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Community

Find your people. Keep them. Play more together.

The best gaming communities aren't one-off events — they're the same eight friends who keep showing up to your Friday night. AleaMeep gives those groups a home.

Home tab — crews module above the activity feed

Connections

Send a connection request after you meet someone at an event. Once accepted, you can message directly, see each other's events, and show up in each other's friend suggestions. Symmetric — nobody can spam you.

Crews

Your Friday night MTG crew. Your Sunday D&D party. The Tuesday night board game gang. Give them a name, an icon, a private chat, and a shared calendar — and watch the group identity click into place.

Play log

Log what you played, with whom, who won, what was wild about it. Your personal gaming history compounds over time. Connections see your plays in their feed. Badges accumulate.

Following stores + players

Follow a player to see their events. Follow a store to never miss what's happening at your spot. Both feed your activity feed.

The crew, up close

Why a Crew > a group chat

A group chat is a thread. A Crew is a thread with a calendar, a roster, stats, and an identity. Once you've named yourselves the "Friday Night Brass Birmingham Society," the group becomes a thing you keep showing up to.

A shared calendar

Events linked to your crew. Members auto-invited.

Private chat

Conversation history all in one place.

Stats that grow with you

Games played together, total events attended as a crew, longest streak.

Crew badges

Hit milestones together. 'Six months running' is the unofficial start.

Crew detail screen — roster, upcoming events, shared stats
Inbox — message threads with connections and crews
Connection-gated messaging

Inbox you actually open

Strangers can't message you. You have to be connected first — and connections require both sides to opt in. The result: an inbox without DMs from people you've never heard of.

Crews come with their own private threads. Events have their own discussion board. One-on-one DMs stay between connected players.

Quietly social

Friend suggestions from real games

The day after an event, AleaMeep gently suggests connecting with the people you played with. No social spam, no "people you may know" lottery — just a list of people you were literally at a table with. Connect if you want, dismiss if you don't.

It's the warmest possible introduction. You already shared three hours and a game.

People you played with
Jaime W.
Played D&D at Friendly Local Games · last Friday
Alex T.
Played Brass: Birmingham at Board game night · 2 days ago
Sam R.
Played Wingspan at Sunday Open Play · last Sunday

The activity feed: quiet by design

A bottom-of-home feed showing your connections' activity: events they RSVP'd to, badges earned, plays logged, posts from stores you follow. Chronological. No algorithm pushing you to scroll. You can opt out of being on it any time.

  • · Privacy control on your profile — toggle off to keep your activity invisible.
  • · Blocked users never see your activity, and you never see theirs.
  • · No engagement metrics surfaced (no likes, no comment counts).
Home tab activity feed — connections RSVP'ing, badges earned, plays logged

Find your people.

Connections, crews, plays, follows — the social fabric of a gaming community, all in one place.