Ideally something you can do with the same people every week so you get to know each other.
Rock climbing isn’t my thing, but I helped out today taking some pictures at one and wow… there are a lot of people at those. People need belayers and it just had a generally friendly atmosphere. Plus you get exercise. If I was in need of friends and liked rock climbing, I’d definitely be going there more often.
I have bouldered for a few years and will agree with the friendly atmosphere.
Board games at a local game store. Many will have a board game night.
Tagging onto this: there’s tons of games to play that have regular tournaments. I run Warhammer 40k tournaments for my local store, and while you occasionally get tryhards that are less fun, the overwhelming majority of the community just feels like a bunch of people getting together to play plastic soldiers for a day. The new Disney game Lorcana is taking off, and there’s tons of different tabletop games besides just board games to try at a local store!
Many have card games too. My local game store has both open Pokemon TCG and Magic free play nights weekly, and tournaments occasionally. They also gave me a lot of free cards and helped me in improving my deck. And this wasn’t only the employees, but other players.
They also have open DnD games they run twice a week. They give you a character sheet and help you build yours, then run a game for a couple hours. Not sure, but I bet this is more rare because you have to have a good DM who is willing to help new players, run or sometimes create a campaign, and who knows how to help players get to the end when time is limited. (DnD people don’t roast me if I’m wrong, I’m not a frequent player.)
Adjacent to this is: check your local library. Ours has regular board game nights and RPG nights. I’m pretty sure they aren’t actually organized by the library itself, but they use the space and the library lists them on their website and advertises the nights on the board out front.
Hmm. Might need to check out a local game store.
As well as game stores and libraries, board game associations have meetups.
We have 5 or more clubs around town. Anywhere from 20-50 people at an event, smart interesting people generally.
Gangbang
This can mean two very different activities, lol.
Whatever interests you. You probably won’t make any friends forcing yourself to go to events and gatherings for things that don’t interest you
Take some sort of hobby class. Painting, woodworking, etc. Join a club of something that interests you. Play in a pool league.
Take a class in something random that interests you. Talk to the people in the class.
Suggestions:
- glass blowing
- cooking
- leather
makingworking - pottery
- painting
- scuba diving
Side bonus is maybe you discover a new hobby that brings you joy.
Leather making sounds interesting. Take the hide, process it. Tanning? Not sure. Gruesome and a rewarding final result.
They probably meant leather working / crafting like making wallets and stuff.
Yeah I did
The other ones sound reasonable, except the last. It seems like a big jump. Don’t get me wrong, scuba diving is fun. I’d say go for a lesson and see if you want to continue, it may not be for you. It can also get expensive.
Not much chatting during scuba either.
I’ve met a ton of friends scuba diving, that’s why I included it.
Sure you can’t talk while you’re diving, but that makes the conversation between dives more interesting. Lots of people passionately comparing and talking about what they saw. You’re probably stuck on a boat together during your surface interval, so naturally you get to know people.
Also sometimes it’s nice to just do an activity without people talking constantly.
If there is something you’re passionate about, then going to events that are about that. Usually it’s easier to make friends when you have something in common that you’re both passionate about.
If you’re into history, HEMA (Historical European Martial Arts), medieval reenactment and SCA are all very approachable and friendly people. They are not cheap hobbies though.
Alternatively, board game nights and Dungeons & Dragons are cheaper and also lits of fun. Check your local board games store
Being social. Go to bars or cafés. Engage in conversation. Insert yourself tactfully when you hear someone talking about a thing you like or know about.
Also, be aware but not overly sensitive if people don’t want to continue talking to you. Be friendly, but not obnoxious. Stay cognizant of social clues.
Do you play an instrument? Do you want to? Musicians are super friendly and welcoming, if that interests you.
am go to community garden
Team sports. Play weekly then go out for food/drinks together after.
I can confirm that the 2hr badminton then 1 hr Dim Sum combo is enjoyable!
Sports is always great, one easy option in case people aren’t to keen on running around: Disc golf is easy, cheap, and every one can play.
Couch or online video games…you can go with party games like Jack box or Co-op stuff
We found awesome people at our local gymnastics place that did adult classes
Sport –
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Outdoors
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Can exercise
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Can talk or not talk
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