If you’ve ever opened a dating app, scrolled through face after face, swiped left a hundred times, and still ended up feeling more exhausted than hopeful — well, you’re not alone. And Bumble, one of the biggest names in online dating, thinks it finally has an answer to that problem. It’s called Bee, an AI-powered personal dating assistant, and it just might be the most ambitious swing the company has taken since its founding.
Bumble unveiled Bee during its fourth-quarter 2025 earnings call on March 11, 2026. CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd introduced the assistant as part of a sweeping platform overhaul the company is calling Bumble 2.0, expected to roll out this spring. At its core, Bee is designed to function less like a traditional app feature and more like a thoughtful, AI-powered matchmaker that actually gets to know you — your values, your relationship goals, how you communicate, the kind of life you live, and what you’re genuinely looking for in a partner.
That last part is important. Dating apps have always relied heavily on photographs and snap judgments. You see a face, maybe a line or two about someone’s job or favorite TV show, and you swipe. It takes a fraction of a second, and it has always felt a bit reductive — like trying to judge a book entirely by its cover. Wolfe Herd said as much during the earnings call, noting that people are “tired of being reduced to images and potentially dismissed with a swipe“. Bee, she hopes, is the antidote.
Here’s how it works in practice. When a user opts into a new experience called “Dates,” Bee kicks off a private, conversational onboarding session — think chatting with a friend who asks the right questions rather than filling out a form. Users can respond by typing or speaking, and the AI gradually builds a deeper picture of who they are. From there, Bee doesn’t just throw a pile of potential matches at you. Instead, it identifies someone else on the platform whose intentions, values, and goals align with yours, and it notifies both people with a descriptive summary explaining why they might be a good fit. It’s less “here are 200 strangers” and more “we think you two should talk.”
Alongside Bee, Bumble is introducing what it calls “chapter-based profiles” — a total rethinking of how people present themselves on the app. Right now, a typical Bumble profile looks just like any other dating app profile: a few photos, a name, an age, maybe a job title. The new format lets users share different “chapters” of their lives, essentially narrative-style snippets highlighting experiences, passions, and defining moments. Maybe you spent six months backpacking through Southeast Asia. Maybe you recently changed careers and are genuinely excited about it. Maybe you’re someone who takes Sunday mornings very seriously — coffee, vinyl records, no phone. The idea is that these chapters give someone a reason to reach out that goes beyond physical attraction.
Wolfe Herd framed it simply and thoughtfully during the call: “Ultimately, dating only works when you really understand the story of someone. This is where chemistry and connection really happen. It is the intersection of someone going from just a stranger that you dismiss to someone you are genuinely interested in.“
And then there’s the swipe itself. Bumble confirmed it will experiment with removing the swipe mechanic entirely in certain markets. This would be a genuinely radical move for an industry that built its entire identity around the gesture. The swipe has been central to dating apps since Tinder popularized it over a decade ago, and nearly every major platform adopted it. But there’s growing evidence that it isn’t actually helping people find meaningful relationships. It gamifies attraction, rewards superficiality, and — according to a lot of unhappy users — produces a lot of those “dead-end chat zones” that Wolfe Herd specifically called out as a problem Bumble wants to solve. Rather than just swiping yes or no, Bumble wants users to engage with someone’s story, express interest in specific chapters, and let the AI help guide the conversation from there.
None of this is happening in a vacuum. The entire online dating industry is going through something of an identity crisis, particularly with younger users. Gen Z, in large part, has grown disillusioned with swipe-based apps, and engagement across the board has been slipping. Competitors are scrambling in similar directions. Hinge launched “Convo Starters” late last year to help users break out of awkward silences with more interesting conversation openers. Tinder has been testing a feature called Chemistry, which analyzes user preferences to deliver curated matches rather than relying purely on photo assessment. Grindr added an AI-powered “wingman” chatbot and recommendation feeds built around compatibility rather than just proximity. Everyone is chasing the same goal: making the apps feel less like a numbers game and more like something that can actually lead to a real relationship.
Bumble has an interesting head start in one respect. The company has already rolled out earlier AI tools — including Profile Guidance, which gives users personalized suggestions to improve their bios — and those features have been helping feed better data into its systems. Bee is essentially the next evolution of that effort, one that’s far more conversational and far more personal. It’s currently in an internal pilot phase, with a public beta launch coming soon for a select group of users.
What’s genuinely exciting about all of this is the ambition. Wolfe Herd said that in the future, Bee won’t just help with matching — it could suggest actual date ideas or even reach out anonymously to your past matches to gather feedback, helping you understand what’s working and what isn’t in how you’re presenting yourself. That kind of feedback loop has never existed in mainstream dating apps before.
Of course, there’s a reasonable question sitting underneath all of this: how much do users actually want an AI to drive their romantic lives? Handing over your “values” and “communication style” to an app’s machine learning model requires a certain level of trust, and not everyone is going to be comfortable with it. There’s also the data angle — chapter-based profiles and in-depth AI conversations will give Bumble a significantly richer dataset on its users, which is valuable for its algorithms but also raises questions about privacy. Bumble hasn’t said much about how that data is stored or used beyond the matching process.
Still, it’s hard not to see Bee as a genuinely thoughtful response to a problem that has been nagging at online dating for years. The swipe was a clever invention, but it was always a shortcut — a way to move fast at the cost of depth. If Bumble can actually pull off what Wolfe Herd is describing, the spring launch of Bumble 2.0 could represent a real turning point for how we think about finding connection in the digital age. Sometimes the best move is to slow down, tell your story, and let someone actually read it.
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