An AI companion that actually remembers you
If you've used an AI companion before, you know the quiet disappointment: you share something that matters, and a few days later it's gone. Or worse — it remembers everything, indiscriminately, and it starts to feel less like a friend and more like a file being kept on you.
Memory done properly
PixelCrush is built around memory that works the way a friend's does. It sorts what it remembers into three layers — so the things at the centre of your life are held for good, your ongoing world stays current, and the small talk is free to fade.
Your name, the people who matter, the things at the centre of your life. Held for good.
Your job, your routines, what you're into right now — kept current, updated as life changes.
The way a friend recalls this week vividly, and last month in broad strokes.
One memory, whether you type or talk
This is the part almost no one else does. What you say in a chat, your companion remembers on a voice call. What you talk about out loud, it brings up later in text. Most companions treat voice and chat as two separate strangers wearing the same face. Here it's one continuous memory across both.
Memory you chose
Your companion asks before it starts remembering — you opt in. And you can delete your data whenever you want. Memory should deepen trust over time, not quietly accumulate behind your back.
Questions, answered
- Does PixelCrush remember past conversations?
- Yes. Your companion remembers what matters to you across sessions — the people, plans, and feelings you share — and lets trivial details fade naturally, so conversations build on each other instead of resetting each time.
- Does it remember voice and text together?
- Yes, and this is unusual. PixelCrush keeps one continuous memory across both, so something you said in chat can come up on a voice call, and vice versa — not two disconnected histories.
- Do I control what it remembers?
- Yes. Your companion only remembers with your consent — you opt in — and you can delete your data at any time. Memory is something you choose, not something done to you.
- Will it forget me if I don't talk for a while?
- No. The things that matter — who you are, what is important to you — are held onto. The fleeting details of older chats naturally fade, but you will never have to start over.
Be first in when we open
Join the waitlist — every friend you refer moves you up the line.