stdout.chat is a free terminal-style chat app for iOS that matches you with people who share your interests — monospace text, slash commands, no video, no camera, no sign-up. This page explains the terminal angle, because the command-line aesthetic isn't a coat of paint. It's the whole point.
01 / DEFINITIONWhat is a terminal chat app?
A terminal chat app is a keyboard-first text chat built to look and feel like a command line: monospace type, a blinking prompt, and slash commands instead of buttons. You open the app, get matched with another person, and the entire interaction happens in writing — the way you'd talk in a shell, not in a feed.
That makes it fundamentally different from the two formats that dominate "meet new people" apps today: video chat roulettes, where a camera feed decides in two seconds whether someone skips you, and photo-first social apps, where the profile picture does the talking before you do.
In a terminal chat, the only thing anyone can judge is what you actually type.
02 / WHYWhy keyboard-first?
If you spend your day in an editor, a shell, and a chat client, a keyboard-first interface isn't a constraint — it's home. Building the chat around the command line changes the conversation more than any feature could add to it:
- No appearance anxiety. Nobody sees your face, your room, or what you're wearing. You can talk from your desk at 2am looking however you look. The pressure that makes video chats exhausting simply isn't there.
- No two-second skip judgment. Unlike video chat roulettes, you can't be dismissed on sight. People read your words before deciding anything — which means quieter, more thoughtful people finally get a fair start.
- Slower is deeper. Typing gives you a moment to think. Text conversations naturally drift toward actual topics — music, code, books, whatever you matched on — instead of awkward small talk in front of a lens.
- Hands stay on the keys. Match, connect, skip, report, block — every action is a keystroke or a slash command. No tapping through menus, no thumb gymnastics. It moves at the speed you type.
Text is also the most honest format for meeting people online: the person who's interesting in writing is interesting, full stop. There's no lighting trick for that.
03 / MATCHINGMatched by interests, not by luck
Most chat apps pair you with whoever happens to be online. stdout.chat doesn't. You pick up to five interests across culture, tech, lifestyle, and sport, and the app pairs you with someone who shares at least one of them.
Before the chat starts, you see a short profile preview — username, bio, and exactly which interests you have in common — and choose [connect] or [skip]. Every conversation starts with common ground instead of "hi… so… where are you from?"
There's no sign-up gate in front of any of this: no phone number, no email, no password. The app generates a random device identity on first launch and you're matching within seconds. The homepage walks through the full flow in three steps.
04 / QUALITYGood conversation has a score
The terminal strips away the noise; the rank system rewards what's left. Every chat on stdout.chat ends with a session grade — S, A, B, or C — based on how the conversation actually went: length, balance, whether anyone bailed mid-sentence.
Grades feed a 16-tier ladder that runs from NEW to LEGEND. Your rank reflects how you talk — not how you look, who follows you, or how long you've been around. It's the opposite of a follower count: you can't buy it, you can't pose for it, you can only earn it one good conversation at a time.
05 / PRIVACYPrivate by default, moderated by design
Conversations on stdout.chat are ephemeral: when a session ends, the messages are gone from our servers. There's no chat history to mine, no profile photo to scrape, and no personal data to hand over in the first place.
Keyboard-first also makes moderation honest work. Typed messages can be filtered and reviewed in ways video never can be. Reporting and blocking are one command each — /report and /block — and confirmed violations end in device-level bans. The support page covers how all of it works.
06 / TRY ITOpen a prompt and start talking
If every "meet people" app you've tried put a lens or a feed between you and the other person, try the one that's just a prompt. stdout.chat is free on the App Store — no account, no phone number, and the first match is seconds away.