Loathing the prospect of spending another Valentine’s Day stuck for things to say on Hinge, Bumble and the like, I wondered if the internet’s new favourite assistant – ChatGPT – could help secure a date.
Before daring to take its suggestions into the dating trenches, I enlisted an expert to assess the chatbot’s ability to strike up conversation.
For dating coach Hayley Quinn, this was undoubtedly one of her strangest assignments. For me, it was a chance to finally find a better conversation starter than a GIF of Obi-Wan Kenobi saying “hello there”.
‘Avoid physical compliments’
We started by assessing ChatGPT’s top three chat-up lines.
“Do you have a map? I keep getting lost in your eyes.”
Alarm bells are ringing immediately here, says Coach Quinn.
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“In a post #MeToo era, physical compliments are dodgy territory. Instead of focusing on someone’s looks, try complimenting them on an aspect of their personality.”
“If you were a vegetable, you’d be a cutecumber.”
Even I think this one’s bad, but Coach Quinn is more forgiving.
“In the age of dating apps, funny first messages can go a long way. Just make sure yours is original, and not one a thousand people (or AIs) have used before.”
“Do you believe in love at first swipe, or do I need to unmatch and match with you again?”
It’s the lack of originality that’s done ChatGPT in here again, says Coach Quinn.
That highlights the chatbot’s established limitations. It’s a so-called large language model trained on a massive amount of data, but that means it draws on things that have already been written.
‘Presumptuous and creepy’
Some dating apps have tried to pivot away from a pure focus on matching based on photos.
But they no doubt remain the key feature – and so we asked ChatGPT for some catch-all compliments.
“Your smile is so warm and inviting!”
Coach Quinn is not very impressed: “Can we ban the use of the word ‘inviting’? This message comes across as presumptive to the point of creepy.”
“This photo really captures your adventurous and fun-loving spirit.”
A bit like the “cutecumber” line, ChatGPT might be on to something here.
Coach Quinn suggests a tweak: “Edit this to make it shorter and sharper – saying ‘adventurous’ and ‘fun-loving’ is borderline tautology. Keep it to a snappier: ‘This photo captures your spirit.'”
But don’t go relying on ChatGPT as some sort of digital Cyrano de Bergerac. While it may give better dating advice than plenty of your friends, you’ll want to do a sense check before taking its suggestions on board.
Is it inappropriate? Does it sound inauthentic? Do I sound like a robot?
If the answer’s yes, it’s probably time to swipe left on this particular love guru.