What is the moving boxes?
The moving boxes is an interactive scene about moving in together: one illustrated living room on the first evening in a first apartment together, eight clickable objects, and behind each one a real conversation that cohabiting couples eventually have. It takes about five minutes and covers what relationship research and long partnerships agree on: a shared home is not found in the lease, it is negotiated one object at a time.
Every object is ordinary on purpose. Boxes labeled in two handwritings, mismatched armchairs, a plant nobody has claimed yet. Moving in together rarely turns on the big talk; it turns on who waters what, whose picture goes up, and how the flat-pack argument ends.
How to play
- Look around the apartment and tap anything that glows.
- Read the short card: one honest cohabiting truth per object.
- Follow the trail: each card links to a tool or read that goes deeper.
- Find all eight and the apartment gives you its last word.
Moving in together, without the ambush
Most first-apartment friction is not incompatibility; it is two working systems colliding without a map. Money habits, tidiness thresholds, alone-time needs, and the invisible work of running a household all arrive in the same van, and each one settles into a default within weeks whether you choose it or not. The couples who thrive in a shared home are the ones who make those defaults on purpose: they name the differences early, split the invisible work out loud, and protect one small daily ritual that belongs to the new place.
If the boxes have surfaced conversations you keep postponing, you can talk them through with an AI relationship coach that remembers your story, or start smaller with the other relationship tools.