Social Connection Map

See How
You Connect

Six Degrees helps you explore the people, groups, and shared links that shape your community. Search for someone, spot overlap between circles, and follow the path that connects one person to another.

Who Are We
People 0
Groups 0
Connections 0
Connection Path

Search a person, filter a group, and follow how shared connections pull separate circles closer together.

Learn more

The Theory

People are usually closer than they seem.

Six degrees of separation is the idea that any two people are connected by a surprisingly short chain of relationships, capturing something people intuitively feel but rarely see: social worlds are much smaller than they look from the outside.

Six Degrees turns that abstract idea into something you see. It allows you to see your overlaps, mutuals, and shared communities quietly reduce the distance between people.

01

Short chain

Six degrees of separation is the idea that any two people are connected by a surprisingly short chain of relationships, even when they appear to belong to completely different circles.

02

Invisible closeness

The phrase became popular because it captured something people intuitively feel but rarely see: social worlds are much smaller than they look from the outside.

03

Made visible

Six Degrees turns that abstract idea into something visible. Instead of treating groups as isolated clusters, it shows how overlap, mutuals, and shared communities quietly reduce the distance between people.

Read The Map

Three signals that make your network closer.

The graph stays readable because each layer has a job: people anchor the view, shared people reveal overlap, and connection paths explain how one circle reaches another.

01

Overlap changes distance

Groups do not stay separate for long.

The moment one person belongs to more than one circle, two communities stop behaving like distant worlds.

Overlap quietly compresses distance into shared social context.

02

Paths explain connection

Connection matters less than the route.

A short path shows which mutuals, communities, or relationships bridge the gap between two people.

That context is what turns a link into something legible.

03

Visibility changes perception

Most social structure is invisible in daily life.

Once a path becomes visible, the network stops feeling abstract and starts feeling navigable.

Seeing the shape of connection changes how near everyone appears.

Groups In The Map

Every group is part of a larger network.

The homepage highlights the most connected groups first. Shared people keep the larger map legible. Open the graph to browse the full network.

Person

Node Name

Shared across groups