锁屏甜蜜,随时感受
不用打开App,解锁手机就看到对方心意,异地恋的情感连接更自然贴心。
If you look closely at most of the apps sold as 'couple apps,' you notice something uncomfortable: most of them are variations of WhatsApp with a pink theme. They have chat. They have exclusive stickers. They have shared calendars for tracking who picks up the kids. They have collaborative albums for uploading weekend photos. They have anniversary reminders. Some even have a counter for the days since the first kiss. All of that is fine, and for some couples it works. But the problem they solve is 'communicate better.' And that isn't the problem anymore. The problem, for a lot of people, is the opposite. We're not short on communication. We have too much of it. We have five messaging apps open at once, two calendars synced with work, shared albums with the whole extended family. What we're missing isn't another channel to write 'how was your day' at 18:27, or another inbox with green bubbles. What we're missing is presence without obligation. Something that says 'I'm thinking of you' without generating a notification, without asking you to reply, without turning into one more pending conversation.
| Feature | Between / Paired / Couple | LockLove |
|---|---|---|
| 壁纸展示方式 | 聊天界面或小组件,无法全屏显示 | 直接锁屏全屏壁纸,甜蜜一览无遗 |
| 消息通知体验 | 收到消息时伴随通知轰炸,容易打扰和泄露隐私 | 默默推送,解锁即见,无任何通知打扰 |
| 异地同步要求 | 多依赖双方同时在线,消息延迟影响体验 | 无需同步在线,想发就发,无惧异地恋时差 |
| 壁纸内容种类 | 大多仅限照片,编辑功能有限 | 图片视频自由切换,内置创意编辑,贴心定制 |
| 隐私保障 | 可能涉及第三方广告和数据收集 | 100%私密,只有情侣双方能看见,无广告干扰 |
| 订阅模式 | 单设备订阅,双方需各自付费 | Premium共享订阅,一份费用共同享 |
不用打开App,解锁手机就看到对方心意,异地恋的情感连接更自然贴心。
照顾工作996,异地恋随时安排送出专属壁纸,520、七夕一样收到甜蜜祝福。
内置文字、贴纸、涂鸦等工具,DIY你们的专属壁纸,好甜又暖心。
无骚扰广告,只有你和另一半的秘密时刻,告别繁杂,专注爱。
二维码、邀请码或远程邀请,三种配对方式轻松连接,即刻把爱装进锁屏。
Huelva ↔ Jaén · weekend relationship
Ula and Vicenta tried three different couple apps in two years. The first had a chat with stickers. The second added a shared album. The third had a really pretty calendar view. They uninstalled them all, one by one, for the same reason: after a few weeks, each one turned into another inbox demanding attention. 'It was like having a second administrative relationship,' says Ula. When they moved to LockLove, the first thing that surprised them was the absence of a chat. The second thing was that the absence wasn't a shortage — it was a relief. On a Saturday at 9:02, Vicenta sent Ula the first photo: the Jaén sky with a coffee. No text to reply to. Just a moment.
Elche · settled couple, same apartment
Wilmer is in sales, Ximo is a freelance translator. They live together but spend the day answering professional messages. They tried Couple, tried Between, tried a Korean app whose name neither of them remembers anymore. All of them, deep down, demanded that they be 'online' for each other somehow: replying, reacting, marking as seen. Ximo put it plainly one night: 'I don't want another chat window with my husband, I see him every evening on the couch, we already talk plenty.' What they wanted wasn't to talk more: it was to feel more. When they found LockLove, they finally understood the difference. On a Thursday at 17:55, Wilmer sent Ximo a photo of his desk with a post-it note. Ximo saw it and didn't reply. He didn't need to.
Ibiza ↔ Formentera · life on a boat
Yolanda skippers a sailboat between Ibiza and Formentera; Zoé works as a vet at a clinic in Ibiza. They tried a very popular couple app for six months. They dropped it because, out at sea, getting notifications that demanded an instant reply was stressful: intermittent coverage, tight battery, limited time. What they needed was the exact opposite: to be able to leave something ready and forget about it, with no obligation to respond. On a Sunday at 21:48, Yolanda scheduled a wallpaper for Zoé from the harbor: the dark horizon, the lights of the other island, one word. 'here.' Zoé saw it when she came back from a cat's birth. No notification, no read receipt, nothing asking her to react. Just that. And that was enough.
For the last fifteen years, we've treated communication as if it were the central problem of modern relationships. And in part it was: when someone was far away, communicating was hard, slow, expensive. WhatsApp, Telegram, Messenger, FaceTime, and all the tools that followed solved that problem so thoroughly that we're now facing the opposite one. Communicating is trivial, free, instantaneous, and constant. And yet plenty of people with good connections, good coverage, and all the apps in the world still feel, in their own way, distant from their partner.
A phone call communicates. A hug feels. Most couple apps are phone calls: LockLove tries to be a hug.
That should have been a clue. Communicating and feeling aren't the same thing. A phone call communicates; a hug feels. A text communicates; a hand resting silently on your back feels. Both count, both matter, but confusing them is a very common mistake of the digital age. Most so-called 'couple apps' are actually better-communication apps: prettier chats, tidier calendars, more shared albums. That isn't bad, but it isn't what a lot of people are looking for when they say 'I miss my partner.'
LockLove decided not to compete on better communication. The reason is simple: there's no room left there. What there is room for is something closer to feeling. Something that shows up in the other person's day like a hand resting on their back. Something that says 'I'm thinking of you' without generating a notification, without asking for a reply, without becoming another thing to handle. No notifications. No alerts. Just magic. A quiet, intimate space, just for two. Nobody has to leave WhatsApp to use LockLove. Nobody has to switch chats. It's the exact opposite: LockLove coexists with all the communication apps you already have, and fills the gap none of them were designed to fill. From Barcelona, with love.
下载应用,开始在每次锁屏上分享爱意。