You're paying for the date, no? And Chicago's huge like Dallas. Can you imagine Ubering or taking the bus to Fort Worth from University Park?
The distance between Fort Worth and central-ish Dallas areas (University Park, Highland Park, Uptown/Downtown Dallas, etc) is too long of a distance to sustainably date. It's possible for a resident of a central-ish area in Dallas to have a plate in Fort Worth under some unusual circumstances, such as an existing Dallas plate moves to Fort Worth, but that's not going to be a close relationship. Even scheduling one date on a weeknight between a Dallas person and a Fort Worth person would be a very difficult exercise.
This is even worse is someone lives in a northern suburb of Dallas (Plano, Frisco, McKinney, Allen) and tries to date someone over in Fort Worth.
Non-sexual friendships between Dallas residents and Fort Worth residents are difficult. That's mainly weekend visits. It is even possible for unfavorable traffic late morning to mid-afternoon on a weekend.
The scenes are separate.
With in-person approaching, it's highly unlikely a Dallas person ends up approaching a Fort Worth person. There may be accidental contact on swipe apps between the two if someone didn't set their geolocation distance correctly.
Based on @Jesse Pinkman's write ups of New York City, Miami, and large state universities, I thought it would be worthwhile to write up Dallas, the city I call home. The Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area (DFW) is the 4th most populated metropolitan area in the United States. Dallas and Fort...
www.sosuave.net
unless you're going to prom, most dates you meet the person at a location rather than pick them up lol
Most first or second dates involve two people meeting at some public place. This is true if the date was arranged from some in-person method or some tech-based method.