Royal Message is an anonymous instant messaging app introduced on a German-language site. Its core selling point is “no Anmeldung”: no phone number and no email address are required. After launching the app, users receive a random RMID, which can be used to find contacts or start chats via QR code scanning. Its positioning is closer to a privacy-first personal IM app than to email, SMS, or an enterprise communications platform.
Based on the article, Royal Message is primarily an IM channel. It supports text chat, images, video, and voice messages, and claims fast message delivery, high media quality, and clear voice audio. Groups can support up to 1024 members, covering communication among friends, families, or teams. It does not disclose support for SMS, email, voice calls, notification APIs, or similar capabilities.
Privacy is its most prominent product narrative: it does not access contacts or location and does not track users. For 1:1 chats, content is deleted from the server after delivery to the recipient; for group chats, content is deleted after all members have received it, or after 1 year at the latest. The text also mentions “Ende-zu-Ende über HTTPS,” but this wording is not enough to prove a standard end-to-end encryption implementation. There is also no visible information on key management, open-source audits, privacy policy, GDPR compliance, or data processing agreements. On performance, the claims are mostly marketing language, with no delivery rate, latency, SLA, or availability data provided.
The page clearly states “free download” and “free, no video ads.” However, the section beginning with “we fund this through...” is cut off, so it is not possible to confirm whether the service relies on subscriptions, sponsorships, advertising, or other paid models. No enterprise pricing is provided.
Its advantages are a very low barrier to entry, no need for a phone number or email address, limited permission requests, and relatively large group capacity. Its drawbacks are that the operator, country, compliance evidence, security details, API capabilities, and integration options are all insufficiently disclosed. For now, it is not suitable for scenarios requiring strong auditability, enterprise archiving, or regulated-industry compliance. It is better suited to individuals, small circles, and temporary groups that want anonymous communication.
The article does not provide information on accessibility from mainland China, app store availability, payment methods, or local nodes, so this remains unknown. For use in China, alternatives such as Signal, Telegram, Threema, and Session can also be evaluated, though they may also face network connectivity restrictions.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on royal-message.com official site.
royal-message.com is an Germany Comms & Email provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach royal-message.com directly.