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What Makes Our DEI Experiences Different

We Educate AND Celebrate

Our DEI experiences foster creativity, new perspectives, and understanding, all within the container of celebration and play. Through these experiences, people of different races, abilities, ages, genders, religion, sexual orientation, and other diverse backgrounds not only will feel more comfortable, but also more confident in the workplace.

We Keep Things Interesting

In our 20+ years of creating team-building events, we have mastered how to keep people engaged and inspired throughout each experience. Every DEI activity has a series of mini-games, so your teams will move from trivia to charades, and everything in between, to keep everyone alert, active, and having fun.

We Keep Our
Content Fresh

In addition to constantly adding new experiences to our roster, we consistently go back and modify our existing experiences to incorporate new mini-games, new relevant trivia and content, and other features to keep our customers coming back year after year.

What Our Customers Have To Say

“This is the best way to spend a couple of hours with your coworkers. You'll see a side of them you didn't know was there.”

Costco

“This game brings people/teams together so quickly - and by the end, everyone is high fiving, laughing, and best of friends! Everyone had nothing but great things to say about this experience - thank you for everything!”

Amazon

“I played an On-Site game years ago, and the feedback I'm getting from my players is that the Self-Hosted experience was very good. Looking forward to the next one! ”

Cisco

Return to Work 2026 | Make It Worth Coming Back

Somewhere between “just circling back” and your fourth coffee, there’s a quiet realization happening across offices everywhere. Being back in person is not the same as being connected. The desks are the same, the Slack channels are the same, the calendars are just as full, but the energy can feel a little flat. Because proximity is not the same as interaction, and interaction is not the same as connection. That part takes intention.

Right now, a lot of teams are sitting in that in-between space. Not fully remote, not fully back, and not entirely sure what “together” is supposed to feel like anymore. Which means culture does not just happen on its own. It has to be designed. And no, that does not mean another meeting about culture. It means creating moments where people actually experience it.

Here is what usually happens. You bring people together for an offsite, a team meeting, maybe even a company-wide day. Everyone shows up with good intentions. There is even a spark of energy at the beginning. But then people naturally drift toward who they already know. Conversations stay surface level. A few voices take over while others hang back. No one is doing anything wrong. It is just human nature. Left alone, a room defaults to comfort, not connection.

So if the goal is real interaction, the environment has to shift.

That is where we come in. The Go Game is built to move people out of passive mode and into participation quickly. No awkward icebreakers. No forced fun. Just structured play that makes it easy to jump in and hard to stay on the sidelines. Within minutes, teams are forming, decisions are being made, and people are collaborating with colleagues they may not have spoken to all year. It is not about turning everyone into extroverts. It is about creating a space where contribution feels natural, where different personalities actually have a place to show up.

And here is the part people do not expect. It sticks. When you solve something together, laugh together, or win something together, your brain does not file that under “work event.” It files it under experience. So the next time those same people are in a meeting, something has shifted. They talk faster. They trust quicker. They engage more fully. Not because they were told to, but because they already did.

We see it happen every time. At the start, people are polite and slightly reserved, figuring it out. Then something small breaks the pattern. A team name, a quick win, a shared laugh. From there, it builds. By the middle, the room feels completely different. Louder, looser, more alive. By the end, you do not need a survey to tell you it worked. You just look at the photo. Everyone is smiling like they are in a dental ad, fully there, not checking their phone, not halfway in.

If you are bringing your team back together, do not waste the moment. You already have people in the same place at the same time, which is the hardest part. Now make it count. Skip the default agenda. Skip the version of “fun” that people can sit through without actually engaging. Do something that changes the dynamic.

Because fun is not extra. It is not a reward at the end of the day or something you tack on if there is time. It is one of the fastest ways to build the kind of connection every team says they want.

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