What is the family dinner?
The family dinner is an interactive game about surviving family gatherings: one illustrated dining room, one hour before the relatives arrive, and eight clickable objects. Behind each one is a real dynamic of holiday family stress translated into plain language: the seating politics in the name cards, the estrangement in the empty chair, the expectations baked into the casserole, the comment the phone on the table is about to cause.
It takes about five minutes, and it is deliberately set before the dinner, because that is when the stress actually lives. Most holiday tension is anticipation: the conversations you are already having in your head while you fold napkins.
How to play
- Look around the dining room and tap anything that glows.
- Read the short card: one honest family dynamic per object.
- Follow the trail: each card links to a tool or read that goes deeper.
- Find all eight and the room gives you its last word.
How to survive a family dinner, actually
The reliable moves are unglamorous. Decide with your partner beforehand that you are a team, whatever gets said. Know the role your family assigns you and choose consciously whether to play it. Rehearse your one hard sentence in advance, softened, so glass-two comments do not write your reply for you. Give yourself an exit time and name it early. And remember that the kids table is listening to everything, including how you handle all of the above.
None of this requires the family to change; that is what makes it work. If a particular dinner, or a particular chair, keeps following you home, you can talk it through with an AI relationship coach that remembers your story, or explore the other relationship tools before the next gathering.