Feeld is a dating and social-discovery application designed for adults exploring a broad range of relationship structures, sexualities, gender identities, and interests, including ethical non-monogamy, polyamory, kink, couples dating, and conventional one-to-one connections. Members create profiles, express desires and boundaries, discover nearby people, connect profiles with partners where supported, match, and message. Feeld provides inclusive discovery and communication; it does not verify every identity, relationship agreement, health claim, consent practice, or offline safety.
Profiles can include photographs, pronouns, gender, sexuality, relationship status, desires, interests, location, and linked partners. Inclusive fields make self-description easier, but disclosure should remain selective. Home addresses, workplace schedules, identity documents, children’s information, financial details, and exact routines should not be public. Photographs should belong to the member and should not show partners or others without explicit permission. A linked profile does not prove every affected partner consents.
Ethical non-monogamy requires informed agreement among relevant people, not merely a label. Users should discuss relationship boundaries, privacy, safer sex, availability, emotional expectations, and what information can be shared. “Don’t ask, don’t tell” or a claimed open relationship cannot be verified by the app. Someone unwilling to respect existing agreements is not made ethical by choosing a profile tag. Couples should avoid treating another member as an accessory rather than an autonomous person.
Discovery and matching can use location, preferences, activity, and platform ranking. A recommendation is not a safety or compatibility endorsement. Sensitive location can reveal home, work, clubs, clinics, worship, or community membership. Users should review background-location permissions and avoid naming exact venues or routines publicly. An offline approach based on inferred location is not consent. Blocking, evidence preservation, and specialist help are appropriate when crossing paths becomes stalking.
Messaging lets matches negotiate expectations before meeting. Keeping early communication in-app preserves reporting and delays exposing a primary phone number or social graph. Users should be explicit about identities, partner awareness, boundaries, safer-sex practices, substance use, recording, and aftercare as relevant. Consent negotiations are ongoing, not a one-time checklist. A person can stop or change their mind at any stage, including after travel, payment, undressing, or prior intimacy.
Kink and group encounters require additional risk planning. Participants should understand activities, competence, physical and emotional limits, safe words or signals, sobriety, emergency procedures, and aftercare. Restraint, impact, breath restriction, substances, and unfamiliar equipment can cause serious harm. Online claims are not training credentials. Safer introductory meetings and education from reputable organizations are appropriate. No activity should be attempted because a match pressures someone to prove openness.
Sexual health involves barrier methods, testing, vaccination, contraception, and honest discussion without stigma. A recent test reduces some uncertainty but cannot guarantee current status or cover every infection. Health data should remain private and consensually shared. Users should not demand photographs of medical documents or distribute another person’s results. Urgent symptoms, assault, or exposure require qualified medical care and, where desired, specialist forensic or survivor support.
Paid Majestic membership or other subscriptions can provide visibility, filters, private photos, incognito behavior, or additional features under current plans. Payment does not guarantee matches or access to another person. Trials can renew automatically. Users should check price, period, cancellation, and refund terms and retain confirmation. Deleting the application or pausing a profile may not stop billing. Private-photo features do not prevent recipients from copying content.
Romance, sextortion, and investment scams can target open-minded communities. A fraudster may obtain intimate material, threaten exposure, request travel money, or introduce cryptocurrency. Users should never send money to someone known only online, receive and forward funds, or invest on a match’s instructions. Intimate images should be treated as permanently copyable. Blackmail should be documented and escalated to appropriate platform, financial, specialist, or law-enforcement channels rather than paid.
Feeld can process identity, gender, sexuality, relationship, desire, location, message, image, purchase, device, and behavioral data—some of the most sensitive personal information. Users should use unique credentials, protect recovery channels, review every permission, and hide revealing notifications. Fake support does not need passwords, codes, gift cards, cryptocurrency, or remote access. Employers, family, or governments may gain access to an unlocked device even if the profile is not public.
Feeld’s value is an unusually inclusive environment for adults to communicate identities, desires, and nontraditional relationship structures directly. Its limitations include self-reported agreements, sensitive sexual and location data, consent and health complexity, subscription pressure, sextortion, and offline risk. Reliable use requires selective disclosure, explicit continuing consent, independent verification, respect for every participant’s autonomy, safer public first meetings, informed health and kink practices, secure accounts, and immediate rejection of coercion, blackmail, financial requests, or secrecy that violates another person’s agreement. Users should regularly review linked partners, private-photo access, active sessions, block lists, and precise-location permissions, especially after travel or a relationship ends. A separate contact method and hidden notification previews can reduce involuntary outing and prevent a new connection from discovering unrelated work, family, or community accounts.