
A new national survey suggests a striking shift in attitudes among young adults who grew up online. Four in ten Gen Z respondents said they wish social media had never been invented. The finding comes from a U.S. poll of 1,006 adults ages 18 to 27 conducted by The Harris Poll in collaboration with researcher Jonathan Haidt’s team.
The numbers reflect a broader mood change. The generation once defined by likes, shares, and follower counts now appears tired of the constant scroll. Many are searching for face-to-face interaction instead of algorithmic validation.
Startup Positions Itself as an In-Person Alternative
Ville, a social application launched in late 2024, is attempting to fill that gap. The platform focuses on helping users discover nearby activities and connect in person rather than through feeds or public profiles. The app avoids follower metrics and public popularity scores, which the company says removes pressure and encourages participation.
The company describes its approach as “in-person-first.” Technology plays a supporting role, not the main attraction. The goal is simple: use digital tools to get people out of their homes and into shared spaces.
The Rise of “Third Places” as Community Anchors
Ville’s design centers on recurring gatherings. These are often called “third places,” meaning locations outside home and work where people meet regularly. Examples include cafés, gyms, parks, hobby clubs, and neighborhood events.
Research suggests these spaces play a major role in community health. In a national survey of more than 6,000 U.S. adults conducted by the American Enterprise Institute’s Survey Center on American Life, 72 percent of people who regularly encounter acquaintances at a third place described their community as tight-knit.
Ville founder Daniel Meese argues that repetition matters. When individuals see the same faces each week, relationships form naturally. No elaborate icebreakers required. Showing up becomes the entry ticket.
New “Vibe” Feature Signals Intent to Go Out
The company’s latest addition, called the “Vibe” feature, attempts to remove the friction of planning. Users can broadcast what they feel like doing in real time — dancing, grabbing coffee, attending a trivia night — with a countdown clock attached. Friends receive the notification immediately.
Early feedback indicates the feature changes behavior. People go out more when they know others are interested at the same moment. The signal acts as social proof without public broadcasting to strangers.
Unlike traditional event planning tools, the emphasis is spontaneity. The system favors small, informal gatherings over large public events.
Post-Pandemic Social Patterns Continue to Shift
The years following COVID-19 reshaped daily routines. Remote work increased. Digital communication replaced many casual interactions. At the same time, loneliness indicators rose across age groups.
Gen Z appears particularly sensitive to the trade-offs. Many entered adulthood during lockdowns, missing formative social experiences. The result is a cohort that values connection yet remains skeptical of the platforms that dominated their teenage years.
Apps like Ville are betting that the pendulum is swinging back. Instead of building larger online audiences, users want smaller circles they can see in person.
Technology as a Bridge, Not a Destination
Ville’s philosophy contrasts sharply with traditional social networks, which reward time spent on the platform itself. Here, success is measured by time spent offline. The app functions as coordination software rather than entertainment.
This approach reflects a broader reassessment of digital life. Many users no longer equate online activity with meaningful interaction. A thousand likes does not replace a conversation across a table.
Availability and Adoption
The application is currently free and available on both iOS and Android devices. Since late 2024, the company reports growing adoption among local communities and organizers seeking tools to promote recurring events.
Whether this model scales remains an open question. Building real-world networks requires density — enough users in a given area to make spontaneous meetups viable. Still, the early traction suggests pent-up demand.
What This Signals About the Future of Social Technology
The dissatisfaction reflected in the survey does not necessarily mean social media will disappear. It does suggest that users are re-evaluating how technology fits into daily life. Platforms that facilitate real experiences rather than replace them may gain favor.
Ville’s launch arrives at a moment when many people are quietly rethinking habits formed over the past decade. The constant scroll once felt novel. Today it often feels like background noise.
If the trend continues, the next wave of social apps may focus less on broadcasting identity and more on coordinating presence. In other words, technology may return to its original purpose: helping people find each other in the physical world rather than distracting them from it.
The survey data, combined with Ville’s strategy, points to a simple but powerful shift. People still want connection. They just prefer it with eye contact, shared space, and the awkward small talk that proves someone is actually there.
Ville is available on IOS and Android.