Yiffr, the animal dating app, released to almost complete obscurity in its first few weeks of existence on the app store. With next to zero advertising from a first-and-only-time developer “Chrono”, very few even bothered to download it simply for the unbelievable thing that it purported to do.
It wasn’t until social media caught on that the app started to spread like wildfire. Influencers on Instagram and Tic-Tok started to post pictures of themselves as dogs. A viral video racking up hundreds of millions of views posted by influencer and model Schick de Clique surfaced sending the internet into a frenzy. The light-skinned nineteen-year-old ebony beauty posted a Tic-Tok where she knelt on all fours, at first looking like she was doing a yoga stretch, but things changed quickly soon afterwards. It wasn’t until her arms and legs began to furrow, her smooth skin gaining a sleek peach-fuzz of black and brown fur that viewers would learn that this was anything but normal. Her hands and feet popped and cracked into paw-pads, changes racking the model’s body as her face maintained a composure of absolute bliss as if she were undergoing the most relaxing massage of her life. Even as her face distorted, mouth and nose lengthening into a muzzle and her sultry moaning turned into canine whines, she still seemed lost in her own personal heaven. The camera shifted to under her belly where her C-cup breasts roiled underneath her, rows of canine teats each pierced with a thick metal stud popped up from her perfectly maintained abs as a tail sprouted from her rear, wagging like an excited puppy. By the end, a fully grown Doberman Pinscher dolled up in body tattoos and piercings flashed a mirthful grin before whipping her tail up and sauntering off - not before flashing a swollen black canine spade underneath her tail to the audience.
Soon the trend spread to almost every popular user on the platform, users suddenly posting themselves after being changed into dogs, cats, horses or even more exotic species became more ordinary. Pictures became lewder over time as influencers fought to capture more attention. Videos of models-turned-animals fucking their pets become commonplace on OnlyFans, girls starting to raise their own puppies became trendy as some influencers even decided to retire from humanity… some even giving up their minds to become completely animal.
With the buzz on social media, admirers and regular users started to download the app, testing it out for themselves. Despite the strict 18 years-or-older age limit, many younger users simply lied about their age so they could join in on the new trend. Soon “yiffing” became common parlance to anyone under the age of forty, everyone from swingers to school children beginning to experiment with what it was like to “Go Wild”.
The app was crude and stitched together, consisting of a poorly designed user interface that consisted of two parts. A “Find your mate!” tab that had a profile on every animal wild or tame within a radius of the user letting the user choose to either “Decline” an animal or “Go Wild!”. The other tab labeled “Transform!” was a confusing mishmash of hundreds if not thousands of sliders and buttons able to customize every aspect of the transformation down to the most minute detail. Sliders reading things like “length of time of transformation”, “In heat”, “mental state”, and “change sex” were placed towards the top while more obscure options letting the user customize the minor details of the change were lower down in an almost endless list of features.
The app only affects the cell phone’s owner, so users are advised to take caution on who they let access their phone.