bumble is abandoning the swipe system — mechanics that became an icon of mobile dating and were copied by competitors worldwide.

Swipes as Universal Language

The classic left-right swipe system was the standard for dating in mobile apps for nearly 15 years. Users scrolled through profiles and decided in one gesture: like or dislike. Bumble used this mechanic from its launch, but CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd announced a transition to a completely different paradigm. The simplicity of swipes was genius: intuitive interface, quick decision-making, minimal cognitive load. But after a decade and a half of dominance, this mechanic started to be perceived as superficial and monotonous. Bumble decided it was time for change.

Bee — Artificial Intelligence as Matchmaker

Bumble developed its own AI assistant called Bee, which will become the new center of the app's ecosystem. Instead of simple profile swiping, users will interact with an intelligent system that analyzes preferences and finds relevant matches. Bee uses multi-level analysis:

  • Analysis of preferences from history and matches
  • Processing of profile text and interests
  • Recommendations based on compatibility
  • Help with first message and dialogue structuring
  • Tips for deeper conversation

Whitney Wolfe Herd has repeatedly commented on the company's fresh direction. She is confident that AI can dramatically improve the dating experience:

"AI will become a super accelerator for love and relationships"

Beyond pairing, Bee should help with making a first impression and lower the barrier to entry for people who are nervous about online dating.

Risks and Challenges

A radical abandonment of swipes is a bold decision. Millions of users are used to left-right mechanics, and their disappearance could cause resistance. Additionally, AI-matching systems can create a "bubble effect" — the algorithm will start showing only similar people, reducing the diversity of options.

What It Means

Bumble's transition to an AI-first approach signals a paradigm shift in the dating industry: from mechanical interfaces to personalized algorithms. The question remains open — are people ready to trust a machine with choosing potential partners?

ZK
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