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For couples living in different time zones

A few hours' gap or half a world — when your days barely overlap, staying close stops being about real-time chat and starts being about small things left for each other to find.

Living on opposite clocks

When you're starting your day as your partner ends theirs, real-time messaging gets thin. You're either rushing a reply before bed or waking up to a wall of texts. The relationship starts to feel like a scheduling problem.

Arcov is asynchronous by design. Everything you share waits gently for the other person to find it on their own clock — no pressure to be online at the same time.

Built for the gap between your days

Time-zone-aware everything. Your mood, your daily letter, and your shared question are all bucketed to each partner's local day, so "today" means today for both of you.

A buzz that's waiting when they wake. Send a Buzz or a Hug before bed; it's there in the morning, with their mood and yours side by side.

Good morning / good night taps. One tap to say "I'm here" across the gap — a tiny ritual that bookends two different days.

Daily letters. Write when it suits you; they read when it suits them. No read receipts, no rush.

Quiet, private, and yours

No feed, no other users, and your words are end-to-end encrypted. Arcov is a private space for two, wherever in the world the two of you happen to be.

Frequently asked

How does Arcov handle different time zones?

Each partner's mood chart, daily letter, daily question, and streak are computed against their own local day, so the experience is correct on both clocks at once.

Is it better than texting for long-distance?

It's not a replacement for talking — it's for the feelings and moments that get lost in a busy thread. Many couples use both. See Arcov for long-distance couples.