Browse, add, map.
Together.
One screen with hotels, restaurants, activities and transport — curated for your destination. Hit + to add to the trip, watch it land on the shared map.


Eiffel Tower — 2nd floor ticket


Louvre Museum — dated ticket


Guided Seine river cruise


Sainte-Chapelle — dated ticket

The research-to-trip pipeline, broken.
Planning a group trip should be a conversation, not a spreadsheet. But here you are: 47 browser tabs open, three group chats with different lists, a Notion doc no one updates, and at 11pm the night before you're still arguing whether the rooftop bar is worth the trek across town. The 'what should we do' question — supposed to be the fun part — turns into the part that breaks groups.
The problem isn't a lack of information. It's the opposite. Every city has 10,000 things to do, and the internet promises all of them are must-see. Sorting signal from noise — and getting four to fifteen people to agree on what made the cut — is where most trips quietly fall apart.
Explorer is built for that exact moment. One screen. Four tabs: hotels, restaurants, activities, transport. A curated card grid for your destination. Hit + to add to the trip, see it land on the shared map. Your group does the same, the consensus places float up. Twenty minutes, one mapped shortlist.
Why discovery is broken
Most groups spend more time fighting the planning than enjoying the trip.
The tab graveyard
35+ open tabs, every one promising the best version of 'best things to do in [city]'. You'll close them tonight, open them again tomorrow. Nothing got decided.
The group chat list nobody updates
Sarah suggested 6 places, Marc added 3, Alex liked all of them, the bride-to-be hasn't seen any of it. You'll bring it up at brunch. Maybe.
Is this actually good or just touristy?
Tripadvisor is full of paid reviews, Reddit threads are 4 years old, Instagram is #ad. You end up at the same overcrowded restaurant everyone else picked too.
The 'I saved it somewhere' black hole
14 Maps stars, 28 Instagram saves, 6 TikTok bookmarks, a screenshot in your camera roll. You'll never find any of them again the day you arrive.
How Explorer fixes it
One screen, four tabs, a real shared shortlist at the end.
Four tabs, not a firehose
Switch between hotels, restaurants, activities, transport with a single click. The cards adapt to the tab — accommodation shows price-per-night, transport shows route + duration. No more comparing apples to plane tickets.
Add with one tap
Every card has a + button. Tap it, the place locks into your trip — green check, no double-confirmation. Your selections sync to the rest of the group in real-time.
Map view, side-by-side
Cards on the left, interactive map on the right (or below on mobile). Hover a card, the pin lights up on the map. Pick by proximity, not by tab order.
Group consensus surfaces
Everyone sees the same Explorer. When multiple members add the same place, it gets a 'crowd favorite' marker. The places everyone secretly agreed on rise to the top — no debate needed.
See it in action
The real Explorer interface — same tabs, same cards, same + button. Switch types, watch the grid update.


Eiffel Tower — 2nd floor ticket


Louvre Museum — dated ticket


Guided Seine river cruise


Sainte-Chapelle — dated ticket

Auto-playing demo · this is what you'll use
Everything you added, mapped
Every + tap drops a pin on the shared map. Open it the day you arrive, pick what's closest, walk to it.
Interactive map · synced with your trip
When Explorer earns its keep
Built for the trips where 'just look it up' doesn't scale.
City breaks (3–5 days)
Long weekends in Lisbon, Berlin, NYC. You don't have time to research — you have time to do. Explorer narrows 500 ideas into 20 in fifteen minutes.
Group trips (4–15 people)
Bachelorette weekends, friend reunions, family trips. Everyone adds their picks from their phone, the consensus floats up. Bypass the group-chat democracy.
Multi-city & road trips
5 cities in 10 days = 5 explores. Save places per city, hit them when you arrive. Your itinerary builds itself around what the group actually wants.
Explore by category
Frequently Asked Questions
Explore mode lets you discover places (restaurants, museums, activities) by swiping like a dating app. Swipe right to save, left to skip.








