Every tool on Ask Me Out runs in your browser: no account, no app and no card. Pick one, follow three steps, and you get a single link to send. Here’s exactly what each one does, with a real example of what you get.
Pick the occasion and a theme. Add names, the date, food and movie options, a note. Send one link — replies land in your private dashboard. Example: They open it, play a round, pick tacos over sushi, and tap Yes.
Choose a party template or a just-a-wish card. Add photos, a cake-flavour wheel, a gift-box reveal. Share the link. Example: They open it, spin the cake wheel, and RSVP.
Pick your categories — icebreakers through flirty. Draw a card. You both answer it, then draw again. Example: “What’s something you’re weirdly good at that almost never comes up?”
Choose how many cards you want. Swipe through them, then pass the phone. Compare your answers side by side. Example: “Do you believe in soulmates?” — you both swiped yes.
Answer 8 questions about yourself. Send them the link. They guess — you both see the score out of 8. Example: 6 out of 8. They missed your comfort food. Loser buys dessert.
Switch on the vibes you want — cosy, adventurous, cheap, foodie. Shake your phone, or just tap. Not it? Shake again. Example: “Loser buys the snacks. Gutter balls count double.”
Add your photos. Drag, rotate, add captions and stickers. Save the image or send it. Example: A year of photos → one polaroid pile that works as a wallpaper.
Pick both star signs. Get a match score out of 100. Share the result as a link. Example: Leo and Aquarius sit opposite each other — which nudges the score up, not down.
Enter both birthdays. Each one reduces to a single Life Path number. See how those two numbers get along. Example: 14 March 1996 → 1+4+3+1+9+9+6 = 33 → 3+3 = Life Path 6.
Answer 8 questions about how you met. Get a rarity score out of 100. Share the story cards. Example: Meeting by chance offline is rarer than it feels — every source is listed.