Skip to content
Feature · 01

The swipe.

A card stack of destinations. Right to save, left to pass, up to super-save. The fastest way we know to turn ‘everywhere’ into a shortlist.

01Try it
Demo0 / 5 swiped

Drag a card.Feel the decision.

Drag right to save, left to pass, or up for one super-save per run — same rhythm as the app.

Lisbon, Portugal
Save
Pass
Dream
Portugal
Lisbon
Coastal · Sunlit · Slow mornings
€€ · best Apr – Jun
Save 00Dream 00Pass 00

0 / 5 swiped ·

Mechanics

Right = save. Left = pass. Up = super-save. That’s it. The detail sheet shows everything else — best time to go, average daily cost, group-friendliness score.

You can super-save one card per free session (unlimited on Premium). Super-saves are double-weighted when the bracket resolves ties.

What’s on each card

  • Destination name and country.
  • Hero image — one we chose, not a stock shot.
  • One-line vibe tagline — ‘Coastal, sunlit, slow mornings.’
  • Budget band — € / €€ / €€€.
  • Best time to go — month range, colour-coded.

Why swiping beats scrolling

Scrolling is a browse interaction. Swiping is a decision interaction. The difference is small in UI terms and enormous in behavioural terms: swiping forces a yes-or-no on every card, which is exactly what a group planning a trip needs.

Tinder didn’t invent swipe because it was novel. They invented it because it collapses decision fatigue into single-bit answers. We borrowed the interaction, not the context.

Twenty cards, twenty seconds. That’s the target. By card six, you’re calibrated. By card twenty, you have a ranked shortlist without having ranked anything.

Offline behaviour

Your last 20 swipes are cached on-device. You can still discover on the plane — just sync when you land.

Early access

Get early access.

1 email at launch. That’s it.

Plain text via mailto. For styled block: copy above → open Mail → select all in body → paste. To: hello@veyago.app

We use your own email app instead of a silent “send” through our servers so spam bots can’t spray our inboxes. The message comes from an address you already sign in to with your provider — that helps us filter junk and verify you’re a real person before we reply or share anything sensitive.