Create a personalized birthday bash in 60 seconds and send it as a link. They open it on their phone and pop balloons, blow out candles, cut a custom cake, and read the letter you wrote for them - no app, no signup, nothing to download.
Takes 60 seconds. Share it instantly.
A "Happy Birthday!" text gets read in three seconds and scrolled past. Your person gets forty of those messages before lunch. None of them land.
A Virtual Birthday Bash is different because it asks them to do something. They tap the link, and their phone turns into a private little party - balloons float up, they tap to pop them, candles flicker, they blow them out, the cake has their name on it, and then your letter opens. The whole thing takes ninety seconds to watch, but the feeling of being the centre of something lasts all day.
That shift from reading to doing is what makes the bash stick. Psychologists call it the peak-end rule - we remember the most intense moment of an experience and how it ended. A text has no peak and no ending. A bash has a build, a surprise, and a personal letter as the payoff. It is the difference between someone saying "I remembered you" and someone showing it.
It also travels. Most people screen-record the bash and send it to three more people - "look what he sent me." A Happy Birthday text never gets re-shared. A personalised interactive link does. Which means your gesture becomes the story of their birthday, not a line in a crowded WhatsApp thread.
Open birthday.myheartcraft.com on your laptop or phone. The first field asks for the birthday person's name. First name is enough, but add a nickname if that is how you always call them. The name you type is what appears on the cake, on the bash screen, and as the personal touch that makes the link feel made-for-them instead of generic. If you are making it for your mom and you call her "Amma" and not "Mom," use that. The bash will read exactly how you would say it out loud.
Choose the date of their birthday - past, present, or a few days out. The bash works whether you are sending it the night before, the morning of, or catching up a week late. Then write a short letter. You do not need to be a poet. Two or three lines of what you actually want to say works better than a paragraph of polished clichés. "Ten years of us. Still the best part of my year" lands harder than "Wishing you a day filled with joy and laughter."
Once you pay ₹199 - one-time, no subscription - you get a unique URL. The link stays live indefinitely. They can open it on their birthday, the next morning, or six months later. The balloons still pop. The letter still opens. Copy the link, keep the tab open in case you want to preview it yourself, and move to step four when you are ready to send.
Paste the link into whichever app they actually use. WhatsApp is the most common in India, but Instagram DM, iMessage, Telegram, Snapchat, and email all work the same. The recipient just taps. No app to download, no account to create, nothing to sign up for. Their phone opens the bash and the birthday begins. Pro tip: send it at 12:01 AM on their birthday so it is the first message they see when they wake up.
Your partner's birthday comes with pressure you do not need. A dinner reservation is forgettable. A gift with no story behind it is a gift. A Virtual Birthday Bash is personal in a way that shows up on her phone the second she wakes up - before the family calls, before the group chat floods in, before anyone else gets to her. She sees her name on the cake, the balloons she can pop, and then your letter. Write about the moment you knew, the inside joke from the first month, the thing you love that she does not believe you notice. Send it at 12:01 AM with a "before the world gets to you" note.
Your best friend's birthday is the one where everyone writes the same "happy birthday my ride or die" caption. The caption loses meaning after the fifth one. A Virtual Birthday Bash is what cuts through that noise - personalised with their name, the inside joke only the two of you share, and a letter that reads like a text you would actually send them. It works especially well when you cannot be physically there: different cities, different countries, or a week where life gets in the way. Send the link during the day so they get a surprise moment between the cake and the party.
Sibling birthdays get lazy after a certain age. The WhatsApp group message ("HBDD🎂") that barely counts. A Virtual Birthday Bash is the move when you want to say "I still see you" without making it weird or formal. You can write the letter like you actually talk - memories from childhood, something only a sibling knows, the thing your parents never found out about. The balloons and cake keep it light. The letter at the end is where you say the thing you have never said out loud. For most siblings, that part lands harder than any birthday gift ever did.
Parents do not ask for much on their birthdays. A call, a cake, a dinner if you are in town. A Virtual Birthday Bash is a way to surprise them with something their kids' generation made. Most parents have never seen a personalised birthday link, so the novelty alone hits differently. Keep the letter simple. Thank them for one specific thing you remember them doing for you. Do not try to cover their whole life in a paragraph. One real memory, written plainly, is the whole point. They will forward it to three aunts by evening and call to ask how you made it.
Time zones and plane tickets kill the birthday. By the time you remember, their day is already over in their country. A Virtual Birthday Bash sits in their WhatsApp whenever they wake up - morning in New York, evening in Sydney, whenever. It is the closest thing to being there. Reference the city they are in, the thing they miss about home, the last time you were together in person. The bash becomes the moment in the birthday where they feel seen from far away, and the letter gives them something to re-read on a quiet Tuesday in three months.
Work birthdays are awkward territory. The cake in the break room, the team card everyone signs without reading, the group email that goes out from HR. A Virtual Birthday Bash from one person lands better than a group message, especially for a colleague you actually like or a boss you want to thank. Keep the letter professional but warm - acknowledge one thing they did that mattered to you, skip the inside jokes, end with a "happy birthday" that sounds like you mean it. Send it on chat, not on the group thread.
The bash opens with a cluster of balloons floating up the screen in HeartCraft brand colours. Each one is tappable. Pop them in sequence or burst through them all at once - either way, the screen fills with confetti the moment the last one goes. This is the interactive moment that pulls the recipient into the experience instead of letting them passively watch. For parents and older recipients, this is often the first time they have tapped something on a phone that reacted like this. Small thing, but it is what makes them smile before they have even seen the cake.
A cake appears on screen with candles based on the birthday age - or a neat five, if you would rather not announce the number. The recipient taps each candle to blow it out. Tap-to-blow feels more tactile than reading a message. It is a ninety-year-old birthday ritual ported onto a phone screen, and it lands because the ritual is familiar even when the medium is not. Once every candle is out, the screen transitions into the letter moment. Fifteen seconds of interaction, and those fifteen seconds are a big part of why they remember the bash.
The cake on screen is not a generic stock cake. The name you entered in Step 1 is written on the icing, styled in a hand-lettered font. Their name, on their cake, on their birthday. It is a small personalisation but it is the thing that gets screen-recorded. We see clips sent back to us of moms reading their own name off the digital cake - "they made a cake for you, Mum" - and the reaction is always the same. The cake style is consistent with the HeartCraft visual identity so the bash feels premium, not generated.
After the candles are blown, the letter opens. This is the sender's moment - the words you typed in Step 2, rendered on a cream-coloured paper background with handwriting-style font, framed as if the recipient is reading a note and not another text. Because it lives inside the bash and not in a WhatsApp thread, it carries more weight. The letter is what the recipient screenshots and saves. It is what they re-read on the quiet days. A birthday message in a normal chat gets buried in an hour. This one stays.
Between each interactive beat, small surprises keep the bash from feeling like a slideshow. A burst of confetti when the last balloon pops. Soft birthday music that fades in and out without being annoying. A final reveal moment that lands after the letter closes. These are the micro-delights that make the bash feel designed rather than generated. They are the difference between a link the recipient watches once and a link they re-open the next day to show someone. The bash does not just say "happy birthday." It stages one.
The Virtual Birthday Bash works by itself, but it becomes unforgettable when you stack it with another HeartCraft experience. Four ways to do it.
Use the Surprise Photo Puzzle to hide the bash link behind a photo they have to unlock. Upload a picture of the two of you, add the birthday bash URL as the final reveal, and send the puzzle link first. They solve the puzzle to find the bash.
Had a fight the week of their birthday? Send a Sorry Card first to clear the air, then send the bash on the birthday itself. The contrast between the apology and the celebration hits harder than either would alone.
If the birthday also marks a relationship milestone, pair it with The Perfect Proposal on a different day that week. Two interactive links in two days turn a normal week into a story they will tell for years.
After the bash closes, point them to the Love Letter mobile app so they can create their own letters - for you, for their parents, for the next person whose birthday matters to them. Turns a one-way gift into a shared habit.
Virtual Birthday Bash is an interactive birthday experience you create and send as a link. The recipient opens it on their phone and gets a personalized bash - they pop virtual balloons, blow out digital candles, cut a custom cake, and open a letter you wrote for them.
Virtual Birthday Bash is Rs. 199 - a one-time payment for a shareable birthday experience link. No subscription, no recurring charges, no signup required.
Once you finish creating it, you get a shareable link. Send it via WhatsApp, Instagram DM, iMessage, email, or any messaging app. The recipient just taps it - no app download, no account.
Yes. You can add the birthday person's name, date of birth, a personalized letter, and customize the cake. More options coming soon.
Yes. Virtual Birthday Bash runs in any mobile browser - Safari on iPhone, Chrome on Android, and everything else. Nothing to install.
Yes - WhatsApp is the most common way people send it. You copy the link after creating the bash and paste it into any WhatsApp chat.
About 60 seconds. Enter the birthday person's name, pick a date, write a short letter, and you have a shareable link.
Yes. Virtual Birthday Bash is designed for any birthday - partner, parent, sibling, friend, colleague. The letter you write makes it personal to whoever the bash is for.
You could send a "happy birthday" text. They will read it in three seconds and forget by lunch. Or you could send a Virtual Birthday Bash - watch them tap through balloons, blow out candles on their own cake, and read a letter you wrote for only them. Same birthday. Very different memory.