The Midtown skyline rising above the green sea of Piedmont Park, Bank of America's gold spire catching afternoon sun, the trees hiding most of the city. Atlanta's neat trick of being a forest with a downtown. Singles over 50 here have often raised families in the suburbs and moved Intown for the second act, or vice versa. However you arrived at this point (late divorce, decades on your own, a recent loss), there's room to find someone in the same gear.
Your profile stays out of search engines. Only signed-in members see you, and your name doesn't show up if a coworker or a Buckhead neighbor Googles it. That privacy matters in a city where so many circles overlap. You can look around quietly. Free to set up, no card needed.
For a first walk, Atlanta members favor Piedmont Park or coffee on the Eastside BeltLine. Virginia-Highland and Inman Park work for an evening; Midtown is good after work. Decatur Square has a steady fifty-plus crowd; Sandy Springs and Dunwoody bring the Perimeter neighborhoods together. Ponce City Market is the catch-all standby, coffee, browsing, eating, all under one old roof. Stone Mountain or a drive up to Athens earns a Saturday.