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BuzzChat

Product guide Chat flow Adult use only

How BuzzChat works

BuzzChat is designed to make the start of a conversation simple. The public site explains the product, the chat route lets you choose a nickname and enter a live conversation, and the guide pages help you decide what to share, what to avoid, and when to leave.

Step 1

Open the site

Visit BuzzChat in your browser. If you want context first, use the guides, FAQ, and Safety Center before you open the chat route.

Step 2

Choose a nickname

Pick a nickname that does not identify you. The best nicknames feel casual and easy, not like handles copied from your other public accounts.

Step 3

Enter live chat

Start a conversation, keep the tone broad at first, and leave quickly if the exchange turns pushy, rude, or too personal.

What happens during chat

The core experience is intentionally lightweight

BuzzChat focuses on live text conversation. You open the route, set your nickname, and use the search control to connect. The product is meant to stay readable and easy to leave, rather than wrapping the experience in profile-building features.

The important part is what that simplicity does not mean: it does not mean every stranger is trustworthy, and it does not mean you should treat the chat like a place to share real-world identifiers too early.

If you need help with first messages, use Conversation Starters. If you need a better feel for privacy habits, start with this privacy guide.

Boundaries that matter

What the site expects from users

  • Use the product only if you are 18 or older.
  • Keep names, exact location, phone numbers, and social handles private.
  • Do not pressure other people for photos, contact info, or off-platform access.
  • Leave and report if a conversation turns abusive or threatening.

Images and shared content

Treat visual sharing as higher risk than text

BuzzChat supports image sharing inside chat, but that does not make every image safe to send. Photos can reveal faces, rooms, uniforms, paperwork, social handles, or location clues even when the message around them feels harmless.

If you send any image, review it first as if a stranger were studying the background. When in doubt, do not send it. Our image-safety guide is the best companion page for that decision.

Help around the product

Public pages you should know about

  • FAQ for common setup and use questions
  • Safety Center for reporting and boundaries
  • Support for technical issues and abuse reports
  • Guides for deeper reading before or after chat