For travellers
The friend you met on the train, in the language you both read.
A lot of travelling is now done by message. The landlord. The host. The neighbour. The friend you swapped numbers with on a Friday night in a city you might come back to.
The first hours of arriving somewhere new are nearly all logistics in someone else’s language. The keypad code, the bus that no longer stops where the map says, the sentence the woman at the bakery repeated three times because she really did want to be helpful.
NatChatt is built for the side of travelling that happens through your phone. You can keep using the apps you already use for trains and hotels. NatChatt holds the conversations.
For the friend you actually keep in touch with afterwards, it stays useful. A two-line message a year later, an invite to a wedding, a recommendation for the place to eat next time. The thread doesn’t ask you to remember which language it’s in.
The host
“The water heater needs about ten minutes. There’s coffee on the top shelf.” In your language, the moment you read it.
The landlord
A document in Spanish or Thai or Japanese, opened on your phone in an airport, read in plain English by the time the wifi reconnects.
The friend
The voice note that finds you on the bus to the airport. You can listen to her voice. You can read what she said.