Skip to main content

Rawr looks to animate conversations by bringing virtual avatars to messaging

Texts don’t always translate the tone of a message accurately, but a few Finnish developers believe that maybe an accompanying virtual avatar can. Futurefly’s new, free iOS messaging app depicts avatars in the backdrop of a conversation that can react according to hashtag commands.

Rawr allows users to create an avatar to their own liking, and have them interact with another user’s avatar by using commands like “#kiss.” That one, not surprisingly, will have one user’s avatar kiss the other’s.

It’s a little odd, but it’s not entirely different from sending a sticker, emoji, or GIF. The only difference here is having an avatar that looks like you perform the action, and these actions can range from twerking and hugging to kissing or tapping on a watch to indicate the time. The app has more than a hundred animations, expressions, and emojis people can use.

These animated interactions are also triggered through the words you type in the message. Rawr’s Natural Language Processing technology will convert a phrase like, “What time do you want to meet?” to an animation of the avatar pointing to their watch.

Rawr will also heavily focus on what’s trending in the real world — new animations “and items” will be made available for trending real-world events. Think along the lines of when Beyoncé unveiled Lemonade — you can expect avatars to drink lemonade, when users refer to the album.

The app also has a Globetrotter feature, which pairs you with other Rawr users from around the world. And to ensure security, Rawr founder Oskari “Ozz” Häkkinen tells Digital Trends that you can’t share images in Rawr; Globetrotter identities are anonymous, users can stop a conversation at any time, and can report other people.

“Rawr Messenger has been built with teens and millennials in mind, and has a teen rating,” he said. “We think of Globetrotter, with its worldwide matchmaking, as being like a modern-day pen pals where users connect with people across continents and potentially find lifelong friends. As the platform grows, we have built the matchmaking algorithm so that it is highly unlikely users are matched a second time.”

Rawr is backed by early investors of Snapchat, WhatsApp, Twitter, and Facebook, as well as Arielle Zuckerberg, Facebook CEO Mark’s younger sister. The app seems to be a response to the increasingly popular trend of virtual avatars, which may have recently gotten a boost thanks to Nintendo’s first mobile app, Miitomo.

Rawr is free and available for download on iTunes. An Android version is in the works.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
This app put iMessage on my Android phone — and it blew me away
Launch screen of the Beeper Mini app.

The impossible has happened. Beeper set out to unify chat platforms into a single bundle, but has ended up solving the iMessage-on-Android conundrum in a terrific fashion. In fact, it has even fixed the revolting green/blue bubble problem in one fell swoop.

Say hello to Beeper Mini, an app that puts iMessage on your Android phone and also kills the green bubble for good. And it doesn’t sacrifice functionality either. All that happened without a shady hack, something that Sunbird or Nothing Chats couldn’t pull off.

Read more
Sunbird — the sketchy iMessage for Android app — just shut down
Sunbird messages app for Android

What was supposed to be an iMessage redeemer for Android smartphone users has quickly been consumed in a chaos of security and utter negligence. Merely days after the Nothing Chats app was removed from the Play Store, the tech at its foundation provided by Sunbird is also taking an unspecified leave, intensifying suspicions of something being seriously wrong.

Sunbird appeared on our radar late last year, promising blue bubbles for Android-to-iPhone messages. It also promised to bundle all messaging apps into a single cluster, somewhat like Beeper. Nothing adopted the Sunbird tech, bundled it into its own app for the Nothing Phone 2, and launched it with an ambitious video. “Sorry, Tim.” That’s the message Nothing CEO Carl Pei sent.

Read more
Nothing’s iMessage for Android app is unbelievably bad
The Nothing Chats splash page in the app.

Earlier this week, Nothing did the unexpected and launched the "Nothing Chats" app for the Nothing Phone 2. The premise? Let anyone with a Nothing Phone 2 send and receive texts via iMessage. Nothing partnered with Sunbird to make Nothing Chats work, with Nothing essentially using Sunbird's own messaging tech to bring iMessage to Android.

It was a bold idea ... but one that was short-lived. That's because Nothing Chats is already dead (for the time being) due to a shocking number of security vulnerabilities that were discovered almost immediately. And by security vulnerabilities, we don't mean minor oversights that could have been easy to overlook. We're talking about major, game-breaking design flaws that massively compromise the personal information of anyone who used Nothing Chats.
The problem with Nothing Chats
iMessage on an iPhone 15 Pro Max (left) and Nothing Chats on a Nothing Phone 2 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Read more