Read before you connect

Useful articles

Quick guides on starting conversations, staying safe, and turning new BLYQUE connections into real friendships.

Starting a chat that doesn't fizzle out

Most first messages die because they don't ask anything back. Opening with just hey usually gets a one-word hey in return, then silence. A better opener points at something specific — a shared interest, a mutual friend, or a genuine question about their profile.

Once a reply comes in, build on it instead of jumping to a new topic. Ask a follow-up before introducing something else. Conversations grow from one thread pulled further, not from a list of unrelated questions fired one after another.

And don't read too much into a slow reply. Most people aren't ignoring you, they're just living a life outside the chat window. A good opener plants the seed — the rest grows at its own pace.

Spotting a genuine profile before you connect

Before you send or accept a request, give the profile thirty seconds. A real one usually has a filled-out bio, a photo that looks lived-in rather than staged, and some sign of an actual history behind it.

Be a little more careful with requests that appear out of nowhere, push to move the conversation off the app right away, or ask for personal or financial details early on. None of these prove bad intent by themselves, but together they're worth slowing down for.

BLYQUE's request-first flow already gives you a buffer — nobody can message you until you've said yes. Use that pause. There's no rush to accept, and it's always fine to simply not.

Keeping online friendships from staying online

A good chat is a beginning, not a destination. If a conversation keeps feeling easy, look for a natural next step — a voice note, a call, or making plans around something you're both already into.

Pace it the way you would any new friendship. You don't need to share everything in the first week, and neither do they. Let trust build across a few genuine exchanges rather than one long info-dump.

If you do decide to meet in person, treat it like meeting anyone new: pick a public place, tell someone where you're going, and don't feel pressure to stay longer than feels right. The best online friendships are the ones that turn out to hold up offline too.