Service Reviews

This site wouldn’t be complete without reviews of e-dating services. I’ve polled a number of friendswith online dating experience to come up with reviews for four major e-dating services.Since there are plenty of other services out there that my friends have never used, I need your help toreview additional services. If you’d like to help other readers to find a good e-dating service(or avoid the bad ones), please fill out the this survey . I’ll incorporate your feedback into this section.

A few words of about this section: The quoted prices reflect month-to-month memberships. Prices are generally lower if you purchase multi-month packages. Descriptions of the specified features can be found in my features section.

Sites currently reviewed:


Match.com
Price $20/mo.
Reputation Big
Features Search , Match , Chat , Wink , Voice Messages , Voice Messages , Hotlist
MJ says The E-Dating Warehouse. If you live in a small town, have very specific requirements, or like your messages by the gallon, Match is for you.

Founded in 1995, Match holds the Guinness World Record as the biggest dating site onthe Internet with somewhere between 8 and 15 million members, depending on who you ask,of which 1 million are paying members. It’s an e-dating warehouse where you can prettymuch find whatever you’re looking for, but it might take some work. If you live in a smallercity, Match may be the best bet simply because it has the biggest selection, whereas smallersites may not be well represented. But Match’s strength is also its weakness: it may be too bigfor you. It can take some work to separate the wheat from the chaff. When TR joined match, she was floodedwith 70 emails in her first 48 hours membership, and some people have complained of too manygeneric emails.

Profile questions:

  • Describe yourself and who you'd like to date.
  • What do you do for fun?
  • Favorite local hot spots or travel destinations?
  • Favorite things?
  • What’s the last thing you read?

[TR: Match’s customer service sucks. They automatically renew your membership, so when my 3-monthmembership expired, they charged me for another 3 months without warning, even though my profile was hidden.When I found out and tried to cancel the next day, they refused to refund my money and only offered to pro-ratethe fee by about half. The customer service guy was also a complete asshole.]


eHarmony
Price $50/mo.
Reputation Scientific soulmate finder
Features Personality Matching , Chat ,
MJ says A hefty fee for dubious methods

eHarmony’s shtick is “scientific matching”. It was founded by a Ph.D. who claims to have devised a mechanism to measure compatibility scientifically. You fill out a million questions, and the computer finds people who fit your personality. Sounds like a bullshit to me, but I’ve never tried it. One of my friends who has used eHarmony was dissatisfied withher matches. She felt that the site just didn’t get her. TR recently spent over three hours filling out five hundred very annoying multiple choice questions, and then decided not to pursue the matches that were picked for her. It wasn’t that there was anything wrong with the picks, but you don’t get much information at first, not even a picture. To see pictures, you have to go through several more stages of question answering and message writing. Needless to say, you have to pay the subscription fee in order to get those stages, and at $50 a month, eHarmony is not cheap.

[TR: eHarmony still tries to send me matches even though I never paid and indicated onthe profile that I don’t want them to send me matches.]

eHarmony’s marketing campaign focuses on helping people to find their soulmates. As a result, it tends to attract serious-minded members. A guy once responded to a friend of mine’s light-hearted getting-to-know-you email by writing that she didn’t seem to bevery interested. This facet of eHarmony seems more important to me than the personality matching technology. Regardless of how well the technology works, the service is mostappriate for people who are ready to settle down and don’t want to mess around with casual dating.

Profile questions:
Far too numerous to print


Nerve Personals (aka Spring Street Networks)
Price $1/credit, 1 credit to contact someone
Reputation Well-read hipsters
Features Search , Match , Chat , Wink , Voice Messages , Hotlist
MJ says Cool, literate, and artistic but pretentious. Beware of snake woman.

Nerve Personals/Spring Street Networks is my favorite online dating service and the one that I have used the most. Nerve.com is an online magazine that focuses on erotica. Several years ago, the Nerve folks spun off their successful e-dating business several years ago into a company called Spring Street Networks, which powers dating services for a number of publications including Esquire, the Onion, Salon.com, the Village Voice, and of course, Nerve.com. (Time Out Magazineused to use Spring Street, but they’ve switched to Yahoo Personals.) If you join any of theseservices, you’ll have access to profiles from all members of the Spring Street Networks.

As you might expect from a service associated with so many publications, Nerve attracts a lot ofpeople in media: writers, artists, editors, filmmakers, and aspiring musicians. My ex-girlfriend’sNerve profile exhorted band members to look elsewhere. Another friend of mine complained of being inundated by film editors. Because of all these literary, artistic types, the profiles tend to be witty and articulate, and many of the pictures are artsy, but beware of pretension.

In keeping with Nerve.com’s erotica focus, many of the questions encourage sexual innuendo, and in addition to the normal categories of “Single” and “Divorced”, Nerve includes “Married” and notably, “Discrete”. For that reason, it’s not for everyone. Several women I know received a post from the “snake-woman”, actually from a couple seeking a third for their threesome and featuring a picture of a topless woman draped with a large snake that hides her nipples. But don’t let that stop you from trying Nerve. While you may receive the occasion sexual proposition, the majority of Nerve members are quite tame. They tend to either go with the innuendo flow or put their creativity into getting around the sexual overtones while still answering the questions.

Nerve is also less expensive than the other sites and great for people who send targeted messages. There is no subscription fee. You pay $1 for each person you contact, although you have buy credits in batches of at least 25. If like me, you only contact a couple of people a week, it’s quite reasonable.

[TR: I still have 24 credits left from responding to one wink!]

Profile questions:

  • Last great book I read
  • Most humbling moment
  • Favorite on-screen sex scene
  • Celebrity I resemble most
  • Best or worst lie I’ve ever told
  • If I could be anywhere at the moment
  • Song or album that puts me in the mood
  • The five items I can’t live without
  • Fill in the blanks
  • In my bedroom, you’ll find
  • Why you should get to know me
  • More about what I’m looking for

Lavalife
Price $0.25/credit, 5 credits to contact someone
Reputation Young professionals
Features Search , Match , Chat , Wink , Voice Messages , Hotlist
MJ says Shiny happy people holding hands

Lavalife markets itself as a dating service for young, attractive, fun-loving professionals,and it’s members fit that mold, more or less. Sample headlines: “YAY! Having fun in Manhattan rules!”,“Open-minded, fun girl looking for exciting mate to share laughs”. Like Match, there is only oneessay question, so the profiles tend to be generic.

Lavalife also makes a big deal about it’s three unique communities: Dating, Relationships, and IntimateEncounters. Essentially, LavaLife consists of three dating services rolled up into one. Each communityhas a separate set of profiles, and the profile questions are different. If you want, you can post in all three. Members from one community can also contact members of another community, which means that members of Relationships may receive explicit messages from members of Intimate Encounters. A friend of mine said that even some of the messages she received from Dating members were a bit forward, as in “What’s your favorite sexual position?”

Like Nerve, Lavalife uses credits, rather than subscriptions, which is cheaper and cuts down on the bulk mail.The instant messaging feature, however, allows users to send as many messages as they like for an hour, so you mayget bulk-instant-messaged.

Profile questions:

  • In My Own Words

JDate
Price $35/mo.
Reputation Jewish
Features Search , Match , Chat , Wink , Hotlist
MJ says Jews-R-Us

JDate is the other site that I’ve used. It’s the best site in the world for one and only one thing: meeting Jews. In addition to the ordinary e-date criteria, you can specify your religious denomination, kosher practices, synagogue attendance, and ethnicity (Ashkenazi or Sephardic). You will not find a larger quantity of eligible Jews anywhere else. When you search for profiles in the New York area, you’ll likely get a list that maxes out at 500 and can take hours to browse.

That said, I don’t particularly like JDate. The questions are bland, and members tend to answer them blandly, without the slightest hint of irony. In New York, the service tends to attract a homogenous crowd that lives mostly on the Upper West or East Side and migrates en masse to the Hamptons every summer weekend. If that’s your thing, then JDate is definitely for you, but I prefer a more diverse mix.

You should be aware that even though the vast majority of its members or Jewish, there a few goyim on JDate. I don’t think that there is anything wrong with non-Jews posting on JDate, but if you’re tempted, you should be upfront about it. There are many JDate members who really do want to date only Jews, and lying about your religion is obnoxious and most likely fruitless. More on dishonest profiles later. As far as I know, I have only once been contacted by a non-Jew, and she was honest about it, but I have a friend who once went on several dates with a guy before she discovered he wasn’t Jewish. The giveaway: he was creationist.

A JDate subscription is $35 per month. You can post a profile for free, but unfortunately you can no longer see or respond to any messages unless you’re a subscriber, so it’s basically useless if you don’t pay.

Profile questions:

  • About me
  • Perfect match
  • Ideal relationship
  • Perfect first date
  • Learned from past relationships

Please help out other visitors by providing feedback on services you’ve used.

Comments

eDating Sites



General


AmericanSingles
Craig's List
Cupid Junction
Date.com
eHarmony
FriendFinder
Lavalife
Match.com
Metrodate
Nerve Personals
PerfectMatch.com
True.com
Yahoo! Personals

Gay/Lesbian


Gay.com Personals
GayFriendFinder
glimpse.com
PlanetOut

Religious


BigChurch
JDate
JewishFriendFinder
Soulmatch

“Intimate”


AdultFriendFinder
Alt.com
Passion.com
SexyAds

Seniors


SeniorFriendFinder
SilverSingles






Online Dating
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