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Hiya
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Hiya

FUNI PTE. LTD.

PlatformAndroid, iOS
RegionGlobal
LanguageEnglish
Top Up Now

About This Game

Hiya: The Complete Guide to FUNI's Global Voice Chat Social App

Introduction & Quick Facts

Hiya (often listed in app stores as "Hiya - Group Voice Chat") is a voice-first social networking application published by FUNI PTE. LTD., built specifically around real-time group audio rooms rather than the text-and-photo paradigm that defines most mainstream social platforms. It targets users who want to actually talk — to strangers, to friends, to communities of interest — in spontaneous live rooms where the conversation is the content. Available worldwide on Android and iOS, it has grown a sizable multinational audience spanning the Middle East, South and Southeast Asia, East Asia, and pockets of Europe and the Americas, with localized support for English, Arabic, Hindi, Indonesian, Thai, Turkish, Vietnamese, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, Malay, Japanese, Korean, and Chinese.

What makes Hiya distinct in a saturated voice-chat market is its emphasis on voice as identity. Instead of building profiles around selfies and bios, users are nudged to build presence through their voice clips, vocal tags, room hosting style, and the gifts they accumulate from listeners. The economy is anchored by coins, the primary in-app currency used to send virtual gifts, unlock premium features, and signal status inside rooms. For most active users, especially hosts and high-engagement listeners, regular coin top-ups become a normal part of the experience — which is where this guide comes in.

This article covers everything you need to operate confidently on Hiya: how the platform works, how rooms and gifting actually function, practical strategies for hosts and listeners, how the coin economy fits together, and how to top up efficiently. Whether you're a brand-new user trying to find your first community or a seasoned host looking to scale a fanbase, the playbook below is designed to be dense, actionable, and free of fluff.

Field Detail
Publisher FUNI PTE. LTD.
Developer FUNI PTE. LTD.
Platform Android, iOS
Region Global
Genre Social / Voice Chat / Live Audio
Primary Currency Coins
Languages English, Arabic, Hindi, Indonesian, Thai, Turkish, Vietnamese, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, Malay, Japanese, Korean, Chinese (Simplified & Traditional)
Official Website funi.bcdjm.com

What is Hiya?

Hiya is a live group voice chat platform — at its core, a network of always-on audio "rooms" that any user can enter, host, or browse. A room typically holds a handful of speaker seats (commonly up to 8 or 9 mic slots depending on room type) plus an unlimited audience of listeners. When you open the app, you're presented with a feed of trending rooms: friendship rooms, music and singing rooms, party rooms, dating/matchmaking rooms, language exchange rooms, gaming co-play rooms, ASMR and storytelling rooms, regional hangout rooms, and themed event rooms tied to seasonal campaigns.

The platform is built for users who feel that text chat is too slow, video is too exposing, and one-on-one calls are too pressured. Voice rooms hit a sweet spot: you can listen passively while doing chores, jump on a mic when you want to contribute, leave silently when you're done, and form recurring relationships with hosts and regulars without needing to commit to a friends list or schedule. The demographic skews young-adult (late teens to mid-thirties) and heavily international — Hiya is particularly popular in MENA (Middle East and North Africa), South Asia, and Southeast Asia, where group voice apps have become a dominant form of social entertainment.

People care about Hiya for three main reasons. First, discovery — the interest-based room browsing and Voice Match pairing make it genuinely easy to meet new people without the swipe-fatigue of dating apps. Second, expression — hosts can build small audiences, monetize attention through the gifting economy, and develop a real on-platform identity. Third, community — recurring rooms feel like club hangouts where the same regulars show up nightly, which scratches a social itch that algorithmic feed apps struggle to replicate. The platform's growth, comfortably past 10 million downloads with steady ratings in the 4.2–4.4 range on major app stores, reflects that it delivers on those three pillars more consistently than most competitors.

You can find more information on the publisher's pages, including download links for both stores, on the official FUNI site.

Core Gameplay / Features

Hiya isn't a "game" in the traditional sense, but it has enough mechanics, progression systems, and meta-loops that it functions like one for power users. Here are the most important features to understand:

  • Group voice rooms with multiple mic seats, queue-to-speak mechanics, and a separate listener audience.
  • Voice Match technology that pairs users for short voice-only encounters based on vocal vibes and preferences.
  • Voice profiles and voice signatures — short recorded clips that act as your "profile picture" in audio-first contexts.
  • Coin economy powering virtual gifts, premium room access, gift effects, mic-on-fire animations, and exclusive cosmetics.
  • Gift catalog ranging from cheap "spam" gifts (roses, small icons) to high-tier animated gifts that trigger full-room visual effects.
  • Game Center / mini-games embedded inside rooms — typically lightweight games like dice, fishing, Ludo-style, lucky wheel, and other party games that participants can play together while chatting.
  • Family / Guild / Team systems that let hosts and core listeners form persistent groups with shared leaderboards and bonuses.
  • Daily sign-in rewards, map collection tasks, and event quests that drip-feed free coins, badges, and frame cosmetics.
  • Level system for users and rooms, with charm levels (driven by gifts received) and wealth levels (driven by gifts sent) shown as colored badges.
  • VIP / Noble tiers that unlock entry effects, special chat colors, invisibility, custom frames, and other status markers.
  • Trending leaderboards (hourly, daily, weekly) for top rooms, top hosts, top gifters, and top families — the engine that drives competitive gifting.
  • Quick login via Facebook, Google, Apple, or phone number, plus account binding for cross-device continuity.

Rooms: the heartbeat of the app

A room on Hiya is a real-time audio space owned by a host. The host can set a title, theme image, background music, password (for private rooms), language tag, and seat layout. Some rooms have fixed seats reserved for co-hosts or VIPs; others are open queue, where listeners raise their hand to speak. Moderators (called admins or managers) can mute disruptive users, kick troublemakers, and manage the mic queue, which lets hosts focus on entertaining rather than policing.

Themed rooms are where the platform gets interesting. A "sing-along" room will have someone on mic performing while the chat showers them with rose gifts. A "friendship building" room is more like an open hangout where 6–8 people freestyle conversations and audience members occasionally jump up. "Late-night chill" rooms run in regional prime time and often become recurring nightly meet-ups for the same group of regulars. "Game" rooms layer Ludo, dice, or fishing mini-games on top of voice, so the room has dual entertainment streams.

The coin economy and gifting in depth

Coins are the lifeblood of Hiya's social signaling system. They're acquired primarily through top-ups (the most reliable method) and secondarily through free channels — daily sign-ins, completing tasks, event participation, lucky spins, and limited-time campaigns. Coins are spent on gifts, which range from tiny one-coin roses you can spam to flagship animated gifts that cost thousands of coins per send and trigger fullscreen effects visible to every listener in the room.

Gifting serves multiple purposes simultaneously. For the sender, it's a tip, a flirt, a way to grab a host's attention, a status display in front of the audience, or a contribution to a guild/family leaderboard push. For the receiver, gifts boost their charm level, their position on host leaderboards, and (through the platform's payout systems for verified hosts) their actual earnings. For the room itself, big gifts boost room ranking, which feeds discovery, which brings in new listeners — closing the loop.

Voice Match and 1-on-1 discovery

Voice Match is Hiya's matchmaking layer. Instead of swiping on photos, you're paired with another user for a short voice call based on shared interests, language, and vocal "vibe" tags. Some implementations of this feature let you set filters (gender, region, language) and use Voice Match tokens or coins to refresh matches, skip, or extend calls. It's a low-pressure way to meet people one-on-one and frequently feeds new relationships into the public room layer — Match a stranger, hit it off, end up regulars in each other's rooms.

Levels, badges, and status

Hiya gamifies presence aggressively. Your charm level rises with gifts received and signals how popular you are as a host or seat-warmer. Your wealth level rises with gifts sent (i.e. coins spent) and signals you're a high-roller worth catering to. Both are shown as colored numerical badges next to your name. Higher tiers unlock cosmetic frames, custom entrance animations (so the whole room sees your dramatic arrival), VIP-only chat fonts, and access to certain noble-only rooms or events. This dual-axis status system is intentional: it gives both spenders and creators reasons to grind.

Families, guilds, and social structure

Beyond rooms, Hiya supports persistent groups — often called families, guilds, or teams depending on the localization. Families pool members, run private rooms, coordinate gift bombs during contests, share family chat, and compete for family leaderboard slots during seasonal events. For new users, joining an active family is one of the fastest ways to find a stable friend group on the platform. For hosts, recruiting a family of loyal supporters is often the difference between an empty room and a packed one.

Pro Tips & Strategy

Beginner Tips (first 1–2 weeks)

  1. Complete every daily task and sign-in for the first 14 days. The cumulative reward curves on most voice social apps front-load the value early — you get more free coins, frames, and trial VIP perks in week one than you will in weeks four through eight combined. Don't sleep on this window.

  2. Record a real voice signature, not a one-second test. Your voice clip is your "profile picture." Aim for 5–10 seconds of natural, friendly speech in your strongest language — a greeting, a joke, or a sample of your singing voice if you plan to host music rooms. Strangers click profiles based almost entirely on this clip.

  3. Spend your first week as a listener. Hop into 10–15 different rooms across themes — friendship, music, gaming, regional. Observe how hosts run their mic queues, how regulars interact, what gifts get reactions, and which rooms feel sustainable vs. dead. You're doing free market research.

  4. Bind your account immediately. Use Google, Facebook, or Apple sign-in plus a phone number. Account loss on social apps is brutal because your social graph (followers, family memberships, badges) is non-portable. Bind day one.

  5. Set your language and region tags accurately. The room recommendation algorithm leans heavily on these signals. Mis-tagging yourself just to "see more rooms" leads to a noisier, less satisfying feed.

  6. Use your free Voice Match tokens. Daily quotas usually refresh automatically. Even if you don't love every match, you'll quickly calibrate what type of person you actually want to connect with — and you'll occasionally hit a great one.

Intermediate Tips (weeks 2–8)

  1. Pick a "home room" and become a regular. Showing up to the same room three to five nights a week for two weeks will get you recognized by the host and other regulars far faster than bouncing between dozens of rooms. Recognition is the foundation of friendships on Hiya.

  2. Send small, frequent gifts rather than rare big ones. A 5-coin rose every few minutes during your home room's peak is read as engaged and supportive. One 5000-coin bomb followed by silence reads as transactional. Generosity perceived > generosity calculated.

  3. Learn the room etiquette of your primary culture. A music room dominated by Arabic singers, a Hindi-language friendship room, and a Filipino late-night hangout all have different unspoken rules around mic interruption, gift acknowledgement, and humor. Match the vibe of the room you're in.

  4. Join one family or guild, not five. Single-family loyalty is rewarded with deeper integration — private rooms, family contests, mentorship from senior members. Multi-family floaters get treated as outsiders by all of them.

  5. Time your top-ups around events. Hiya runs regular promotional events (anniversary campaigns, regional holidays, seasonal festivals) that bundle bonus coins, exclusive event-only gifts, or limited frames with top-ups. Holding your spending for those windows can stretch your coin budget by 20–50%.

  6. Maintain a personal "do not gift" list. Some users farm new arrivals for gifts with flirty energy then ghost. After a few weeks you'll spot the pattern — note them, stop spending on them, and move your attention to creators who actually engage back.

  7. Get comfortable on the mic before trying to host. Spend significant time as a seated speaker in other people's rooms. You'll learn pacing, how to introduce newcomers, how to defuse awkward silences, and how to handle a troll — skills that determine whether your own room survives its first week.

Advanced Tips (host & power-user)

  1. Schedule your host hours and announce them. Hosts who go live at random times never build a recurring audience. Pick two or three time windows per day matching your target audience's prime time (e.g. 9–11 PM local for a regional friendship room) and stick to them for at least a month before judging results.

  2. Recruit two to three reliable co-hosts. Solo hosting is exhausting and your room dies the moment you need a bathroom break. Co-hosts cover transitions, keep energy up during your off-mic moments, and shoulder some of the moderation load. Split gift income via family/team systems if your locale supports it.

  3. Track which themes drive your gift income. If your music nights pull 3x the coins of your free-chat nights, lean into music. If your late-night ASMR-style storytelling drives high-tier whales while busier daytime rooms only get spam roses, optimize for the whale slot. Treat your room like a small product.

  4. Build a small Discord or external chat for your core regulars. A WhatsApp group or Discord channel for your top 10–20 fans (where you announce go-live times, share clips, and run private events) protects your community from algorithm changes and keeps your audience portable.

  5. Use entrance effects strategically, not constantly. A VIP entrance every time you join a friend's room loses its novelty. Save the dramatic entries for rooms where you actually want to be noticed — your target room of the night, a competitor's room, a host you're trying to befriend.

Characters & Room Personas

Hiya doesn't have characters in the JRPG sense, but the platform's social fabric is built on a handful of recurring user archetypes. Understanding them helps you navigate rooms faster, decide where to spend your coins, and figure out what kind of presence you want to build yourself.

Persona Role in the Ecosystem Key Trait
The Host Runs and themes a room, manages mic queue, performs/converses Charisma + consistency
The Co-Host Supports the main host, covers transitions, moderates chat Reliability, second-voice presence
The Whale High-tier gifter, often VIP/Noble High wealth level, courted by hosts
The Regular Returns to the same room nightly, light but consistent gifter Loyalty, social glue
The Singer Specializes in music rooms, performs live vocals Vocal skill, song repertoire
The Matchmaker Lives in Voice Match and friendship rooms, connects people Curiosity, social energy
The Gamer Hangs out in mini-game rooms (Ludo, dice, fishing) Competitive, casual chat style
The Listener Lurks silently, rarely speaks, occasional small gifts Passive entertainment seeker
The Family Leader Runs a guild/family, recruits members, coordinates events Organizational, status-conscious

Most active users blend two or three of these. A common career arc on Hiya looks like: start as a Listener → become a Regular in someone else's room → graduate into a Co-Host → eventually launch your own room as a Host. The Whale and Family Leader tracks are parallel paths that some users prioritize from the start.

Building your own persona

Before grinding for a level badge, decide what role you want to occupy. A whale who tries to also be a host will spread attention thin and underperform at both. A singer-host who tries to also moderate game rooms loses focus on what their core audience actually shows up for. The most successful Hiya users have a clear, one-line self-description: "I'm the late-night Hindi storytelling host," "I'm the chill Arabic music room regular who always sends roses," "I'm the family leader who runs Tuesday game nights." Clarity attracts followers faster than range.

Game Modes & Room Types Deep Dive

Hiya's "modes" are really room formats. Each format has its own etiquette, gifting expectations, and skill demands. Picking the right format for your goals — whether that's making friends, building an audience, or just unwinding after work — saves you weeks of wasted effort.

Friendship rooms

The default and most populous format. Open mic queues, casual conversation, broad themes. Best for newcomers learning the ropes and for users who want low-stakes social time. Gifting is light and mostly symbolic (roses, small icons). The skill is conversational pacing and inclusivity — making sure every speaker on mic gets airtime and that audience members get welcomed when they enter.

Music and singing rooms

Hosts and seated speakers perform live vocals, often with backing tracks or instrumentals. These rooms drive disproportionately high gifting because performance creates clear moments to reward — a soaring chorus, a perfectly-hit note, a popular song request. If you can sing reasonably well in your target language, music rooms are the fastest path to a charm-level glow-up.

Party and group celebration rooms

High-energy, loud, often event-driven (birthdays, family anniversaries, holiday parties). Multiple speakers on mic at once, lots of overlapping chat, gift bombs as celebration. These rooms can be magical or chaotic depending on host moderation. Great for whales who want a big-audience moment to drop a flagship gift.

Dating / matchmaking rooms

Structured rooms with seats labeled by gender, often featuring host-led "introduction rounds" where each seated speaker pitches themselves. These rooms run on directed conversation rather than free chat, and gifts double as flirtation signals. Hosts in this category function more like dating-show MCs than entertainers.

Game rooms (Ludo, dice, fishing, etc.)

Voice chat layered over a turn-based mini-game. Conversation is incidental to gameplay, but the social bonds form anyway — recurring game nights are some of the stickiest communities on the platform. Lower gifting per session than music rooms but very high retention.

Language exchange and learning rooms

Members practice a target language with native speakers in low-pressure conversation. Especially popular for English, Arabic, Hindi, and Korean learners. These rooms are gift-light but loyalty-heavy and often spawn long-term friendships.

ASMR / storytelling / late-night rooms

Quiet, intimate formats running in late-night time slots. One main voice with a small attentive audience. Despite small headcounts, these rooms can pull high-tier gifts from listeners who treasure the calm vibe.

Room Type Energy Level Typical Gift Volume Best For
Friendship Medium Low–Medium New users, casual hangs
Music / Singing High High Performers, talent showcases
Party Very High Very High Whales, celebrations
Dating / Match Medium Medium–High Singles, flirt-friendly
Mini-Game Medium Low Competitive casual play
Language Exchange Low–Medium Low Learners, polyglots
ASMR / Late Night Low Variable Wind-down listeners

Coin Economy & Gifting Mechanics

Understanding the coin economy in detail is the difference between spending efficiently and burning your budget on low-impact gestures. Below is the conceptual structure of how coins flow through Hiya.

Sources of coins

Coins enter your account through two channels: earned and purchased. Earned coins come from daily sign-in streaks, completing daily and weekly tasks, participating in events, lucky wheel spins, map collection campaigns, watch-time rewards, and occasional promo codes distributed during official campaigns. Purchased coins come from top-ups via the App Store, Google Play, or third-party top-up services that deliver coins to your account via your Hiya user ID.

Earned coin streams are generous in the first two weeks (new-user incentives) and then taper. Power users typically rely 80%+ on purchased coins after their first month, supplementing with event coins during major campaigns.

Sinks for coins

Coins exit your account through gift sends (the main sink), premium room entry fees, VIP/Noble subscriptions (paid in coins or via separate top-up), profile cosmetics (frames, entrance effects, mic effects), Voice Match boosts, and occasional gacha-style lucky boxes that contain limited gifts or items.

Gift tiers and their purposes

Gifts in voice social apps generally cluster into four bands:

  • Spam tier (1–10 coins): roses, hearts, claps. Used to keep a host's gift feed alive during their performance. Cheap, frequent, low individual signal but cumulative warmth.
  • Mid tier (50–500 coins): candies, themed icons, regional gifts. Used to mark specific moments — a great song, a funny joke, a birthday.
  • Premium tier (1000–5000 coins): animated gifts with on-screen effects visible to the whole room. Used to claim attention, signal status, or push a host up the daily leaderboard.
  • Flagship tier (10,000+ coins): rare full-screen showpiece gifts, often tied to seasonal events. Used by whales during contests, anniversaries, and ranking pushes.

The leaderboard loop

Every gift contributes to multiple leaderboards: room hourly/daily, host weekly, family monthly, regional rankings, and event-specific tracks. Whales chase wealth-level milestones. Hosts chase charm-level and creator rankings. Families coordinate timed gift bombs to push their faction up faction leaderboards during contests. The platform deliberately stacks these systems so that any single coin spent fires multiple progression bars at once — which is why heavy spenders often describe the experience as "addictive."

Practical budgeting

If you're a casual user, set yourself a monthly coin budget before you open the top-up screen. A typical sustainable casual budget covers daily small gifts in your home room plus one mid-tier gift per week for a friend's special moment. Stepping up to "regular supporter" tier means budgeting for one or two premium-tier gifts per week. Whale-tier participation is a different conversation entirely and only makes sense if you genuinely enjoy the status game and have disposable income to match.

Top-Up & Recharge

Most Hiya users top up coins directly inside the app via Apple's App Store or Google Play's in-app purchase system, which is the simplest path but typically the most expensive after platform fees. A common alternative is third-party top-up services, which credit coins to your account using your Hiya user ID (found in your in-app profile) — these services often offer better effective rates, regional payment options, and faster bulk top-ups for hosts and family leaders who buy in larger volumes. To top up via a third-party service, you generally need to provide your numeric Hiya ID, select a coin package, complete payment, and wait for the coins to land in your account (usually within minutes). Always double-check your user ID before confirming, since coins sent to the wrong ID can be difficult to recover.

Our site offers reliable top-up / recharge for Hiya coins using your user ID, with package options sized for both casual users and high-volume hosts.

For broader account questions, payment region-locks, or official campaign details, the publisher's resources at funi.bcdjm.com are the authoritative starting point.

FAQ

Q: Is Hiya free to use? A: Yes. Downloading the app and using core features — joining rooms, listening, basic chat, free daily tasks — costs nothing. Coins for gifting and premium cosmetics are optional purchases. Most users can have a rich social experience without spending if they're patient with daily reward streams.

Q: Is Hiya safe for younger users? A: The platform's terms typically require users to be at least 17–18 depending on region, and the app has community guidelines against harassment, explicit content, and exploitation. That said, like any open voice platform, it's an adult social environment in practice. Parents should treat it the way they'd treat Discord or any open audio app — not as a kids' product.

Q: Can I make money as a host on Hiya? A: Verified hosts in supported regions can earn through the platform's host program, which converts a portion of received gift value into payouts. Eligibility, conversion rates, and payout methods vary by region and tier, and serious hosts typically only see meaningful income after building a consistent audience over several months.

Q: What's the difference between charm level and wealth level? A: Charm level rises with gifts you receive and signals your popularity as a host or speaker. Wealth level rises with coins you spend on gifts and signals you're a generous supporter. Both are visible as numbered badges and unlock cosmetic perks at milestone thresholds.

Q: How do I find rooms in my language? A: Set your in-app language preference correctly and use the regional/language filters on the room discovery tabs. Many rooms also include language tags in the room title. Joining a family aligned with your language is the fastest route into a stable language-specific community.

Q: Can I use Hiya on PC or web? A: Hiya is primarily a mobile experience (Android and iOS). There's no official PC client. Some users run it via Android emulators, but performance, mic quality, and account safety on emulators are not officially supported.

Q: What happens if I lose access to my account? A: If you bound your account to Google, Apple, Facebook, or a phone number, recovery is usually straightforward through the login screen. If you used only a quick guest login without binding, account recovery is much harder. Bind your account immediately after install.

Q: How long do coins last? Do they expire? A: Purchased coins typically don't expire under normal use. However, event-specific bonus coins or "diamond" sub-currencies sometimes carry expiration windows tied to the event. Always read the fine print on event-only currencies.

Q: Can I refund a gift I sent by accident? A: No. Once a gift is sent, it's credited to the recipient and counted toward leaderboards. Triple-check before tapping the send button on high-tier gifts, especially during fast-moving room moments.

Q: Why are some rooms password-locked? A: Hosts use passwords for private family meetings, VIP-only events, paid coaching sessions, or invite-only hangouts. If you're a regular in a room and want access, ask the host or a moderator directly — most are happy to share passwords with trusted regulars.

Q: Does Hiya have video chat? A: Hiya is intentionally voice-first and does not center video. This is a deliberate product choice — the platform's value proposition is that you're judged on voice and personality, not appearance.

Q: How do I report a user for harassment? A: Tap the user's profile and use the in-app report function. For in-room incidents, the host and room moderators can mute or kick the offender immediately, and serious cases are escalated to platform-level moderation.

Verdict

Hiya is a strong pick for anyone who genuinely enjoys talking — to friends, to strangers, to small recurring communities — and who finds text-and-photo social media draining. Its strengths are real: a large multinational audience, deep room variety, a well-tuned gifting economy that rewards both spenders and creators, and a voice-first design philosophy that creates more authentic interactions than appearance-driven platforms. Hosts looking to build an audience, regulars looking for a nightly social anchor, and casual listeners who want company while doing other things will all find what they need.

It's less suited for users who want passive, algorithm-served content (it requires active participation), users who are uncomfortable on mic and aren't willing to push through that discomfort, and users who can't trust themselves around a status-driven gifting economy — the leaderboard mechanics are intentionally compelling and budgeting discipline matters. If you fall into the first group, set a clear monthly coin budget, pick a room format that matches your goals, commit to a single home community for at least a month, and the platform pays back the time you put in.

For everyone else, the playbook is straightforward: install, bind your account, complete two weeks of dailies, find your home room, build a voice signature you're proud of, and either join a family or start hosting once you've watched enough other hosts to know what works. Top up strategically during events, gift consistently rather than impulsively, and let your charm or wealth level rise as a side effect of actually enjoying yourself — not as the goal itself.

[ENG-SUB] HIYA Movie Trailer - Hoya

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