

DayOfUs vs mmotion
DayOfUs and mmotion are both friendship apps that help you meet people in real life, but they take different approaches. Here’s how they stack up across pricing, format, cities, and more.
Side-by-side comparison · Updated 2026
At a glance
Pricing
DayOfUs is priced at $ ($12.99/single dinner or $15.99/month unlimited + cost of your meal), while mmotion comes in at Free (Free (invite-only beta)).
Format & matching
DayOfUs uses groups of 4-6 per table, compared to mmotion’s 5 friends per profile, and DayOfUs relies on algorithm-based matching while mmotion uses interest-based matching.
How they work
DayOfUs: Download the app and take a personality quiz that covers your interests, conversation style, and what you're looking for in a dinner companion. Pick your city and a date that works. DayOfUs's algorithm assembles a table of four to six people with complementary personalities and handles the restaurant reservation. On the day of your dinner, you'll get the venue details. Show up, sit down, and meet your group. The app also includes icebreaker prompts if the table needs a nudge.
mmotion: Apply to join the vetted community — mmotion is members-only. Once approved, the app quietly logs the places you spend time at (restaurants, gyms, galleries) into a private Location Vault that only you can see. You create up to three profiles to express different sides of yourself — maybe one for nightlife, one for fitness. When you're ready, you choose which visits to share publicly. You can discover other members who've visited the same spots and connect with them, limited to five friends per profile to keep things intentional. Messaging opens with a built-in conversation starter about the place you both visited.
What to love
DayOfUs: Available in 13+ cities across four continents — significantly wider reach than most dinner-matching apps. Personality-based matching creates genuinely compatible tables. The app handles the entire reservation so there's zero logistics on your end. Affordable entry point at ~$13 per dinner. Smaller group sizes (4-6) keep conversations intimate.
mmotion: Privacy-first design — everything is private by default. Location-based matching feels more organic than profiles or algorithms. Multiple profiles let you compartmentalize your social life. Five-friend limit per profile forces genuine connections. Built-in conversation starters remove the cold-open awkwardness.
Reality check
DayOfUs: Still relatively new — no public ratings yet on the App Store. iOS only, no Android app. No structured post-dinner community or follow-up features. Restaurant selection may be limited in newer cities.
mmotion: NYC-only beta with a 1,000-user cap — most people can't use it yet. Invite-only application process creates a barrier to entry. Requires constant location access, which is a big ask. Very new — the community may be too small to reliably match with people.
Søren's take
On DayOfUs: DayOfUs is essentially Timeleft's younger sibling with a wider passport. The core mechanic is identical — personality quiz, algorithm-matched dinner group, restaurant booked for you — but it's already live in cities across Asia, Australia, and Europe that Timeleft hasn't fully penetrated. The lack of ratings suggests it's early days, which means smaller user pools in some cities. But the price is right, the model is proven, and if it's available where you live, it's worth a shot.
On mmotion: mmotion is one of the most interesting social apps I've seen in a while — the idea of meeting people through shared places instead of shared bios is genuinely compelling. The privacy controls are thoughtful and the five-friend cap is a bold design choice that signals they're serious about quality over quantity. But right now, it's a NYC-only beta capped at 1,000 users, so unless you're in Manhattan, you're on a waitlist. Worth applying if you're in New York and curious about what post-swipe social networking looks like.





