Apart from one-on-one relationships, Peperonity hosted elaborate romantic storylines. Think of them as crowdsourced, interactive Tamil serials, but cooler.
Every romantic story needs an antagonist. On Peperonity, this was the "Voice Hacker" or impersonator. Someone would record a boy’s voice saying "I love you" and replay it to multiple girls. Or a jilted lover would create a fake profile mimicking the hero’s voice. The storyline required the real couple to post a synchronized voice note denying the rumors—a primitive form of "cancel culture" resolved through vocal proof. peperonity.com tamil sex voice amr
What made Peperonity unique was the deliberate performance of romance. Users didn't just document their relationships; they wrote them as serialized stories. These fictional storylines often bled into reality
Many "couples" were actually strangers playing roles. A user named Kavitha_SweetGirl might collaborate with Vijay_Romantic to produce a 15-part voice storyline called "Oru Thuli Kadhal" (A Drop of Love). Each episode (2 minutes long) would advance a fictional romance involving jealous exes, misunderstandings at a bus stop, or a hero saving the heroine from a street dog. Apart from one-on-one relationships
Listeners became invested. Other users would comment:
These fictional storylines often bled into reality. Actors in a voice series would develop real feelings, leading to "meta-relationships" where the fictional script became a blueprint for actual phone calls outside the platform.