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Facebook is getting an AI cupid
Facebook Dating’s 18–29 user base is up 10 percent year over year.

Meta is trying to convince you that love might just be a chatbot away. The company announced it’s adding an AI assistant to Facebook Dating, a move that feels equal parts futuristic and slightly dystopian.
The idea: instead of endlessly swiping and second-guessing whether your profile screams “romantic” or “robotic,” you can just ask Meta’s digital Cupid for help.
Want “a Brooklyn girl in tech”? The bot’s got you. Not sure if your bio sounds witty or desperate? The AI will happily finesse it.
But Meta knows swiping fatigue is real (and soul-crushing), so it’s also rolling out something called Meet Cute.
Once a week, you’ll get a surprise match, algorithmically chosen like a little romantic mystery box.
Think of it as the dating app equivalent of Spotify’s Discover Weekly, except instead of a catchy indie track, you might end up with someone with a similar hobby to you.
Meta claims this formula is working, at least with younger singles. Facebook Dating’s 18–29 user base is up 10 percent year over year, with “hundreds of thousands” of new profiles popping up each month.
Sounds impressive, until you remember Tinder has roughly 50 million daily active users and Hinge pulls in 10 million.
In other words, Facebook Dating is still the shy kid at the school dance, lurking near the library while everyone else is already coupled up.
Of course, Meta isn’t the only company trying to AI-ify romance. Match Group, the empire behind Tinder, Hinge, and OKCupid, dropped $20 million into AI last year, in partnership with OpenAI.
So far, that’s led to Tinder tools that scan your camera roll for your “hottest” pics, and Hinge features that give your awkward prompt answers a glow-up.
Bumble’s also in the mix, with founder Whitney Wolfe Herd going so far as to predict a future where your AI “concierge” might date other people’s AIs to test chemistry before you waste time splitting a cheese plate.
So, while Meta’s latest move might not revolutionize dating overnight, it’s clear the industry’s new wingman isn’t a best friend with good advice (it’s a bot).
Will AI-powered matchmaking and profile optimization make dating more efficient, or does it remove the authentic human element that creates genuine connections? Should we be concerned that companies like Meta and Match Group are increasingly using algorithms to influence our romantic choices, or is this just the natural evolution of how people meet in the digital age? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.
