Sharing a Game
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Sharing a Game
This page walks through what sharing a game outside Furbol looks like from your side of the screen — tap, share sheet, done — plus what the recipient sees when they open the link. The rules behind it live on Sharing a Game (rules).
1. Find the Share button
Open the game. In the top-right of the game detail page, tap the three-dot overflow menu.
Among the entries (share, report, and, if you’re the host, edit / cancel) there’s a SHARE row. Tap it.
2. What happens when you tap
Nothing fancy on your side. The app:
- Asks Furbol’s server to create (or re-use) your share link for this game.
- Opens your phone’s native share sheet with the link pre-filled.
No modal in between, no in-app preview of what the recipient will see, no “pick a contact” screen inside Furbol. It’s just the OS sheet — WhatsApp, Messages, email, copy-link, all your usual options.
Worth knowing: the share sheet is pre-filled with just the URL. There’s no stock invite text like “Hey, come play this game at …” prepended. Whatever you want to say to the recipient, you type yourself in the messenger after the link gets pasted.
3. The link itself
The link Furbol generates is yours — tied to you as the inviter. Re-sharing the same game doesn’t mint new links; Furbol reuses the same one for a given game-and-sharer pair.
So the link you copy from this game today is the same one you copied last week. Good for pinning in a group chat; you don’t have to refresh it when you re-share.
4. What the recipient sees
Three cases, depending on where they are when they tap:
They have Furbol and they’re signed in
The app opens the game page directly. Before that, Furbol records you as the one who invited them (same mechanism as a direct game invitation). For private and secret games, this invitation is what grants them access — they couldn’t have seen the game without the link.
After the game opens, the app offers to follow you — unless they already do. They can dismiss this without affecting the invitation.
They have Furbol but aren’t signed in
Furbol remembers the link. Once they finish signing in, the invitation is applied and the game opens.
They don’t have Furbol
The link opens a browser preview of the game:
- The venue name and kick-off time.
- The state of the game (published, playing, played, cancelled).
- The lineup count — how many players are in vs. the maximum.
- A game image with the current lineup.
The same preview is what messengers use to unfurl the link when it gets pasted into a chat — the rich-card that appears below the URL before it’s tapped.
From the preview, they can install Furbol and tap the link again, which then flows into the “signed in” case above.
5. What the recipient’s invitation unlocks
Same game, different effect depending on the game’s kind:
- Public game — the link is a convenience. They could have found the game on their own.
- Private game — the link’s invitation grants access. Without one (direct or via share), they can’t see or join.
- Secret game — same. They wouldn’t even see the game existed until the link was opened.
So sharing a private or secret game really does expand the invite list by one each time someone new redeems the link.
6. What you won’t see in this flow today
Worth naming:
- No in-app preview of what the recipient gets. If you want to see the browser preview for yourself, you’d have to open the link in a logged-out browser or a messenger that shows the unfurl.
- No stock invite text in the share sheet. It’s a design choice — Furbol lets you write the nudge yourself — but if you were expecting “click to share with default copy,” you’ll get just a URL and have to add context yourself.
- No way to un-share a link after the fact. Once you’ve sent it, anyone with the URL can redeem it, and the invitation it creates is a real invitation. If someone you didn’t mean to reach gets hold of the link and opens it, the fix is on the game side — excluding them via the invites tab (see Inviting Someone to a Game).
- No delivery confirmation. Furbol doesn’t tell you “your link was opened by three people” — the invites tab’s “Others invited” section surfaces it eventually, once someone actually redeems the link.
Related
- Sharing a Game (rules) — the rule-page version.
- Inviting Someone to a Game — the inside-the-app counterpart (existing Furbol users via the Invites tab).
- Magic Links — the broader link concept; game share links are one of the three kinds.
- Game Kinds — public, private, secret.
- Game Invitations — what the opener’s invitation actually means.