The friend group chat just became a battlefield. Mediate digital group conflict where tone is invisible and emotions are real.
Part of
Online Conflict →
Arguments in comment sections, Twitter feuds, and group chat explosions — navigate digital disagreements where tone is invisible and stakes feel impossibly high. You'll navigate four escalating scenarios — from the reply you should not send to the digital peace — practicing the decisions that matter most when the pressure is real and the stakes are personal. This isn't theory. It's practice for the moments that define how this chapter of your life unfolds.
Skills you'll build
What happens in this story4 scenarios
The group chat that used to be fun just turned toxic. Someone said something, someone took offense, and now 47 unread messages are waiting — each one raising the temperature.
You read the messages and your stomach sinks. Two friends are going at each other in text, misreading tone and escalating fast. The emojis are doing none of the heavy lifting they think they are.
You type a message trying to calm things down and accidentally make it worse. Text-based conflict strips away every social cue that makes resolution possible — and you are learning that the hard way.
You suggest taking the conversation offline — an actual call, an actual room. The resistance is immediate. People would rather fight in text than face each other's voices.
More stories in this course
View all →The Reply You Should Not Send
Your blood is boiling and your fingers are typing. Learn to pause before the send button turns a disagreement into a war.
4 scenarios →The Public Pile-On
You said something reasonable and the internet disagrees. Navigate public criticism without retreating or escalating.
4 scenarios →The Digital Peace
Not every disagreement needs resolution. Learn when to engage, when to disengage, and how to protect your peace online.
4 scenarios →The Group Chat Explosion
The friend group chat just became a battlefield. Mediate digital group conflict where tone is invisible and emotions are real.
Start free →4 scenarios · 25 min · No account required to try
