Feature · Discovery
Spin the globe. Say hello.
The rest of NatChatt is for the people you already know. Discovery is for the ones you haven’t met yet. The world is full of people who don’t share your language — now that’s no longer the reason you never talk.
How it works
From a spin of the globe to a real conversation.
- 01
Opt in
Join Discovery
Discovery is a space you choose to step into. Join, and your name and photo become visible to other NatChatt users — and theirs to you. You can leave anytime from Settings.
- 02
Explore
Spin the globe
A globe of where people are, by continent and country, with live counts. Give it a spin, tap a continent, drill into a country, and see who’s there to talk to.
- 03
Connect
Send a chat request
No cold messages. You send a short request — they accept or decline. Once they say yes, it’s an ordinary NatChatt chat, translated like the rest of them.
You stay in control
Open to the world, on your terms.
Discovery is opt-in. You’re only visible once you join, and the only things others see are your name and your photo — the same things you’d show a new contact. Change your mind and you can leave from Settings, any time.
And nobody lands in your chats uninvited. Every first message is a request you can accept or decline, so a conversation only starts when you both want it to.
The point of Discovery isn’t to find someone who speaks your language. It’s that it doesn’t matter whether they do. When you say hello to someone in Seoul or São Paulo, you write in yours and they read it in theirs — the same translation that runs under every other chat on NatChatt.
So you can spin the globe, stop on a country you’ve always been curious about, and just start talking. No phrasebook, no awkward copy-paste into a translator. The language fades into the background, and the person is what’s left.
A small moment
A Tuesday night, a globe, and a stranger in Lisbon.
You can’t sleep. You open Discovery and give the globe a slow spin, the way you’d spin the one that sat on your grandfather’s desk. Portugal drifts past. You tap it. Forty-one people, awake somewhere out there.
You send one a request — “Your city looks beautiful in photos.” It arrives in Portuguese. An hour later there’s a reply in your language, and a photo of a tram going up a hill at night. You’ve never been. Now someone there knows your name.