Moreover, the blurred photo exists to protect the person who liked you. They paid for a premium feature (or assumed you would have to match organically). Unblurring the image without their consent or a mutual match circumvents their privacy.
flag or similar data points in the raw server response that the standard app interface might hide. Console Injection : Many GitHub repositories, such as Tinder-Bumble-Auto-Match bumble unblur github link
: Some developers share snippets on GitHub Gist that you can paste directly into your browser’s developer console (F12) to reveal blurred images. Moreover, the blurred photo exists to protect the
These scripts claim to intercept the data sent from Bumble’s servers to your browser. The theory is that Bumble knows exactly who liked you; it simply blurs the image client-side (on your computer/phone). If you can intercept the image URL before the blur is applied, you might be able to access the clear photo. flag or similar data points in the raw
Disclaimer: This post is for informational purposes only. The author does not encourage the use of scripts to violate Terms of Service or bypass paid features.
: A Chrome extension that surfaces real-time profile data, including whether a person has already swiped right on you, directly from Bumble’s server. Bumble Enhanced (Greasy Fork) : A userscript often managed via extensions like Tampermonkey Violentmonkey that attempts to modify the web app's behavior. Dating-Plus
In the early days of dating apps, blurring was often done poorly—client-side. Today, Bumble sends the image already blurred from its servers. The app never receives the clear version of a “liked you” photo unless you pay. If the data isn’t on your device, no script can unblur it.
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