Your Starting Point for Discovery
After signing in, the Home Feed is the first thing you see. It brings together events, hosts, communities, and recommendations relevant to your interests and activity — all in one scrollable view.
The feed is not static. It responds to the interests you selected during onboarding, the hosts you follow, the communities you join, and the events you attend. The more you engage, the more accurately it reflects what matters to you.
What You Will See
The Home Feed is organised into distinct sections, each serving a different discovery purpose:
Highlights — Featured events and moments worth your attention, curated for relevance and timing.
Sponsored Events — Events promoted by hosts to reach a wider audience. These appear alongside organic recommendations.
Trending — Events and content gaining momentum across the platform.
Happening Near You / Nearby Events — In-person events close to your location, surfaced when location access is enabled.
Popular Events — Well-attended experiences with strong registration activity.
For You / Based on your interests — Events and communities matched specifically to the interests you selected and your engagement history.
Suggested People — Hosts and profiles worth following based on your interests and activity.
People with shared interests — Other members who care about the same categories as you.
Making the Most of Your Feed
Your feed improves with use. Three things make the biggest difference: selecting relevant interests during onboarding, following hosts whose events you enjoy, and joining communities that match your goals. Each action gives taron more context for what to show you next.
If your feed feels too generic early on, that is normal — it becomes more specific as you engage. Start by following two or three hosts and joining one or two communities, and your recommendations will sharpen quickly.
Finding Something Specific
If you want to search rather than browse, use taron's search and category tools. The Home Feed is built for discovery; search is built for intention. Both are useful depending on whether you know what you are looking for.