Qui pige qui?
Run the family Christmas draw, even from a distance
The family is scattered all over: a brother in Gatineau, a cousin in Vancouver, the grandparents in Rimouski. That's no reason to give up the Christmas name draw — it's what decides who spoils whom at the réveillon.
No more waiting for everyone to gather around the same table to shuffle paper slips: the draw happens online, and everyone discovers their result on their own, in their own living room.
A draw even grandma can open
The trap with online tools is forcing the whole family to create accounts. Between the uncle who never remembers his passwords and the grandparents who are wary — rightly so — of websites demanding their email, half the family gives up before the draw even starts.
With a secret link, none of that: you send each person their link in the family group chat or by email, they click, and the drawn name appears. No signup, no app to install. And since the organizer never sees the results, you keep the surprise too.
The family draw in three steps
Enter the family names
Add all the participants, with exclusions if needed — to keep couples from drawing each other.
Launch the draw online
The draw runs by itself: nobody draws their own name, no matter where everyone lives.
Send out the secret links
By email or in the family group chat: everyone opens their link whenever it suits them and discovers who they're spoiling.
Frequently asked questions
How does it work for grandparents who aren't comfortable with technology?
They just open a link, like a photo or video received from the family. No account to create, no password to remember: the drawn name appears, that's all.
Does everyone need to be online at the same time?
No. The draw is done ahead of time, and everyone checks their link on their own schedule — handy when the family spans several time zones.
Does it cost anything?
It's free for a small group. For a big family, a one-time unlock of CAD $5.99 is all it takes — no subscription.
Qui pige qui? was designed for exactly this: the Christmas draw that brings the family together, even scattered.