A list of interests is not the same as a life in common.
Usual adds real-world context to dating by helping people discover the places and routines their lives already share.
What people do matters.
Profiles are useful, but they are incomplete.
Two people can both select fitness, food, music, or the outdoors without having anything specific in common.
A shared climbing gym, neighborhood café, running trail, bookstore, or concert venue gives that interest shape.
It turns a broad claim into a real part of everyday life.
Shared context changes the introduction.
Starting a conversation with a stranger is difficult because there is often no natural place to begin.
Usual gives people a specific, mutual point of reference.
Not:
What do you do for fun?
Instead:
It looks like we both climb. How long have you been going?
Local does not have to mean live.
Many location-based products focus on who is nearby right now.
Usual does not.
The product is built around recurring places, not live proximity.
You can have meaningful overlap with someone without being at the same venue, on the same day, or at the same time.
Comparison
| Typical dating experience | Usual |
|---|---|
| Starts with photos and prompts | Adds real-world shared context |
| Broad interest labels | Specific types of places and routines |
| Nearby based on home radius | Relevant based on everyday life |
| Generic conversation starters | Clear reasons two people may connect |
| Location treated as distance | Location treated as private context |
| Limited explanation for suggestions | Transparent reasons for each match |
Usual does not claim to know who is right for you.
No matching system can predict a relationship.
Usual provides better context, not certainty.
It helps surface people whose lives already contain meaningful overlap and leaves the rest to you.