Omegle is gone. Here's what actually replaced it.
I run a video chat platform. November 14, 2023 was the busiest 24 hours we had all year — a tidal wave of traffic the moment Omegle's door closed for good. This is what I learned about where those people ended up, what worked, what didn't, and a handful of traps the tutorial-style guides never mention.
- No login
- No credit card
- Median first hello under 60s
November 14, 2023 — the night Omegle shut off
Leif K-Brooks, the founder, posted a long farewell letter that evening. The phrasing he used has stayed with me: he wrote that "the stress and expense of this fight" had become too much, after a string of lawsuits over what users on the platform had done to each other. He'd built Omegle alone at 18 years old; he was 34 when he closed it.
14 years. From the dorm-room launch in March 2009 to that November 2023 statement. In that window Omegle became one of those words that filtered into mainstream culture without ever really being mainstream — a known noun, a meme template, a place teenagers tried once on a dare and adults pretended they'd never visited.
At my place, traffic was about 4× our normal that first night. By the weekend it was closer to 6×. Then a long slow tail for three months as people stopped reflexively typing omegle.com. That's the curve I'd expect anyone who runs a cam product to have seen, and the people I've talked to since confirm something close to it.
It hasn't come back. Don't trust any "Omegle is open again" tweet — every revival site so far has been an unrelated team renting the brand recognition.
What Omegle was doing that nobody quite copied
A lot of post-2023 alternatives try to recreate "random video chat." That's not the actual formula. Omegle's combination — and the reason it stuck for 14 years — was five things in one product:
- no account required, ever
- cam-to-cam in under five seconds of clicks
- genuinely anonymous (no profile to look up later)
- a one-key skip that didn't punish you
- worked on a school laptop with no app install
Almost every alternative that has come along since gets four of those right and breaks one. LuckyCrush charges before the camera connects. ChatHero gates the queue behind a sign-up. Bazoocam group rooms aren't really 1-on-1 anymore. Chatspin's gender filter is functionally a credit-card filter. Monkey ships a native app first, which is great until it isn't installed.
The hidden lesson — and this is the one nobody in the listicles mentions — is that Omegle's moderation deficit wasn't a feature. It was the thing that killed it. The alternatives that have grown the most since 2023 are the ones that quietly added verification while keeping the rest of the formula intact.
Where the traffic actually went
Five different directions. Not five "best apps" — five different philosophies. If you're trying to pick one, what you actually pick is which trade-off you accept.
1. Direct clones
Bazoocam, ChatRoulette, a long tail of clones in 2024. Closest to the Omegle shape. Same shape, same moderation gap. Fine for a few minutes; tiring after twenty.
2. Paywall replacements
LuckyCrush, CooMeet, FlirtyMania. Quality of conversation goes up because money filters out the worst of the lobby. The "free random video chat" promise is gone. Most of these are also pay-per-minute, which is its own friction.
3. Gender-filter pivots
Chatspin and ChatHub leaned into letting users filter by gender. The catch: the male/female ratio on cam sites is roughly 7:1 and hasn't moved in fifteen years. A gender filter on a 7:1 queue is just a longer wait disguised as a feature.
4. Group cam lobbies
Camsurf, Tinychat, parts of Bazoocam. Multiple cams at once, public room. Faster pacing, but it's a different product altogether — closer to an open mic than a one-on-one.
5. Verified 1-on-1
The slowest growing of the five, and where the well-behaved traffic ended up. Adds a one-time verification before the queue; keeps the rest of the no-login, no-charge experience. BerryCam sits here.
Three things the listicles miss
Time of day matters more than the app you pick.
The cleanest lobby on every one of these platforms is Monday to Friday, roughly 4 PM to 7 PM in Western Europe — late afternoon EU overlapping with early evening US east coast. Saturday after midnight is the worst across every site I've looked at. If your first try on a "good" app was at 1 AM on a weekend, that's the variable, not the app.
"Free" is a spectrum, not a label.
"Free queue, paid filters" is a different product from "free until the camera connects then $0.05 per second." Both call themselves free. The cheap trick is to read the second paragraph of any pricing page, not the first — the second paragraph is where the actual model lives.
Ban-evasion advice is mostly wrong.
Most cam-site bans are an IP-plus-cookie combination. Swapping a VPN without clearing cookies changes nothing. Clearing cookies without changing IP changes nothing either. Anyone who tells you "just use this VPN" to get back into a service after a ban is either selling you the VPN or hasn't actually tried.
Where BerryCam fits, if you're curious
We're direction 5 — verified 1-on-1, no sign-up. We chose to put a live-photo check before the queue because the 2023-2026 lesson everyone in this space learned was that fully anonymous made the first thirty seconds worse for almost everyone. Verification adds three seconds at the front; it removes about a minute of friction at the back.
Free queue, no per-minute charge. Real human moderation reviewing reports inside of an hour. That's the whole story. If you came here looking for an Omegle-shaped thing, we are not exactly that — we are closer to what Omegle was supposed to feel like before its moderation problem buried it.
FAQ
Yes. Omegle shut down on November 14, 2023 after 14 years online — founder Leif K-Brooks published a farewell letter that same day. The site has not returned, and the domain has not been sold. Anything currently using the Omegle name at omegle.com or a copycat URL is unrelated to the original platform.