CNXN
CNXN, pronounced “connection”, is question-based card game created to guide its players towards fostering deep, lasting connections regardless of the intended relationship type.
Players ask each other a variety of questions ranging from light-hearted to intimate depending on which of the three sections (friends, dates, &/or couples) is chosen. After a card group is chosen, simply pull a card, read, all players answer, and repeat.
CNXN, pronounced “connection”, is question-based card game created to guide its players towards fostering deep, lasting connections regardless of the intended relationship type.
Players ask each other a variety of questions ranging from light-hearted to intimate depending on which of the three sections (friends, dates, &/or couples) is chosen. After a card group is chosen, simply pull a card, read, all players answer, and repeat.
CNXN, pronounced “connection”, is question-based card game created to guide its players towards fostering deep, lasting connections regardless of the intended relationship type.
Players ask each other a variety of questions ranging from light-hearted to intimate depending on which of the three sections (friends, dates, &/or couples) is chosen. After a card group is chosen, simply pull a card, read, all players answer, and repeat.
(The game is designed to be interoperable as the relationship intimacy level increases; so friends use the friend cards, people dating use the dating and friend cards, and couples use the whole box)
In each box there are 300 cards (290 questions + 10 write in cards ) intentionally chosen to minimize the chances of there being duplicate questions asked, reducing the chances of the constant annoyance of ‘question clash’—aka that experience wherein you get the same question multiple times in different wording or pull questions that are so similar that you end up answering 5 others by answering 1. And best of all, it all comes in a compact, minimalism-inspired box with no dividers to encourage players to choose themselves where the lines of each relationship type should be drawn in our ever-evolving world.