# Lamp vs Hinge: When 'Designed to Be Deleted' Meets AI

> Lamp vs Hinge, honestly: Hinge matches on prompts and likes; Lamp is an AI dating app matching on personality and values, with Genie and Wishes.

Published: 15 May 2026 · Updated: 15 May 2026 · By The Lamp Team
Canonical: https://lampdating.com/blog/lamp-vs-hinge

Of the big mainstream apps, Hinge is the one most people reach for when they want
something more serious than swiping. Its "designed to be deleted" positioning, its
prompts, and its relationship-minded tone have earned it real affection — and for
good reason. So if you're comparing **Lamp vs Hinge**, you're already past the
casual stage and asking a sharper question: which app actually understands who
you are?

This is an honest, narrative comparison. For the quick at-a-glance table, see our
[Lamp vs Hinge](/compare/lamp-vs-hinge) page. Here we'll give Hinge its due, then
explain where Lamp goes further for serious daters.

## What Hinge does well

Credit first. Hinge is genuinely **relationship-focused**, and its whole brand —
"designed to be deleted" — signals that it wants you to find someone and leave.
That's a refreshing intent in a category built on keeping you scrolling.

Its **prompts** are clever. Instead of a blank bio, you answer set questions that
give people something specific to react to, which makes profiles feel more human
than a row of photos. And the **like-and-comment** model lets you connect by
responding to a particular photo or prompt rather than a faceless swipe, so first
contact has a bit of context built in.

Hinge also has a **large, established user base**, so in most cities you'll see
plenty of profiles, and it's available on **both iOS and Android** — where Lamp is
iOS-first for now. If you enjoy the browse-and-like ritual and prompt-led
profiles, Hinge is purpose-built for it, and it's a fine choice.

## Where Hinge stops short

Here's the honest limit. For all its relationship focus, Hinge still asks *you* to
do the matchmaking. You browse a queue, you like and comment your way through it
one profile at a time, and you ration your attention across an endless stream. The
prompts make profiles richer, but the underlying mechanic is still "look at people
and pick" — and it leaves the hardest parts to you.

It also has **no built-in AI assistant**. Once you match, you're back at the blank
message box, working out how to turn a clever prompt answer into an actual
conversation. And while prompts capture more than photos do, they still don't add
up to a real model of your personality, values and how you picture the future.

## How Lamp goes further

Lamp is an **AI dating app** built for people who've outgrown liking individual
photos and prompt answers and want matching that understands who they actually
are.

### Matched on substance, not a grid

Lamp turns your profile and your Wishes into an AI compatibility model — your
personality, values, lifestyle and goals — and introduces a **curated few** people
who genuinely fit, with the reasons you match shown before you say hello. So your
attention goes to a promising handful rather than being rationed across a queue.
Our [how AI matchmaking works](/blog/how-ai-matchmaking-works) explainer and the
[AI matchmaking glossary](/glossary/ai-matchmaking) lay out the mechanics in plain
English.

### Wishes: ask in plain English

Where Hinge gives you set prompts, Lamp lets you describe your ideal match in your
own words — a **Wish**. "Someone thoughtful who loves live music and wants a
family one day": you ask the way you'd tell a friend, and Lamp factors it in. No
preset boxes, no paid-tier filters to unlock.

### Genie does the awkward bits

Where Hinge leaves you staring at a blank message box,
[**Genie**](/glossary/ai-dating-assistant) — Lamp's AI dating assistant — helps
you write a bio that sounds like you, suggests an opener that nods to something
specific about your match, and offers a first-date idea you'd both enjoy. Genie
**only ever suggests; it never messages or acts on your behalf.** You always have
the final say, and every word stays yours.

### Know why you match

Lamp shows you what you have in common and where your values line up *before* you
say hello — context that turns a cold open into a real conversation, and a much
stronger start than reacting to a single prompt.

## "Designed to be deleted" — and what comes next

Hinge's tagline is one of the best in the category, because it names the goal out
loud: find someone, then leave. It's a genuinely good intention, and Hinge
deserves credit for building its brand around the outcome rather than the
addiction.

But an intention isn't a mechanism. Hinge points you at the right destination and
still asks you to do most of the driving — browse, like, comment, ration your
attention, work out who's worth it. Lamp shares the exact same goal, and tries to
do more of the work for you: it models who you are, estimates compatibility, and
hands you a curated few introductions so the "find someone" part is genuinely
easier. Both apps want you to delete them one day. Lamp just aims to get you there
with less effort and fewer dead-end conversations.

## For serious daters: which gets you there faster?

If you've decided you want a real relationship, the practical question is which
app reduces the wasted time between "I'm looking" and "I've met someone who fits."

- **Hinge** gives you richer profiles than a swipe app and a relationship-minded
  crowd — but you're still the matchmaker, sorting a queue by hand.
- **Lamp** does the matchmaking for you. It reads your personality, values and
  goals, introduces a curated few who genuinely fit, shows you why, and gives you
  Genie for the bio and the opener.

For people who are done with dating as a part-time job, that shift — from sorting
profiles yourself to being introduced to the right ones — is the whole point. It's
why we describe Lamp as a thoughtful dating app rather than a faster one: the win
isn't speed for its own sake, it's spending your limited time on people worth
meeting. Our [AI matchmaking glossary](/glossary/ai-matchmaking) and the
[how it works](/how-it-works) page go deeper if you want the detail.

## So, is Lamp a good Hinge alternative?

If you like Hinge's relationship focus but want matching that understands your
personality and values rather than asking you to like individual photos and
prompts, Lamp is a strong alternative — arguably the most thoughtful dating app
for serious daters. You keep the "I want something real" intent and gain AI
compatibility, natural-language Wishes and Genie.

- **You enjoy prompts and the browse-and-like ritual.** Hinge is built for it.
- **You want to be understood, not just seen, and helped to connect.** That's
  Lamp.

Both are free to start; Lamp is iOS-first for now. For the wider picture,
our guides to the [best AI dating app](/blog/best-ai-dating-app) and
the [best dating app in London](/blog/best-dating-app-london-2026) compare the
whole field, and you can read how we approach [safety](/safety).

## The honest bottom line

Hinge is a relationship-minded, prompt-led, browse-and-like app — genuinely good
at what it does. Lamp is an AI dating app that matches on personality and values,
hands you a curated few introductions, shows you *why* you're compatible, and adds
Genie to make saying hello easy. For serious daters who want depth over a queue,
it's the thoughtful step up. See the side-by-side on our
[Lamp vs Hinge](/compare/lamp-vs-hinge) page.

**Lamp is free to download on the App Store** — AI matchmaking, Wishes in plain
English, and an assistant that only ever suggests. If Hinge had the right idea but
you want it to truly understand you, download Lamp free and meet a curated few
people who genuinely fit your life.
