In their 2026 Big Ideas, a16z called out a new category: Social AI Apps.
Their definition: "using real-life context to help people understand themselves and strengthen relationships, not just get tasks done."
Then they said: these startups don't exist yet. It's your time to build.
I'd already been building exactly that for months.
Every major AI product optimizes for output — coding, writing, automating. The entire industry built for productivity.
But the biggest pain points in most people's lives aren't about output.
We live in an era where AI is replacing jobs, social media rewards performance over honesty, and everyone is quietly overwhelmed but nobody says it out loud.
The US Surgeon General declared loneliness a national epidemic. 57% of Americans are lonely — Gen Z and Millennials are lonelier than any generation before them, despite being the most digitally connected. 61% of young people say loneliness takes a toll on their mental health.
More social apps. More loneliness.
Existing social media gives you an audience. It doesn't give you understanding. WHO now identifies loneliness as one of the defining public health challenges of our time.
Re:feel — an AI social app where:
Core insight: emotions are private, but the experience of having them is universal — across every language, every culture, every timezone.
Words can be translated. Emotions can't. Re:feel translates the words, and lets the human feeling do the rest.
Journaling has tens of millions of users globally. Mental health apps are a $20B+ market. But none of them have cracked the social layer — the moment when your private emotion finds its people.
Journaling apps have the privacy. Social apps have the connection. Nobody has built the bridge — until now. AI finally makes it possible to go from private feeling to anonymous human connection, across any language, at scale.
That's the white space Re:feel is building in.
We just opened our waitlist. Launch is coming soon.
👉 https://refeeljournal.com/
And for the builders here:
Would you use something like this? What's missing?
The idea is compelling. The real challenge might be turning private emotions into meaningful connections rather than just another feed.
Exactly. That's the core design challenge. That's why we don't just throw emotions into a feed. Connection happens through shared feeling, not shared identity. You see someone felt the same thing you did, and that's the entry point. No noise, no performance, just resonance. Whether that translates to meaningful connection at scale, that's the real test. Will find out soon.
This is an interesting take. Most AI products right now really do focus on productivity and output, but a lot of people’s real problems are emotional or social rather than task-based. The idea of using AI around real life context and emotions feels like a direction we’ll probably see more of. If someone actually manages to make that social layer work (without turning into another noisy social feed), that could be pretty powerful.
Curious how you think about moderation and privacy in a space where people might share really personal emotions. That seems like the hardest part to get right. Also wondering what the early user behavior looks like so far. Are people mostly journaling privately, or actually interacting with others around shared emotions? Interesting build either way.
On moderation and privacy:
Journaling is fully private by default. Nothing leaves their personal space unless the user explicitly chooses to share. When they do, it's always anonymous. Nothing that connects back to the real person.
We have a Privacy Policy that explicitly covers data handling, GDPR compliance, and clear disclosure of how AI processes journal entries. Users own their data and can delete everything at any time. The hardest moderation challenge is sensitive content like self-harm, crisis situations. We handle this with content guidelines and AI-assisted flagging.
On early user behavior:
We're still pre-launch, waitlist only, launching very soon. So no behavioral data yet. But my prediction is that the feed will actually be pretty active as anonymity removes the fear of judgment, which is exactly what holds people back on every other social platform. When no one knows who you are, honesty comes naturally.
The honest worry is on the business side. It's a community product, which means free users need enough value to stick around and build the network but Pro needs to feel worth paying for. We're keeping all social features free to drive network effects, while Pro gets deeper features.
Will report back once we launch. These are exactly the things we'll be watching closely. 👍