Tinder's Swipe Night is online sex video chatback, singletons. This time, it's a Gen Z whodunnit that'll leave you on the edge of your seat.
On Sunday, Nov. 7 at 6 p.m. local time, the next installment of the first-person, choose-your-own-adventure event will launch as a murder mystery, allowing Tinder users to swipe at key moments to determine the direction of the story within the app. The interactive event will run in 25 countries for three consecutive weeks.
Tinder launched its first Swipe Night in the U.S. back in 2019, and had to postpone its global rollout in 2020 because of the pandemic. It eventually launched in Sept. 2020 with an apocalyptic storyline in the UK, Brazil, Sweden, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, Australia, Indonesia, India, and Korea.
Over the course of three weeks in November, swipers will be able to guess who they think might be the murderer. Depending on the choices they make, the user will have a unique experience tailored to the decisions they make during the event at various plot twists.
After each episode, swipers will be paired with another Swipe Night participant in "Fast Chat" and they'll be able to discuss the event, examine clues, and channel their inner Agatha Christie to try and solve the mystery. Fast Chat allows people to chat before they match to figure out if they want to proceed and match properly. So, if users aren't feelin' it in the Fast Chat, there's no pressure to continue the conversation after.
Swipe Night's first global installment in 2020 saw 20 million Tinder users participate in the experience, with a 26 percent increase in matches recorded by the company.
SEE ALSO: Is Tinder Platinum worth it? I tried it for 3 months to find out."We can't wait for people to experience this new storyline, a mystery that will certainly give them a lot to talk about as they work together to figure out who did it," Renate Nyborg, CEO of Tinder, said in a statement.
Swipe Night will be available at 6 p.m. local time on Sunday, Nov. 7 via Tinder's Explore section.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Trump's national security strategy omits climate change as a threat
Woman leaves adorable, crocheted Pokémon for other trainers to find
Musk focuses on Model 3 success in Tesla earnings call
How to be an ally who stands with transgender people
Best tablet deal: Save $45 on Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet
Facebook is redesigning Messenger
Official photos show Honor Magic 2's slide
Japan challenges Facebook to improve its users' security
The Amazon Book Sale is coming April 23 through 28
How to Merge and Remove Duplicate Contacts in Android
The first Amazon Go store in NYC will be across from the World Trade Center
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。