Looking for someone specific? Ask a Wingmate to introduce you or introduce yourself.
Step 1:
Invite a trusted friend (private link)
Step 2:
Choose what they can see:
Step 3:
Approve or decline any recommendation before it’s sent
You are in control
• Choose who can recommend someone for you
• Approve every introduction before it’s sent
• Decide which vouches appear on your profile
• Change roles anytime without restarting
You’ve Been Invited to Make an Introduction
Your friend trusts you to recommend someone aligned with their values and intentions.
Step 1:
Review your friend’s preferences (limited view)
Step 2:
Submit a recommendation:
• Candidate name
• Short endorsement (Why they’d be a good match)
• Optional contact intro
Step 3:
Your friend (Seeker) approves before it’s sent
Header:
You’ve Been Recommended by
[ ]
Explanation:
Someone who knows you believes you may align with [ ].
Accept introduction
or
Decline politely
“Connection Intent”
Card Title:
Select Your Intent
Description:
Choose the type of connection you’re seeking. Your Wingmates will only recommend candidates aligned with your selected intent.
☐ Relationship – Seeking a committed romantic partnership
☐ Companionship – Seeking consistent connection and shared experiences
☐ Friendship – Seeking meaningful platonic connections
Friendli is where dating becomes a team sport – with friends, structure, and accountability built in.
No one builds a meaningful life alone. Dating shouldn’t be any different.
By inviting trusted friends into the process, we turn isolation into community and anxiety into support.Wing mates aren’t spectators—they’re collaborators, guides, and guardians of the people they care about. When friends are involved, standards rise.
When accountability exists, behavior improves.
When community is present, safety follows.
We reject the idea that engagement should come at the expense of mental health. Dating should not make people feel invisible, disposable, or replaceable.
That’s why we replaced swipes with vouches.
That’s why matches are earned, not infinite.
That’s why rejection is private, constructive, and humane.
Trust isn’t a feature—it’s the foundation.