Show HN: I built a friend app after watching Twitter/X tear itself apart

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A month ago, I was doom-scrolling Twitter at 2am in Accra and got hit with post after post of people tearing each other apart. I closed the app thinking “we have such a long way to go.”
Then I remembered something: a few years back, I hesitated for 48 hours before messaging someone on Facebook who would become my mentor. I was scared—previous scammers had burned me. But I gave myself that window to decide. I messaged him. He changed my life.
That night, I thought: what if that 48-hour window could work for everyone?
So I built Eintercon.

How it works:
You match with someone internationally based on shared interests (sci-fi books, indie music, whatever you’re genuinely into)
You have exactly 48 hours to chat and see if the connection is real
After 48 hours, you both decide: keep going or move on
No ghosting. No guilt. No conversations dying in your inbox.

Why 48 hours?
Because it creates urgency without pressure. It’s long enough to have real conversations, short enough that you can’t procrastinate forever. Either the friendship sparks, or you both deserve better matches.
Every other friend app lets you match with 50 people and message none of them. We force a decision. It’s uncomfortable, but it works.
Why international?
Because you can’t hate someone whose story you know. Because the person who gets your weird obsessions might be in South Korea, not your city. Because division thrives in bubbles, and I’m tired of bubbles.
One month in:

200 users across 30+ countries
Zero marketing budget (just word of mouth)
People telling me they made their first real friend in years
A user in Ghana and a user in Seoul are now best friends over sci-fi books

The tech:
React Native, Node.js, Firebase, PostgreSQL. Nothing fancy. I’m a student splitting time between classes and coding. It’s scrappy but it works.
What I’m struggling with:

Keeping international matches feeling balanced (timezone challenges)

Building safety features without killing spontaneity

Figuring out monetization that doesn’t feel gross

What I learned:

People are desperate for genuine connection
Urgency > features for engagement
Emotional intelligence beats algorithms
You don’t need funding to validate an idea

Why I’m posting here:

I want to hear from people who’ve tried to solve loneliness with tech. What worked? What didn’t?

Honestly? I’m hoping some of you try it and tell me what’s broken.

The bigger question:
Can software actually fix loneliness? Or are we just creating better ways to be alone together?
I don’t know yet. But 200 people have real friends now who didn’t a month ago. That feels like something.


Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45640319

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# Comments: 0

Source: eintercon.com

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