Portable trust for identity-rich hobby worlds.
Passport is the cross-world identity layer inside Social CardHouse. It helps reliable people feel known when they explore a new scene, without flattening each hobby into the same reputation ladder.
Passport is public-facing, but its strongest signals are curated. We want it to feel trustworthy, not gamed. If you want the public rules in one place, read the Trust Center.
Make a new scene feel less like starting from zero.
Social CardHouse is built around the idea that people often overlap across hobbies. Passport creates a trust-rich bridge between those worlds while keeping each community culturally intact.
Reliable people deserve continuity
Good behavior, follow-through, and healthy participation should not disappear every time someone enters a different room.
Hosts need better context
Passport helps hosts see useful trust signals before a meetup without exposing raw private details.
Worlds should still feel native
Passport supports the separation between PokeMeet, MagicMeet, and YugiMeet instead of erasing it.
Portable trust only works if the worlds still feel authored.
Passport should not make Social CardHouse feel like a generic account system spread across hobby skins. The umbrella needs enough taste, restraint, and cultural fluency that the trust layer feels worth carrying from one world to another.
Neutral SCHWorld polish, coral actions, crisp blue support states, world-native accents, and a TCG companion loop with portable trust at the center.
Each world should feel authored
PokeMeet, MagicMeet, YugiMeet, and DungeonMeet need distinct social texture, vocabulary, and competitive energy, not just different accents.
Signals should feel curated
Passport needs to read like earned context from attendance, check-ins, deck history, and reliable participation, not a punitive badge wall.
Local scenes should feel real
Metro pages, venue surfaces, unclaimed shop listings, and rollout copy should make the product feel grounded in actual communities.
Competition needs guardrails
Unofficial local activity can feel alive now, while official ranked and gym actions stay locked until backend integrity is proven.
Passport works best inside real communities.
The first launch trio gives Passport a concrete home. Each world keeps its own flavor while the trust layer stays familiar across the umbrella.
PokeMeet
A dependable Pokemon TCG world for players who want friendly tables, trade-binder context, local battles, and repeat play.
Portable trust helps reliable players move between Pokemon spaces without starting from zero every time.
MagicMeet
A shop-native Magic world for players who value format structure, deck history, repeat play, and a strong local reputation.
Passport makes it easier to move between shops while still feeling known for good behavior and follow-through.
YugiMeet
A high-energy duel world for players who want organized nights, deck identity, strong recognition, and clear trust signals.
Passport helps good conduct carry into a new room, even when the local crowd is different.
Signals should help, not overwhelm.
Public trust should emphasize reliability and healthy behavior, not a wall of punitive noise.
Tier is earned, not self-assigned.
Passport tier should reflect trust signals and review, not a badge someone can simply click into.
Sensitive details stay controlled.
Passport should make meetups safer without turning into surveillance or a universal scorecard.
See Passport take shape
Join the waitlist, pick your world and metro, or open the app shell to see how Passport is becoming a real product surface.