Plick is a binary decision engine for groups. Everyone swipes the same deck in real time — yes or no. When you all land on the same one, that's where you're going.
Four friends. Two Yelp lists. One screenshot of a TikTok. Nobody wants to pick, everybody wants to veto. Ninety minutes later, you order the same dumplings. Again.
Choose your category — restaurants, movies, menus, trips. Each Plicker brings its own curated deck.
One card at a time. Left for no, right for yes. No lists, no scrolling — just a rhythm.
Everyone swipes yes on the same one. Decision locked. Conversation moves on.
Start a Nest, set radius to 400m. The deck is every open restaurant in walking distance. Last swipe wins.
You and your partner, thirty cards, zero scrolling. The film you both swiped on — that's the one you're watching.
Scan the QR. The menu becomes a Plicker. Everyone swipes appetizers — matches go on the order.
Genre, mood, budget — the first few swipes silently narrow the deck. You're not seeing 500 options; you're seeing the twelve that still stand a chance.
Send an email, text a link, drop it in the group chat. Friends swipe from anywhere — presence dots, live match counts, no "I didn't get the invite."
One design language across all three. Tap targets that feel native. Gestures that feel native. It's the same Plick, just wherever you are.
No sign-up, no password, no "check your email." You open the Nest and you're in. Accounts exist for people who want history — nobody else needs one.
We're building now. Drop your answers in our two-minute survey and you'll get a first-day invite, a say in which cities launch first, and the option to be a founding host.
One Nest. Five friends. Under sixty seconds to a decision. Probably Koji Ramen.