Rooms helps people find better nights out, starting in Vancouver.
Think smaller dinners, conversations, and social rooms with better chemistry, clearer context, and less noise. Vancouver is first. More cities follow.
The room is the product
Guest mix, context, setting, timing, and follow-through matter more than list size.
Curation should stay human-led
Rooms can organize signals and draft decisions, but invitations and introductions still deserve judgment.
Consent improves connection
Applications are private, introductions are opt-in, and high-risk actions stay gated.
What Rooms is actually trying to do
Most social discovery systems optimize for more: more events, more profiles, more messages, more noise. Rooms starts from a different belief. Better real-world connection often comes from a better shared context, not from higher volume.
That is why the product direction centers on curated rooms, clearer trust signals, more thoughtful applications, better guest mix, and learning from what actually happens after people meet.
Who tends to love Rooms
Rooms is for thoughtful people, hosts, community builders, and generous guests who care about conversation quality, context, and who they meet.
If you mainly want a giant public calendar, instant booking, a swipe-style experience, or a traditional members club, another product will usually be the clearer fit.
Why Vancouver is first
Vancouver is the first proving ground because it gives Rooms a real local context to test whether one carefully shaped room can create better follow-through and better future rooms.
The ambition is larger than one city, but the smartest version of Rooms earns trust one city at a time. It is better to prove the concept honestly in one place than to sound bigger than the experience already is.
Smaller rooms. Better people. Stronger follow-through.
Learn what Rooms is, who it is for, and how the Vancouver pilot works before more cities open.