One is a daily vitamin. The other is a fire extinguisher. Here is when you need which.
You're arguing. Nobody's budging. You open Piece, each record your side, and the AI tells one of you to apologise. Five minutes. One round. One verdict. Then you move on.
You and your partner answer one question a day, picked by an algorithm built on 20 years of clinical research. You answer privately, then see each other's responses. It builds understanding over time. It does not resolve a specific fight.
Agapé is prevention. Piece is intervention. One builds connection before the argument happens. The other breaks the deadlock once the argument is already here. They solve different problems at different moments.
Nothing until the argument shows up. No daily habit, no streaks, no partner invites required upfront. You open it when you're stuck and close it when you're not.
A daily commitment from both partners. The app works through consistency: answering together, building a streak, earning points. If one person stops showing up, the whole thing stalls. It rewards couples who want a shared ritual. It frustrates couples where one person is less keen.
Piece asks for five minutes when things go wrong. Agapé asks for five minutes every day regardless. Neither is better. Be honest about which version of commitment your relationship will actually follow through on.
Free with ads. No subscription, no premium tier.
Free with limited question categories. Premium unlocks everything for roughly $50/year for both partners, or about $95 for lifetime access. Works out to around $2 per person per month.
Both start free. Agapé charges for depth. Piece does not charge at all. If you are deciding between them on price alone, you are probably asking the wrong question. Pick the one that matches your actual need.
Agapé is for couples who want to talk more. Piece is for couples who need to unstick one specific argument right now. You could use both. The question is not which is better. It is whether your problem today is "we don't connect enough" or "someone forgot to call and now nobody's speaking."