Squick alert: Contains incest.
April Fools 2024 contest entry. Please don't forget to check out the other entries!
The inspiration for this story comes from
Bamagan's
Incest Quest
. Their 12-part story is heavy on fetishes but the underlying app was the spark for this story. A very special thank you is in order.
Every person engaging in sexual activities in this story is over the age of 18. This is a work of erotic fiction. Any resemblance between the characters or events and any actual persons, living or dead, or events is unintentional and coincidental.
Let's swipe right, shall we?
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It seemed innocent enough.
An email in my inbox, announcing a new dating app being tested in our area. I marked it as spam and deleted it. Anything that promised results without relying on pictures and profiles sounded too good to be true. You know the old saying, anything that sounds too good to be true usually is.
The same email came the next day, with the same result. And the next day. And the next day. I opened the fifth one and looked for the little unsubscribe link. I unsubscribed with a note to stop sending me these emails typed into the box provided. I hadn't signed up for anything like this but maybe my sister April did it as a joke. It wouldn't be the first time one of us had done something like that for April Fool's or a birthday.
On the sixth day, a different email. Same app, same promises, different presentation. I unsubscribed and reported it as spam.
It became a routine. Wake up, check my email, unsubscribe, report, delete. Somewhere around day 18, a new email showed up in my inbox. The subject read "What Have You Got To Lose?"
I opened it, I don't know why. Idle curiosity, I guess.
There was no fancy ad, no hype, no fantastical pitch. Just a detailed list of all the rejections I had received on my other dating apps, including dates. At the bottom was a table of stats. The most telling stat was the average time on profile. It was 23 seconds. That's how long the average woman looked at my profile before moving on.
23 fucking seconds. I timed it and it was depressing.
Their interpretation of the data showed that, even though women thought I was around a 7 on a scale of 1 to 10 in attractiveness, my profile personality rated a 3. The summary concluded I was too introverted to succeed at online dating, the women I found attractive according to their profiles were more extroverted, and that extroversion was what they were looking for in a partner. I was also apparently trying to punch above my weight in the looks department, too. Oof.
Hey, a man's gotta dream, right?
The last line of the email was in large print and again asked the question, "What have you got to lose?"
That was a pretty good question at that point. I quickly decided that I could lose the dating apps, since I obviously wasn't getting anywhere and now I had an informed idea as to why. I deleted my profiles and then deleted the apps from my phone. I also deleted the email. I toyed with the idea of confronting April about it but decided I wouldn't give her the satisfaction.
The next morning, the email subject line read "What Is Wrong With You?" I deleted it unopened and before I could close my email app, it was back. So I deleted it again. It reappeared almost immediately. The third time, "READ ME!" was appended to the end of the subject line. I had a degree in computer science and this raised all kinds of red flags. This was not a practical joke from April, she wasn't technologically disadvantaged by any means but this was professional quality shenanigans.
I closed the email app and ran the antivirus supplied by my cellular carrier. Nothing out of the ordinary. I searched online and found a separate antivirus I could run without downloading. It was also normal. I tried a third with the same result. I didn't have any kind of malware on my phone.
I went back and opened the email. Again, "What do you have to lose?" was the headline. Below, it went over the virtues of the app being pictureless and not requiring a user-supplied profile. No lying about looks or interests. A detailed questionnaire was provided free of charge, the true/false answers would be evaluated using artificial intelligence and matches based on personality and temperament would be provided.
There would be a period of app-based text question and answer interaction, also evaluated by AI, to further determine compatibility. We would then be encouraged to meet face-to-face in a neutral location after uploading pictures to the server, which would be scanned and evaluated for compatibility. A footnote briefly described the process, indicating the pictures would be subjectively rated for attractiveness and those persons with similar levels would be encouraged to meet personally, as studies had indicated that disparate attractiveness levels did not mesh well.
I thought that sounded like bullshit, a computer rating my looks. How would it know if I uploaded somebody else's picture?
There was a large blue button at the bottom of the email, titled "Start My Assessment." Right underneath that was the magic question again, "What have you got to lose?"
You mean besides what's left of my self-respect? Nothing.
I clicked on the button and it took me to the app store to download the app's beta version. After it installed with a clean bill of health from the antivirus, I opened it. My first name and a picture of me appeared, with the option of uploading a different picture. I didn't give it permission to upload pictures but when I opened the permissions page, it had already been granted. The option was grayed out, so I couldn't change it. So that was how they solved that particular problem with picture authenticity.
It wasn't a bad picture, my hair was combed and I didn't have anything stuck in my teeth, so I left it as is. The personality and temperament assessment was next. I began answering questions, all of them true or false. They appeared to be randomly distributed and after a while, I began to recognize questions, which only differed by a word or two or by the degree of detail involved.
I answered them as honestly as possible, erring on the side of negative if I wasn't sure. I don't know how many questions I answered, they weren't numbered, but I was at it for about an hour. After the last question, the app indicated that further questions would be forthcoming as the AI evaluated my answers and formulated additional ones to further clarify my previous answers. I closed the app and went about my day-to-day activities.
After I had graduated college and gotten a job, I moved into an apartment near my parent's house. I usually went over for dinner a couple of nights during the week and I would sometimes hang out on the weekend if I didn't have any other plans. I usually didn't. My sister still lived at home while she finished college, she didn't have that many credit hours left until she finished her degree. She also rarely had plans for the weekend.