A town square for activity invitations
What. When. Where. And you.
You post the what, when, and where. We find the who — that's you. Then chat to pin it down, and go do it.
Hit tennis — preferably weekly
Posted by Sam · 2.3 mi away
A town square for activity invitations
You post the what, when, and where. We find the who — that's you. Then chat to pin it down, and go do it.
Posted by Sam · 2.3 mi away
It's as easy as 1 · 2 · 3, Match · Set · Go.
No calendars, no signups — just what you feel like, right now.
Post an invitation, or accept someone else's. Maybe you know what you want to do, or maybe you're open. Maybe it's for one person, or maybe more. Either way, the activity leads — it defines the match.
Now the two of you chat to pin it down. Messaging is the setting tool, not a scheduling grid. Nail down the details in a couple of replies.
You meet up and do the thing, in real life. No software owns this part — and that's the point. From bored to booked in seconds.
The activity is the vehicle; the friendship is the destination.
Every field is a dial
Nothing is optional — what's optional is precision. Slide each field wherever you want. Home is 1-on-1, loose, now.
One partner by default. Open the seat count up to a group of N when the activity needs a crowd.
Name the activity — it leads, from a tennis rally to a coffee catch-up. Or list a few. Or leave it open: "I'm free, you pick."
"Weekday evenings" is enough to match on. Pin a fixed time only when you already have one.
A city is fine. Or dial down to a zip, a neighborhood, or a specific court.
Trust is built in
Meeting someone new should feel safe from the first tap. The controls are first-class, not buried in settings.
Schegit is in private testing right now. Drop your email and we'll get you in as soon as your city opens up.
No spam. Just an invite when it's your turn.
You're on the list — see you in the square. 🎾