What's replaced Omegle?

A realistic, aggressively mediocre iPhone snapshot in a small messy home office at night: an adult man sitting at a cluttered desk with a laptop open showing a blurry, generic video-chat style interface (no readable text), webcam light on; in the background, partially visible in the corner, a life-sized female humanoid robot torso or mannequin-like figure leaning against a wall with a hoodie draped over it (non-explicit). Awkward framing, slight motion blur, mildly overexposed desk lamp causing uneven lighting, visible noise/grain, random cables and a cheap headset on the desk, candid unposed moment, no logos, no brand names, no watermarks, no text.

Omegle is gone—so what replaced it?

Omegle didn’t get a single, official replacement. When it shut down in November 2023, people scattered across a handful of “roulette-style” random chat apps and a bigger set of safer, more structured communities. Omegle’s founder cited the growing misuse of the service and the difficulty of keeping it safe. (1)

So if you’re asking “What’s replaced Omegle?”, the most accurate answer is:

A mix of random video chat platforms (OmeTV, Chatroulette, Monkey, Emerald Chat) plus community-based spaces (Discord/Reddit/etc.)—with heavier emphasis on moderation, accounts, and reporting than the old Omegle vibe.

Below is a practical breakdown of what people use now, what each option is best for, and what to watch out for.


The closest “Omegle-style” replacements (random video chat)

These are the services that most directly recreate the Omegle experience: click a button, get matched with a stranger.

1) OmeTV

Why people use it: It feels the most like classic Omegle—fast, global, and centered on random video chat.

What’s different from Omegle: - It typically requires an account/login method. - It presents itself as 18+ (though age-gating online is rarely perfect). (2 3)

The big safety reality check: Regulators have publicly raised concerns about roulette-style apps being used for grooming and child exploitation. Australia’s eSafety Commissioner issued a formal warning to OmeTV’s provider (dated 20 August 2025) and later reported that Apple and Google removed OmeTV from Australian app stores (press release dated 28 October 2025). (3 4)

Best for: Adults who specifically want random video chat and are willing to be proactive about safety.


2) Chatroulette (the original brand)

Why people use it: It’s one of the oldest random chat brands and still has strong name recognition.

What to know before you pick it: - Chatroulette publishes rules that state it’s 18+ and prohibits inappropriate content. (5) - It also publishes a child-safety policy (effective 1 Jan 2025) emphasizing zero tolerance for child sexual exploitation content. (6) - Historically, Chatroulette has discussed using automated filtering/image-recognition approaches to reduce obscene content (quality varies across eras and clones).

Important nuance: There are many “Chatroulette-like” sites and even similarly named domains. If you’re choosing this route, verify you’re on the service you intend to use and review its rules/safety pages.

Best for: Adults who want the classic roulette format and want a platform that at least clearly documents its rules.


3) Monkey

Why people use it: Fast, swipey, short-form video matching that feels more like a social app than a website.

What to watch for: Safety reviewers consistently point out that random-video matching creates obvious risks (harassment, exposure to explicit material, and weak age assurance). Common Sense Media rates Monkey for older teens and highlights that unmoderated chats can become explicit and that age verification can be weak. (7)

Best for: People who like quick, app-native matching and accept that “roulette” formats come with unpredictable encounters.


4) Emerald Chat

Why people use it: It tries to keep the “meet strangers” concept but adds structure: - Interest matching - Text/video modes - A visible karma/reputation layer

Emerald Chat promotes these features publicly (including karma and interest-based matching). (8 9)

Safety note: Even with extra features, you can still encounter sexualised content and inappropriate behavior. Australia’s eSafety guide also notes the platform may not reliably verify users’ ages. (10)

Best for: People who want an Omegle-like flow but prefer some friction (accounts + reputation signals) to reduce pure chaos.


What really replaced Omegle for a lot of people (safer, more predictable options)

If what you miss is the conversation (not the roulette adrenaline), a lot of former Omegle users moved to places that are less random—but dramatically more manageable:

Community-first spaces (lower risk, better conversations)

  • Discord servers focused on hobbies, local areas, or age-gated communities
  • Reddit communities (topic-based discussion, AMAs, accountability via profiles)
  • Interest forums and group chats where moderation is visible

These don’t replicate “instantly talk to a stranger on webcam,” but they do replicate what many people actually wanted from Omegle: meeting new people outside your bubble.


A quick chooser: which replacement fits your goal?

  • You want the closest thing to old Omegle: start with OmeTV / Chatroulette / Emerald Chat.
  • You want short, app-like interactions: Monkey.
  • You want fewer unpleasant surprises: choose community-first (Discord/Reddit) instead of roulette.

Privacy & safety checklist (worth doing on any “Omegle replacement”)

Roulette chat is inherently high-variance. A few basics reduce your odds of a bad time:

  1. Assume you can be recorded. Screen recording is trivial.
  2. Keep identifying details out of view. Backgrounds, mail, uniforms, location hints.
  3. Never share a phone number or personal socials quickly. If you move off-platform, you lose built-in reporting.
  4. Use the report/block tools early, not late. Don’t debate with someone who’s pushing boundaries.
  5. Be extra careful with “age claims.” Age gates exist, but enforcement can be inconsistent across services. (2 10)

A different kind of replacement: private, controlled interaction (no strangers)

Some people aren’t looking to “replace Omegle with another roulette site”—they’re trying to replace the feeling of spontaneity and companionship without the privacy risks of random strangers.

That’s where private, at-home interactive tech can be a better fit. For example, Orifice.ai offers a sex robot / interactive adult toy for $669.90 with interactive penetration depth detection—which is a very different category than chat apps, but one that appeals to people who want interactive experiences without exposing themselves to unknown users, platforms, or moderation roulette.

(Informational note: If you explore any adult-oriented tech, prioritize clear return policies, device security basics, and reputable vendors—privacy should be part of the product, not an afterthought.)


Bottom line

What replaced Omegle is a bundle of options—not a single winner.

  • For the closest match: OmeTV, Chatroulette, Emerald Chat, Monkey (each with tradeoffs).
  • For better conversations and fewer risks: community-based platforms.
  • For private, controlled interaction: adult interactive tech like Orifice.ai.

If you tell me what you liked most about Omegle (text vs video, interests vs totally random, casual vs longer talks), I can narrow this down to the best-fit alternatives and a safety setup that matches how you actually use these platforms.

Sources