THE 60-SECOND VERDICT Mirami is a gender-paired random video chat that connects men with women on live one-on-one calls. It is genuinely easy to use and the video runs smoothly, but it is built around a pay-per-minute coin model rather than free socializing. You get a short free taste, then the screen pauses on an insufficient balance prompt and asks you to top up. Treat it as paid live entertainment, not a place to make lasting friends, and watch your spend closely. | |
GOOGLE PLAY RATING 3.93 /5 | SELF-CLAIMED RATING 4.8 /5 |
EFFECTIVE COST $0.80-1.50 /min | FREE WINDOW 30-60 sec |
What Mirami actually is
Mirami is a one-on-one video chat roulette with a single defining rule: it pairs men with women, and only men with women. Its own tagline is blunt about it, “Chat with girls.” You open the site or app, allow your camera and microphone, and within seconds a woman is on screen ready to talk; if the conversation stalls, one tap drops you into the next. The platform claims the female side is “real and verified” and that its matching never connects two men.

Positioned squarely as an alternative to Omegle, Chatroulette, OmeTV, Azar, and CooMeet, Mirami leans on three things to stand out: built-in automatic translation that erases the language barrier, private one-on-one rooms it markets as anonymous and secure, and a layer of social extras, namely a browsable catalog of women, a friends list, direct calls, and virtual gifts.
It is operated by Infoholders s.r.o., a company based in the Slovak Republic, and runs as both a browser app at mirami.chat and an Android app, “Random video chat - Mirami,” live on Google Play since September 2021. Its High Maturity rating is the first honest signal of what it really is: adult-leaning live entertainment, not a casual social network.
By the numbers
Before opinions, here is the verifiable scaffolding pulled from the app listing, third-party trackers, and Mirami’s own legal pages. These figures stay consistent across the rest of this review.
| TABLE 1 · MIRAMI AT A GLANCE | |
| Publisher | Infoholders s.r.o. (associated with the Slovak Republic) |
| On Google Play since | September 2021 |
| Latest app version | 2.1.4 (updated 9 Oct 2025) |
| App size | 28.10 MB |
| Minimum Android | 5.0 and up |
| Content rating | High Maturity (adult-leaning) |
| Platforms | Web browser and Android app |
| Reported downloads | ~2.5 million (Google Play) |
| Translation | Built-in, automatic, free during chats |
How the platform works
The flow is deliberately frictionless. There are no long profile questionnaires and no swiping queue. You arrive, allow your camera, and the matching algorithm drops you into a private room with one other person. From there the controls are minimal: stay and talk, hit next to re-roll, send a text message that gets translated on the fly, or send a gift. The simplicity is the point, because every extra step would slow down the moment you start spending time.

Two features shape the experience more than the marketing admits. The first is automatic translation, which quietly removes the language barrier and is part of why so many chats are cross-border rather than local. The second is the catalog and gifting layer, which nudges the service away from “meet a random stranger” and toward “spend time with a featured host.” There is also a reels-style feed of short clips from women on the platform, which functions less like a social timeline and more like a storefront window that keeps you browsing.
| FEATURE | AVAILABLE | NOTES |
|---|---|---|
| TABLE 2 · FEATURE MATRIX | ||
| Gender-paired matching | Yes | Men matched with women only |
| One-tap “Next” skip | Yes | Instant re-match |
| Geo and gender filters | Yes | Narrow by region or preference |
| Auto-translated chat | Yes | Free, real time, both directions |
| Reels-style feed | Yes | Short clips from women on the app |
| Friends, catalog, gifts | Yes | Social extras, gifts cost coins |
| Free unlimited chatting | No | Free window is brief, then paywalled |
| Account required to start | Partial | App login simple; web allows quick start |
I spent an evening on Mirami
Data is one thing, but the only way to understand a metered platform is to walk through it. So I created an account and used it the way a curious first-timer would. Here is the session, step by step, with nothing dressed up.
Getting in took seconds. The login screen offered exactly two routes: continue with Google, or sign in with an email address. I chose email. What stood out immediately was what did not happen. There was no one-time passcode, no verification link sent to my inbox, no confirmation step of any kind. I entered my details and was straight inside. For a platform that markets verification so heavily on the female side, the male sign-up gate is effectively wide open, which is worth knowing before you assume the room is tightly controlled.

The first thing that greeted me was a reels feed. Before any chatting started, I could scroll through short vertical clips of women who use Mirami, swiping the way you would on any short-video app. It is an effective hook. It makes the platform feel populated and lively, and it sets an expectation about who you are about to meet on a call.

Then I started a video chat, and the technical side genuinely impressed me. The connection happened quickly and the call itself was smooth. The video was clear, the audio held up, and there was no stuttering or awkward lag while it was running. On a pure performance level, this is not a janky service. It connects fast and it looks good.

And then the moment that defines Mirami arrived. Mid-conversation, the call simply dropped. A panel slid in reporting insufficient balance. The free window had quietly run out. Immediately after the disconnect, the app surfaced the full profile of the person I had just been talking to, presented as the obvious next step: top up your coins and continue with her, or browse on. That single sequence (free taste, abrupt cut, balance prompt, profile dangled in front of you) is the entire business model compressed into about ten seconds. Everything before it is designed to make that prompt land at the exact moment your interest peaks.

The meter: pricing and credits
Mirami is free to download, but everything past a short free window runs on a one-time, pay-as-you-go currency called diamonds (coins in the Android app), with no subscription. Here is exactly what it costs and how the meter works.
| PACK | DIAMONDS | PRICE | PER 100 DIAMONDS |
|---|---|---|---|
| TABLE 3 · DIAMOND PACKS | |||
| Starter (“for try”) | 55 | $2.99 | $5.44 |
| Mid | 325 + 10 free | $17.99 | $5.37 |
| Top | 900 + 35 free | $49.99 | $5.35 |
| TABLE 4 · THE COST MODEL | |
| Currency | Diamonds (called coins in the Android app) |
| Billing model | One-time payment, no subscriptions |
| Effective in-call rate | ~$0.80 to $1.50 / minute (user-reported) |
| Free allowance | ~30 to 60 sec (or one free call/day) |
| Payment methods | Cards, Paysafecard, cryptocurrency |
| Refund policy | Currency described as non-refundable |
| Disconnect trigger | Call ends on “insufficient balance” |
[01] Before you spend a single coin • Set a hard budget first. Decide the maximum you are willing to lose before you load coins, and treat it like a movie ticket, not a recurring service. • Use a prepaid or virtual card. Keep the payment method separate from your main account so a fast burn cannot run away with your balance. • Assume the currency is gone for good. The platform treats coins as non-refundable, so do not buy in expecting to claw money back later. • Never share contact or financial details in chat. Whatever the conversation feels like, keep personal and banking information off the call. |
What real users say
Sentiment about Mirami splits sharply by source, and the split is itself informative. The app’s own pages and a wall of affiliate review blogs lean glowing, while the independent, user-submitted platforms tell a more cautious story. Below is what each of the four sources you would normally check actually shows, including the two where Mirami simply has no presence.
Google Play 2.8/5 · ~5,100 ratings APP STORE · LARGEST REAL SAMPLE This is the deepest pool of genuine feedback, and it is mixed-to-cautious rather than hostile. The recurring praise is that the app works and is enjoyable to use. The recurring frustration is cost and the thin free tier. ![]() “Good app for chatting, but the prices are very high.” Several reviewers note the one-free-call-per-day limit and warn that without topping up you cannot really talk to anyone. A minority are blunt, calling the app’s credibility poor and advising others not to download it. Notably, some women on the host side also post confusion about how to withdraw the coins they earn. |
Trustpilot 3.9 /5 · reviews CONSUMER REVIEWS · TINY SAMPLE, TREAT AS QUALITATIVE The Trustpilot profile is too small to be statistical, but it aligns with the common failure mode for per-minute platforms. The reviews are evenly split between three-star and one-star. ![]() “Don’t invest money in this platform.” One visible review (from a South African user) carries that warning directly, while the other criticizes customer support as very poor and says the experience did not deliver much quality for the money. Two data points only, but both point at value and support rather than at the technology. |
Reddit Threads & discussion COMMUNITY SENTIMENT · RECURRING THEMES Reddit has no single rating, but the threads and user-review roundups that cite Reddit paint a consistent picture. A small group enjoys the immediacy and novelty. The larger group is frustrated, and the same complaints surface repeatedly. The dominant themes are coins disappearing faster than expected with frequent prompts to buy more, conversations that feel staged or scripted, women steering chats toward longer calls and gifts, and support that is hard to reach. The most common verdict is not that it is an outright scam, but that the “organic social experience” is oversold. |
G2 No listing BUSINESS SOFTWARE DIRECTORY Mirami has no verified profile on G2, and that is expected rather than suspicious. G2 indexes business and SaaS tools, the kind of software a company buys, and a consumer video chat app does not fit its taxonomy. Takeaway: the absence here is a category mismatch, not a missing review. Do not read a G2 silence as either an endorsement or a red flag for a product like this. |
Capterra No listing GARTNER-OWNED SOFTWARE MARKETPLACE Same story as G2. Capterra, which shares the Gartner review database with Software Advice, lists business software for buyers comparing tools like CRM, project management, and accounting. A pay-per-minute social app sits entirely outside that scope. Takeaway: for a consumer-facing chat platform, Google Play and Trustpilot are the meaningful review surfaces. Capterra and G2 will never be the place to judge it. |
Pulling the sources side by side makes the central tension obvious: the rating Mirami shows you is far higher than the rating its own users leave.
| SOURCE | SCORE | WHAT IT REFLECTS |
|---|---|---|
| mirami.chat (self-reported) | 4.8 / 5 | Marketing claim, 10.2M users cited |
| Google Play | 3.93 / 5 | ~5,100 real user ratings |
| Trustpilot | 3.2 / 5 | 2 reviews, qualitative only |
| Scam Detector (algorithmic) | 54 / 100 | Medium trust, “questionable” |
| ScamDoc (algorithmic) | 76% | Average, more checks advised |
| G2 / Capterra | Not listed | Business-software directories |
[02] The complaints that repeat everywhere • Coins drain fast. The single most common grievance is balance vanishing quicker than expected, with little warning before the call cuts. • Chats can feel scripted. Reviewers report women steering conversations toward longer calls and gifts, raising the question of paid hosts. • Support is hard to reach. Across Trustpilot and the app store, slow or unhelpful customer service comes up again and again. • No clear refund path. Non-refundable currency plus weak support leaves dissatisfied users with little recourse. |
Safety, privacy, and legitimacy
The honest read from independent tools is cautious, not alarmed: the real risk lives inside the experience, not in the code. Here is how the main safety and privacy factors stack up.
| FACTOR | WHAT WE FOUND | WHAT IT MEANS FOR YOU |
|---|---|---|
| TABLE 6 · SAFETY AND PRIVACY AT A GLANCE | ||
| Trust scores | Scam Detector rates it 54/100 (questionable), ScamDoc about 76 percent (average), and ScamAdviser leans probably legitimate. | Cautious, not a red alert. |
| Malware & phishing | No scanner flags the site as malware or a phishing operation. | The site itself is unlikely to harm your device. |
| Camera & microphone | Both are required to chat, and you should assume anything shown on camera can be recorded. | Treat every call as potentially saved. |
| Profile authenticity | The female side is marketed as real and verified, yet many reviews point to paid hosts following engagement scripts. | You may be paying a host, not meeting a stranger. |
| Data exposure | The privacy policy warns that personal details you share can become visible to other users. | Never share contact or financial information. |
| Legality | Paid adult video chat between consenting adults is legal in most regions. | Legal, but strictly 18+; check local rules. |
Who it is for, and who should skip it
Mirami earns its keep for a specific user: someone who wants fast, low-effort access to live video conversation with women, treats the spend like buying tickets to a show, and is comfortable that this is closer to entertainment than to dating. If you go in with that framing, the smooth video and quick matching can genuinely deliver. The trouble starts when expectations drift toward organic friendship or a slow-burn relationship, because that is not what the meter is built to produce.
[03] Mirami is probably not for you if • You want real, lasting connections. The pay-per-minute structure pushes against slow, unhurried conversation. • You are sensitive to micro-spending. Continuous coin burn rewards exactly the people who lose track of it. • You expect dependable support or refunds. Both are weak points, and the currency is non-refundable. • You want maximum transparency. The gap between the social pitch and the metered host experience may frustrate you. |
THE BOTTOM LINE So, is Mirami worth it? Mirami is functional, polished, and not a scam in the technical sense. It loads, it connects fast, the video is genuinely smooth, and your coins buy exactly what the meter says they buy. My own test confirmed the experience end to end, right down to the call cutting out on an insufficient balance prompt with a profile dangled in front of me. The catch is that the entire product is engineered around continuous spending wrapped in the language of casual socializing. The independent 2.8 on Google Play is the number to trust over the self-reported 4.8, and the recurring complaints about cost, authenticity, and support are consistent enough to take seriously. Go in with a fixed budget, a prepaid card, and zero expectation of romance, and Mirami can be a fun novelty. Go in expecting connection or value, and the meter will teach you an expensive lesson. |

