For Chinese netizens who feel judged by their WeChat posts, or stigmatized for their bawdy sense of humor, thereโ€™s now an app called โ€˜Right Brainerโ€™ (ๅณ่„‘ไบบ), a safe space for Chinaโ€™s self-identifed weirdos.

โ€œThis is a social product that brings lunatics and psychos together,โ€ states Right Brainerโ€™s website. โ€œWe help the unruly meet troublemakers, and let misfits find unconventional friends.โ€

Much of the โ€œweirdnessโ€ of Right Brainer boils down to semi-risquรฉ content โ€“ phallic memes, nipples, condom jokes โ€“ though there is some legitimately bizarre content on there, like a picture of hairy man wearing nothing but a pink, flowered apron. The app also features original creations by Right Brainer users, such as uploaded artwork and short comics.

The point is to share content that boosts your imagination or โ€œopens your mindโ€ (่„‘ๆดžๅคงๅผ€, which literally translates to โ€˜widen your brain holeโ€™), says Wei Zheng, the CEO of Right Brainer. โ€œI believe that everyone, under different circumstances and periods of time, has the potential to โ€˜open their mindsโ€™.โ€

To facilitate โ€œbrain opening,โ€ the app pushes timed challenges to users, who can win strange, kitschy awards if they complete them on time. For example, responding to the prompt, โ€œDescribe a time when you successfully wooed a woman or man,โ€ earns users a wooden sculpture of a tuxedo-ed duck. Users can also respond to โ€œcrazy soundโ€ (็–ฏๅฃฐ) prompts through voice recordings. Some โ€œcrazy soundโ€ responses are more confessional, such as โ€œTell us about something that made you unhappy recentlyโ€, while others are more competitive, such as โ€œWho can whistle the best?โ€

โ€œAdding a speech bubble onto an image counts as a kind of creativity,โ€ Mr. Zheng told Chinese media site Pencil News (link in Chinese). โ€œThereโ€™s no standard to creativity, nor is there a high barrier to entry. Everyone is creative and can participate in the creative process.โ€

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Posts from Right Brainerโ€™s newsfeed.

The Beijing-based startup is hoping to convert the โ€œlunacyโ€ and quirkiness of their users into creative solutions. Here, creativity doesnโ€™t refer to graphic design, visual art, or anything categorical, but simply the ability to imagine. According to Mr. Zheng, Right Brainer will serve as a platform where users can crowdsource solutions to personal issues and requests.

โ€œThere wonโ€™t be any restrictions on what kind of requests are allowed [on Right Brainer], but we will not recommend requests that require offline or high-tech solutions,โ€ says Mr. Zheng. Instead, requests might look similar to the prompts that Right Brainer users are already used to, like,โ€I canโ€™t sleep. Can someone tell me a story?โ€ or, โ€œMy girlfriend is a second-generation rich kid. How should I propose to her?โ€

Currently, Right Brainer only allows users to socialize and share, as the request feature is slated to launch on May 7th, according to Mr. Zheng. Right Brainerโ€™s approach of building a community before monetizing user interactions is typical in China, where startups, such as ride-hailing company Didi Chuxing, often prioritize user acquisition over earning capital.

Last Friday, the company announced they have secured 6 million RMB (about $927,000 USD) in angel funding. Earlier in April, Right Brainer raised about 7 million RMB (about $1 million USD) through JDโ€™s crowdfunding platform, and a 2 million RMB round of seed funding (about $309,000 USD) from Buttonwood Capital, Rice Bank, and Taihuoniao in 2015.

Image credit: Right Brainer

Eva Xiao is a tech reporter based in Shanghai. Contact her at eva.xiao@ovau.ip-ddns.com or evawxiao (wechat & twitter).

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