Live examples

Six finished journeys. Tap any to play through.

Each example is a real receiver page on a permanent demo URL — not a marketing mock. Walk through every scene, send hearts in the composer, react to the letter with multiple emojis, try the reveal quiz on the anonymous one, even tap yes on the question card. They're full proposals, just with stand-in names.

What to look for

Six things worth noticing as you walk through.

The examples are easy to skim — but the real craft sits in the micro-decisions. Here's what most people miss on the first watch.

01
The opening tap

A gentle entry gate appears with the receiver's first name. Her tap is what gives the browser permission to play your background song with sound.

02
How the chat unfolds

Typing dots, then a single short line. Then another. Section chips break the flow into chapters — Hello, Memories, Letter, Question, Yes — so it never feels like a wall of text.

03
The photo layout you picked

Polaroids that auto-drift sideways. A slideshow that crossfades. A filmstrip with sepia. A scrollable grid. Each example shows a different one of the four.

04
The letter takeover

The chat dissolves and a full-screen italic letter types itself out one character at a time. Five emoji reactions sit pinned at the bottom — pick any, multiple if you want.

05
The anonymous reveal

On the anonymous birthday example, the contact header is blurred and the signature reads "— ???". Solve the quiz to watch your name crossfade letter-by-letter into every prior message.

06
The yes screen

Confetti, the headline with her name, a "share this moment" button that exports the card as a PNG (not just a link). Try the dodging "no" button before tapping yes.

The four flows

What the filter chips actually filter.

Each example sits inside one of four occasion flows. The proposal flow is live now; birthday, Valentine's, and anniversary are demoable through these examples but the public create-flow for them rolls out shortly.

Proposals
1 example

Marriage proposals — named (signed in your name) or anonymous (with quiz reveal). The flagship flow.

Birthdays
1 example

Cake-day with photos, AI letter, and the "make a wish" beat. Anonymous version uses the same quiz reveal as proposals.

Valentine's
1 example

A sub-flow for each of the eight V-week days — Rose, Propose, Chocolate, Teddy, Promise, Hug, Kiss, Vday. Each has its own particle and question.

Anniversaries
2 examples

Milestone sub-flows for first / fifth / tenth / twenty-fifth. Calmer pacing, deeper templates.

Watching tips

Best on a phone, in a quiet moment, with sound on.

  • Examples don't auto-play music (stand-in pages have no song). Your real created proposals do — and the receiver gets a soft tap-to-begin gate that doubles as the user-gesture browsers need to allow audio.
  • 📱The chat is mobile-native. On a desktop the layout still works but the scroll-snap reel and the dodging "no" feel best on a phone.
  • Tap "yes" on the question card to see the celebration screen. Confetti, share-as-image, and the stats line all come alive. Examples don't actually fire the email/WhatsApp ping — only your real created proposal will.
  • Try the anonymous birthday example specifically — that one shows the quiz reveal mechanic, blurred contact header, and the letter-by-letter name crossfade animation that makes anonymous proposals so dramatic.

Inspired? Build yours.

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