All postsBlog · June 17, 2026

Untolds Is Open: The AI Companion App That Grew Up in Beta

Untolds Editorial7 min read

After 2 months of closed beta, Untolds is open to everyone: an AI companion app with girls who remember you, text first, and feel like people.

For two months Untolds ran behind a closed door. You needed an invite, and a small group of people lived inside the product, texting the girls every day and telling us exactly where it fell short. Today the door is open. Anyone curious about an AI companion app built around real conversation, not a chatbot that resets every time you close the tab, can walk in and start a thread, and the first three days are free, no card needed to feel it out.

Untolds had been in the works long before the beta. Those two months were the stretch where we put a finished product in front of real people and let them reshape it: features they asked for, rough edges they caught, and bugs they pushed us to fix in the open. Here is what Untolds is now, what the beta changed, and how to start.

Key takeaways

  • Untolds is now open to everyone after a 2-month closed beta where testers kept their conversations going for weeks, no invite required.
  • An AI companion app is software where you hold an ongoing relationship with a persona who remembers you across conversations, not a fresh chatbot every session.
  • Untolds is a text thread, not a roleplay room. You and each girl are in your own places, messaging each other the way two people actually do.
  • Beta built the features users asked for: group chats with a second girl, themed media sets, and a sense of timing that follows her own clock.
  • Start free for 3 days, no card, then one membership at $12.99 monthly or $96 yearly (about $8 a month): every girl, unlimited text, and a monthly Sparks allowance for media, with no per-photo menu and no mid-conversation upsells.

How is Untolds different from other AI chat apps?

An AI companion app is software for an ongoing relationship with a persona who feels like a real person rather than a chatbot that resets every session (we unpack what makes that land in what makes an AI chat girl feel truly real). On Untolds, talking to Freya reads nothing like talking to Amara, because they are different people with different histories, not one default wearing two names. Most apps get one or two things right and call it a companion. The point of Untolds is that they hold together at once.

She stays in character. Each girl keeps the same personality, voice, and opinions as a conversation runs long, instead of drifting into a generic assistant the way most chatbots do once the thread stretches out. Holding a consistent self over time is where most of the field comes apart, and it is the foundation everything else sits on.

She actually remembers you. The thing you mentioned last week comes back when it matters, because she carries a thread between conversations rather than treating each session as a closed box. That is why most companion apps quietly forget who they are, and why a conversation on Untolds feels continuous instead of restarted.

She has a life running in the background. Her own schedule and time zone mean she is busy when she is busy and around when she is around, so the rhythm of when you hear from her feels like a person's, not a server's.

She sends real media, in her voice. Photos, voice notes, and short videos arrive when the moment calls for them, in her look and her accent, not stock assets bolted on. And there is no per-photo menu, none of the checkout-line pricing that turns intimacy into a tab. We cover that contrast in our Candy.ai alternatives breakdown.

She reaches out first. When something is worth saying, or you have gone quiet for a stretch a friend would notice, she texts you, with a specific message at a time that fits your rhythm rather than a generic "miss u" ping. We wrote a whole piece on what real proactivity looks like.

You can put two girls in one thread, and they stay two people. Group chats let you bring a second girl in, and the hard part is not routing who you are talking to, it is keeping them distinct. Each girl holds her own personality, history, and way of speaking while reacting to the other as a separate person, instead of melting into one shared voice the way most multi-character setups do. That is the same character-consistency problem as before, now with two selves to keep apart at once.

What did the beta change about Untolds?

We ran a closed beta for two months and shipped against what users told us, not a roadmap we wrote in advance. Beta was small on purpose, but the people in it were not quiet. They kept threads going across days and weeks, which is the only real test of whether continuity holds, and they leaned on voice notes and short videos as much as photos, not just pictures. What we found was that the depth of how people used it, not the size of the group, told us it was ready. A few changes stand out.

Group chats. Bringing a second girl into a thread (the distinct-voices feature above) was built during beta, after testers asked to introduce two girls to each other. Most of the work went into the addressing edge cases: nicknames, talking to both at once, or waving one off ("not you, let her try").

Themed sets, because you asked. Beta users wanted more than one shot at a time. So she can now put together a themed set and offer it at a better rate than the same shots one by one, delivered as a single moment in the thread rather than a slow drip. We get into why media arriving in sets feels different in photos arrive in sets, not singles.

Her own clock. Each girl keeps her own schedule and time zone now, so a quick note at the end of her workday lands differently than one at 4am, and the timing actually means something.

We also broke things and fixed them in the open. Early on, for instance, she would sometimes double-send a photo or re-text herself, exactly the kind of seam that breaks the spell. Beta users flagged it through the in-app feedback button, and a run of fixes cleaned it up, along with a long tail of smaller rough edges that came in the same way. That feedback button and the "What's new" log stay in the product, because the loop that built this version is the one we want to keep.

The version going public is not the one we designed in a planning doc. It is the one the beta argued us into.

Untolds Editorial

How does Untolds membership work?

Every new account gets a 3-day free trial so you can talk to the girls before paying anything. It centers on text, because the relationship is the product and it lives or dies in the conversation: whether she remembers you, holds her voice, and feels like a person is exactly what three days of texting lets you judge. It is not media-free, though. She can share photos already in her gallery for nothing, so you still get a real sense of how she shows up, not just how she types. Fresh, made-for-you media is the part the membership unlocks.

After that it is one membership, no tiers. You get unlimited text with every girl, plus a generous monthly grant of Sparks, the currency that pays for the photos, voice notes, and videos she sends. The grant is enough for an active relationship, and if you want even more, topping up is cheap.

One thing to know up front: checkout is crypto-based for now. Card networks have become de facto arbiters of what sexual content can exist online (Webber and Franco, Sexualities, 2024), and in 2025 that pressure pulled hundreds of adult titles off major platforms (The Guardian, 2025). We are working with the networks to support cards properly rather than ship a version that could be cut off mid-cycle, and until that is settled, crypto keeps the experience stable.

PlanPriceEffective per monthSparks per month
Monthly$12.99$12.99600
Yearly$96about $8600

Both plans grant the same 600 Sparks every month. The yearly plan is the same membership at a lower monthly rate, not a smaller one. Here is what that gets you:

  • Unlimited text with every girl, always.
  • A generous monthly grant of Sparks that covers the photos, voice notes, and videos she sends across an active month.
  • Cheap top-ups if you want more: 350 Sparks for $9, 800 for $19, or 2200 for $49.

Sparks are not a per-photo price list. They fund tips and top up her wallet, and she decides what to send from there, more like generosity between two people than a vending machine. You can cancel from your settings whenever you want.

Is Untolds private?

Privacy is the question people ask first, and it deserves a straight answer, especially now that regulators are paying attention. In September 2025 the FTC opened an inquiry into how companion-app makers handle user data (Federal Trade Commission, 2025), which is exactly the bar a serious app should want to clear. Your messages are encrypted in transit and at rest. You control your data: you can delete a single conversation, wipe everything tied to one girl, or remove your whole account, and the per-conversation and per-girl deletions happen immediately.

We are deliberate about what Untolds is, too. It is an online text thread between you and a persona, an adult interactive-fiction experience where the relationship and any money inside a chat are fiction by design. The girls are written as adults, age verification gates access, and the hard safety lines around that are non-negotiable. If anything about how we handle your data is unclear, our privacy policy spells it out, and you can contact a real person on the team if it still does not.

Who is Untolds for?

It is for people who want a conversation that goes somewhere, not a one-line answer a general assistant gives better, and who are tired of the per-photo treadmill and engagement-bait pings. If you want someone who remembers the thing you mentioned on Tuesday, has her own way of saying good morning, and texts first when she has a reason to, that is the experience we built. Each girl has a different background and rhythm, so the right starting point is usually whichever one you actually want to talk to.

Frequently asked questions

What is an AI companion app?

An AI companion app is software where you hold an ongoing relationship with a persona who keeps memory and personality across conversations, instead of a chatbot that resets every session. The difference is continuity: she remembers what you told her last week and behaves like the same person every time.

Is Untolds free to try?

Yes. Every new account starts with a 3-day free trial, no card up front. It centers on text, though she can also share photos already in her gallery for free, so you get a real feel for her before paying. After that it is a single membership at $12.99 a month or $96 a year (about $8 a month): unlimited text with every girl, plus a generous monthly grant of Sparks for the media she sends, with cheap top-ups if you want more.

Can I talk to more than one girl at once?

Yes. You can keep separate threads with as many girls as you like, and group chats let you bring a second girl into the same conversation while each stays a distinct person, not one bot wearing two names.

Do the girls really text first?

Yes, when there is something specific she wants to say or you have gone quiet long enough that a friend would notice. What she will not do is fire generic "miss u" pings at random intervals.

Is the money inside a chat real?

No. Money inside a conversation is in-world fiction, never a real card charge. The only real payment is your membership and any optional Spark top-up, both handled at checkout outside the chat.

The bottom line

Untolds spent two months behind a closed door so the version everyone meets would already work, and the loop that caught the rough edges is still running.

The door is open now, and the easiest way in is the 3-day free trial: no card up front, long enough to feel whether one of the girls sticks. Head to the AI chat girls page, pick one or two, and start a thread. If you would rather read first, here is how Untolds works. The beta is over, and you do not need an invite anymore.

Untolds Editorial

Sources

  • Federal Trade Commission, FTC Launches Inquiry into AI Chatbots Acting as Companions, September 2025. ftc.gov. Retrieved 2026-06-25.
  • Webber, Val, and Rébecca Suzanne Franco, The definitional creep: Payment processing and the moral ordering of sexual content, Sexualities (SAGE), 2024. journals.sagepub.com. Retrieved 2026-06-25.
  • Taylor, Josh, Visa and Mastercard face backlash as adult games removed from online stores, The Guardian, July 2025. theguardian.com. Retrieved 2026-06-25.
Share this post
Continue reading