Online dating has a trust problem. You match with someone, start a conversation, and three messages in you’re wondering if you’re talking to the person in the photos or someone running a script from a call center overseas. Fake profiles, catfishing, bots posing as humans. It’s exhausting. HundRoses, a dating platform in development for Canadian and American users, has a straightforward solution: make people prove they’re real before they can send a single message.
Here’s how it works. You can browse profiles without any verification, scroll through potential matches, and get a feel for the app. But the moment you want to actually talk to someone, verification is required. It’s a hard line that most dating apps won’t draw, but HundRoses is prioritizing safety over convenience.
The verification requirement only for messaging is smarter than forcing everyone through it upfront. People want to explore before committing, and there’s no point making someone verify their ID just to see if the app even has users in their area. But once you’re interested enough to reach out, proving your identity becomes part of the process. It’s the difference between casual browsing and genuine engagement.
HundRoses
This approach directly addresses what makes online dating feel unsafe for a lot of people. Women deal with harassment, fake accounts, and people who aren’t who they claim to be. Men waste time talking to bots or scammers. Everyone’s been ghosted by someone who was probably never real in the first place. Verification raises the floor. If someone has to verify their identity to message you, you know there’s an actual human on the other end. That baseline level of accountability changes how people interact from the first conversation.
The platform calls itself a dating app “built around respect and trust,” and the verification system backs that up. It’s not just a tagline or marketing language. It’s baked into how the app functions at its core. You can’t operate anonymously when it comes to making connections, which changes the dynamic from the start. There’s a real person behind every message, and both people know it.
HundRoses is launching in Canada and the USA, targeting North American singles who are tired of the same recycled experiences from Match Corporation’s family of apps. They’re currently offering early access to VIP members while the platform’s still in development, building a user base that values verified connections over anonymous browsing. The focus on Canadian and American markets gives them a contained launch to refine the experience before considering expansion.
The verification barrier separates people who are serious about meeting someone from those who just want to browse without accountability. For users fed up with fake profiles and dead-end conversations, that barrier is exactly the point. It filters out the noise before it even starts.
Dating apps have spent years trying to make everything as frictionless as possible, removing any obstacle between swiping and messaging. HundRoses is adding friction back in, but only where it matters. Browse all you want, but if you’re going to reach out to another person, you’re doing it as yourself.