guidelines.

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Black cards or booklet with white text reading "We grew up to be kids again," stacked in a pile with some pages slightly bent, on a white surface petits-sacrifices-oracle book-photo-carl-diner

petits sacrifices was born from a simple idea:

Creating a game made of detachable prompts and reflections you can keep.

Meant to be shared, it's not something you own. It's something you find, and eventually let go of.

Page by page, person by person.

+ This game helps you connect with anyone.

+ The instructions are on the second page.

+ It’s small enough to be carried around and fit in your back pocket (7x11cm).

+ Every version has a unique tracking number, located on page 4.

+ The best part is making your people play—have friends ask themselves a question and randomly tear out a page.

+ You can keep it as long as you want, but not forever; at some point, you must give it away.

+ Always carry one with you until it feels right to pass it on.

+ Never throw away pages—hide them in your friends’ pockets or leave them somewhere.

first, a couple starters:

how it works in 30 seconds?

1.

focus on a thought or question

once you have it, flip through the book without looking and stop on a page.

2.

tear out the page

carefully detach the page you landed on. it’s yours to keep. (yes—tear it)

3.

share it

keep the book for as long as you want, but at some point, you must give it away.

Stacked black boxes with sunburst designs, arranged in a pyramid shape, on a white background. petits-sacrifices-oracle book-photo-carl-diner
Open black book with textured pages, viewed from above on a light surface. petits-sacrifices-oracle book-photo-carl-diner

+ The best part is making your people play.

have friends ask themselves a question and randomly tear out a page.

+ I ask if they want to play a game. Most people say yes.

+ I tell them to think of a question—something that’s been on their mind — and to keep it secret.

+ Then I hand them the book. They have to tear out a random page without looking.

+ Afterwards, I ask if they want to share the page they got or what they were thinking about.

+ If it doesn’t connect, I just let them try again.

how I usually introduce the book:

+ Never throw away pages

hide them in your friends’ pockets or leave them somewhere.

now you know everything.

get yours