Private by default
Only members see the group's quests, completions, and chatter. No algorithm peeking. No "discovery" opt-out buried in settings.
Only members see the group's quests, completions, and chatter. No algorithm peeking. No "discovery" opt-out buried in settings.
Post a quest, members see it immediately. No approval queue, no trust tier. The group owns its own bar for what counts as a good quest.
Group quests, completions, and photos stay with members. Nothing gets auto-promoted to the public feed, ever. If you want reach, publish to the main feed yourself.
Ten people, three days, a few shared micro-adventures. Beats the icebreaker spreadsheet and survives after the offsite ends.
Turn the group chat into a shared accountability loop — quests post to the group, everyone sees who did what this week.
A low-pressure way to share "try this on Saturday" with the five relatives who text daily. Curated, not another notification pile.
A photography society, a reading club, a hiking crew — recurring rituals documented as quests, with completions and photos in one place.
Only members. Groups are private by default — there's no "public group" toggle. If you want people to discover your stuff, publish to the main feed instead.
Every group has a short invite link. Share it however you like — WhatsApp, iMessage, Slack, Discord. People join with one tap. You can revoke the link and generate a new one at any time.
No. Group content stays in the group — full stop. Nothing gets auto-promoted, nothing gets indexed, nothing escapes. If you want a quest to reach a wider audience, you publish it to the main feed yourself as a separate action.
Yes. Collections (Open, Sequential, Challenge) work inside groups exactly like on the public feed. A common pattern is a 7-day challenge kicked off in a group chat.