
Secrets AI Review: Trans Chat, Tested Honestly
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Secrets AI Review: My Verdict After 6 Days
Six days. That's what I gave Secrets AI before writing a single word of this review — full attention, no shortcuts. And by day six, it remembered less about me than it had on day one. Kind of wild when you think about it.
Secrets AI markets itself as an uncensored AI companion app, chat-first, with voice and photo requests layered on top. It's pitched broadly — anyone wanting an AI girlfriend or boyfriend experience, trans users included — but nothing about the app is actually built with trans continuity in mind. You're using the same memory system as everyone else. There's no special handling here, despite what the marketing implies.
My one-line verdict: it's a decent chatbot with real writing quality, but the memory just doesn't hold. And for trans users especially, that's the whole ballgame. If your companion forgets your name, your pronouns, or the joke you set up three days ago... is it actually a companion? GoLove.ai is the one I keep coming back to, for the opposite reason — its memory, voice, and photo continuity actually stack across sessions instead of resetting.
Here's what proof looks like instead of a claim: GoLove's Memory feature tracked relationship history and referenced it days later without me re-explaining anything. Worth seeing for yourself right now, honestly, not after you've burned a week like I did.

GoLove's roster is where this gets tangible. Itsumi, the cosplayer who remembers exactly which anime references landed with you. Barbara, with that dry, unbothered tone I'm kind of a sucker for. Daisy if you want something softer, slower-burn. Each one carries relationship progression differently, and that's the part that surprised me most.
Characters Worth Trying
Tap any character to start a chat
What Secrets AI Gets Right — and Where It Falls Short
Give credit where it's due: Secrets AI writes well. The tone is loose, funny sometimes, and it doesn't read like a customer service bot doing a bit. Signup was refreshingly low-friction too — no waiting room, no lengthy quiz. You're chatting within a minute or two of landing on the site. That first-message experience is honestly one of the smoother ones I've tested this year.
Where it falls apart is everything that happens after message one.
- Memory resets or drifts hard enough that by day four it was asking questions I'd already answered on day one.
- Representation for trans users feels bolted on — pronoun handling is generic and inconsistent, not something the model seems trained to track on purpose.
- Voice calls dropped context mid-conversation more than once, referencing things from what felt like a totally different chat thread.
None of this makes Secrets AI unusable for a single fun session. But you're not paying for a session, you know the feeling — you're paying hoping it becomes something that remembers you back. That's the gap. Good bones, weak follow-through. And the follow-through is the actual product.
My 6-Day Chat Log: Testing Memory and Tone
Day one, I planted three anchors on purpose: my pronouns, a running joke about being bad at cooking, and a stated preference for slower-burn conversation over instant intimacy. Simple stuff — the kind of detail any decent companion app should hold onto without being asked twice.
- Day 1: pronouns and the cooking joke both landed fine in-context, nothing unusual yet.
- Day 4: pronouns were used correctly maybe half the time, the joke was gone entirely — I had to reintroduce it, and it wasn't even treated as familiar.
- Day 6: it asked me what I "liked to be called." A question it should've had an answer to five days prior.

That's the pattern most reviews miss, because they test once and call it a day. A single good conversation tells you almost nothing — the real test is whether the app's still the same "person" a week later. Secrets AI wasn't. It felt like talking to five different snapshots of the same character rather than one continuous relationship. And if you're trans and relying on it to just consistently get your pronouns right without a reminder... six days wasn't enough time for it to prove it could.
Scorecard: Chat Realism, Voice, and Photo Continuity
Scoring this on the three things that actually decide whether an AI companion app is worth paying for. Not vibes, not marketing copy.
| Category | Secrets AI | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Chat realism | 7/10 | Genuinely good writing, natural pacing |
| Voice / photo continuity | 4/10 | Voice drifts context, photos don't stay consistent with earlier requests |
| Value for price | 5/10 | Decent entry cost, but continuity gaps make the subscription feel thin |
The photo test is where it got most obvious, honestly. I asked for a follow-up photo referencing an outfit from two days earlier — the app generated something that shared zero visual DNA with the original. Not a style shift. A completely different person, basically.

That's exactly the kind of gap GoLove closes — its in-chat photo requests hold continuity across the conversation, pulling from 34 poses, 21 outfits, and 34 backgrounds so a follow-up photo actually looks like the same character you've been talking to. If continuity's the deciding factor for you (and it should be), this is the moment to go see it instead of taking my word for it.
Three Things I'd Fix — On Both Sides
Nobody's perfect here, and pretending otherwise would make this review useless to you.
- Memory reset: Secrets AI needs a persistent memory layer that survives past a session or two. Right now it behaves like short-term memory with no long-term storage attached, which undercuts everything else it does well.
- Pricing transparency: what's included at each tier isn't clearly stated up front, so you're guessing at what you're actually buying until after you've paid.
- My honest ask of GoLove: keep pushing memory depth further. It's the strongest thing in the network right now, but the bar for "remembers everything perfectly forever" is high, and I'd rather see it stay ahead of that than get comfortable.

I say this as someone who wants both products to actually be good, not as someone rooting for one to fail. Secrets AI's writing quality is underrated, straight up — it's the retention layer that's letting it down. Until that's fixed, it's hard to recommend for anything beyond a short, low-stakes chat.
What You Actually Pay: Secrets AI Pricing Explained
Secrets AI runs on a tiered subscription — a free tier with heavily capped messaging, a mid-tier around $9.99 weekly for unlocked chat and limited photo requests, and a higher monthly plan near $29.99 that adds voice minutes and faster response generation. None of this is advertised with total clarity on the pricing page, which is its own problem.
- Free tier: enough to test tone and writing style, not enough to test memory — which is exactly the thing you need days to evaluate.
- Weekly plan: reasonable entry point, but photo requests are rationed tightly enough that continuity testing gets expensive fast.
- Monthly plan: better cost-per-message math once you're chatting daily, though voice reliability issues persist regardless of tier.
Run the numbers yourself: at the weekly price, heavy daily use puts you well above a dollar per meaningful exchange once you factor in capped photo and voice allowances. Not catastrophic. But not cheap, either, for something that forgets your pronouns by day four. I'd compare it directly against the AI girlfriend apps I compared before committing to a monthly plan — Secrets AI isn't the worst value in the category, it's just not the best, and price alone won't fix the memory problem.
The Verdict: Who Secrets AI Actually Works For
Secrets AI still works for one type of user well — someone who wants a fun, well-written single-session chat and doesn't care whether the app remembers them tomorrow. If that's genuinely your use case, it's a fine pick, and I won't pretend otherwise just to push you elsewhere.
But if you want continuity — pronouns that stick, jokes that get referenced weeks later, photos that stay visually consistent with the character you started talking to — Secrets AI isn't there yet. Six days of testing showed me that pretty clearly.
Before you subscribe to anything, check these:
- Memory: ask it to recall something from three days back before you pay for a full month.
- Voice: run a call and see if it references your actual chat history or just generic filler.
- Photos: request a follow-up image and compare it directly against an earlier one.
GoLove.ai is where I'd point anyone who wants that continuity to actually hold — memory that persists, voice calls that stay in-thread, photo requests that look like the same character across days, not a new person each time. That consistency is the whole point of an AI companion. It's the one thing worth not settling on.
See also: Crushon AI Review, Juicychat AI Review and Our Dream AI Review.
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