Feature

Flexible Station Navigation

Every station starts with directions, and you choose what fits your venue: a live map in open spaces, written directions inside buildings, or skip straight to content.

3 Ways to Guide Your Participants

Every venue has the right navigation for it. Park tour? Live GPS map. Indoor museum? Written directions. Activity where everyone's already there? Skip navigation entirely.

Outdoors

In Open Spaces: Live Map & GPS

Participants see themselves on a live map and navigate toward the target. Distance updates in real time, and even without cellular signal – the map and route are already saved on their device.

Indoors

Inside Buildings: Written Directions

Write free-text directions and add directional photos: "Go up to the second floor and turn right past the stone stairs." The perfect solution for museums, historic buildings, and heritage sites.

No directions

Free Navigation: Straight to Content

Content opens immediately, with no intermediate screens. Ideal when participants already know where to go, or for stations inside "exploration zones."

Each station can use a different navigation mode. Feel free to mix map, text, and free skip in the same tour!

Try It Yourself

Choose a navigation mode, edit the content, and see right away what participants will experience.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between map and text navigation?

Map navigation shows a live map with the participant's location and a destination pin. Distance updates in real time. Ideal for outdoor tours, nature trails, and city routes. Text navigation shows written directions with images, perfect for indoor venues like museums, buildings, and heritage sites where GPS doesn't work.

Does navigation work without internet?

Yes. Map tiles and routes are pre-loaded onto the participant's device. Once the tour is opened, navigation works completely offline, including GPS and distance measurement. Suitable for tunnels, basements, and nature trails with no signal.

When should I use 'Straight to Content'?

When participants already know where to go and don't need directions. For example: spatial tours where they choose a zone from a list, audio guides where they enter a station number, or classroom activities where everyone is already seated.

Can I mix different navigation modes in one tour?

Yes. Each station is configured independently. You can have the first station with a map, the second with written directions, and the third with no navigation at all. Choose what fits each point in the tour.

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