As with the web app, you'll log into Tinder Online using Facebook, though the company says it's "testing the ability to log in via SMS directly from your mobile phone in various markets." If you haven't done so already on mobile, you then set up your bio and pictures, something that should be easier using a keyboard. From there, you'll swipe or click to find partners, depending on your device.

Tinder Head of Product Brian Norgard told Techcrunch that it wasn't easy creating the new app, given its years of being on smartphones only. "Our DNA is mobile so there was a learning curve involved in building something for a bigger screen," he said. "What makes Tinder great on your phone might not make it great on the desktop, and vice versa."

With the arrival of the web app, the company made a few tweaks to its software. In an effort to promote the "dating" over the "conquest" aspect of the app, it now prompts you to "send message" when you make a match rather than "keep swiping!" That said, the desktop app is no doubt an attempt to boost its user base and overall growth more than anything else.

For now, Tinder Online doesn't support any of the mobile app's money-making features like Tinder Boost or Super Like. In addition, testing is limited to a just seven countries across South America, Asia and Europe: Argentina, Indonesia, Italy, Mexico, Philippines, Brazil, Columbia and Sweden. That's an odd mix, but if you're in one of them, you should be able to try it out soon here. For now, it doesn't seem to be up yet in Sweden or Brazil, according to my attempts with a VPN.