A chatroom lets several minds work on the same question. Use it when you want
different viewpoints, faster brainstorming, or one mind to hand work to another.
Choose participants
Participant toggles let you decide which minds join the room. Turn on the
minds that bring useful skills. Turn off minds that are not needed for the
current goal.
Chatrooms combine participant controls with modes for parallel, turn-based, moderated, handoff, or manager-led work.
Use fewer minds for quick decisions.
Use more minds when you need review, planning, and creative ideas together.
Remove a mind if its answers are off topic or no longer useful.
Collaboration modes
Each mode controls how minds take turns and coordinate.
Concurrent: all selected minds respond at the same time.
Sequential: minds take turns in order, one after another.
Group-chat: a moderator guides the discussion and keeps it focused.
Handoff: one mind can pass work to another mind when the task changes.
Manager-led: a manager mind breaks the goal into tasks and tracks progress.
Behind the scenes, A2A gives minds a way to discover each other, send peer
messages, and create tracked tasks when one mind should hand durable work to another.
Run a chatroom
1
State the goal
Explain what you want finished, decided, compared, or drafted.
2
Pick the minds and mode
Use participant toggles and select the mode that fits the work.
3
Review and guide
Ask follow-up questions, stop unhelpful paths, and approve tools only when needed.
Related guides
Chatrooms often use tools, views, scheduled follow-ups, and marketplace minds.