From tonight’s drinks to next month’s hike — find it, join in, show up.
A title, a place, a vibe. No event page, no form with twelve fields. It’s public — live for anyone nearby before Mika’s out the door.
One tap each — no “maybe”, no read-and-ignore. Mika’s never met any of them. Everyone sees the count climb in real time.
Every meetup gets its own chat — so nobody’s wandering Poblacion looking for a table of people they’ve never met.
Arrival tracking and a QR check-in at the table — an hour ago nobody knew each other. Streaks and XP for the people who keep showing up.
Ramon’s crew wants that sea-of-clouds sunrise on Mt. Pulag — but no date works yet. Different problem, same app.
He doesn’t pick a date — he picks “This month.” The next thirty days go up for grabs, and eight people are in before a single calendar opens.
Tap the calendar, or swipe the deck — every day this month is a card. Right if you’re free, up if it’s ideal, left if you’re busy. Taps stay hidden until you’ve marked yours, so nobody just piles onto the popular day.
Eight schedules across the month, one glowing day. Ramon locks it in, and the card updates for everyone.
Strangers Who Run is a public group — a hundred-some strangers who keep showing up. This week’s run is already on the board.
One card in every member’s feed. No group-chat archaeology, no “who’s coming?” thread — just tap in.
The group is public — anyone can join from the meetup card. This week: 23 in, 9 of them brand new.
Check in at the finish, then breakfast at Yardstick. The card rolls over to next Saturday — streaks for the ones who keep coming back.