Groups
Groups let you organize an audience and run Loots scoped to it. They turn one-off campaigns into an ongoing community surface.
Public vs private
Section titled “Public vs private”- Public group — anyone can find it, view it, and see its members and Loots. Good for an open community.
- Private group — hidden from non-members. Its detail page, member list, and Loots are visible only to members; outsiders cannot even see its content. Good for allowlisted communities, partners, or tiered audiences.
Creating a group
Section titled “Creating a group”Any signed-in user can create a group: give it a name, description, and avatar, and choose public or private. The creator becomes the owner. You can edit these details later, and dissolving a group is permanent.
Joining and leaving
Section titled “Joining and leaving”- Join — members join public groups directly. A group can also have its own Gates (for example request-and-review or invite-only), in which case joining means passing them.
- Leave — members can leave at any time. The owner cannot leave their own group — they dissolve it instead.
Each member has a role (owner or member), and membership is tracked per group.
Private Loot
Section titled “Private Loot”The headline use of groups is private Loot: a Loot scoped to a group so that only its members can see and claim it. Non-members get nothing — the Loot simply is not visible to them.
Use private Loots to:
- Reward your core community without exposing the campaign publicly.
- Run partner or co-marketing drops limited to a shared group.
- Tier your audience — different groups, different rewards.
Segmenting your audience
Section titled “Segmenting your audience”Because a Loot can be associated with a group, you can run different campaigns for different segments — newcomers, power users, collaborators, a region — and tune the reward and Gates for each. Groups are how a creator moves from a single broadcast to an ongoing, layered relationship with their community.