Group chat friend prompts
Questions to Ask Friends in a Group Chat
Group chat questions work best when several people can answer in one line, skip without pressure, or react with a quick result card. Use one prompt when the chat goes quiet, then send a Mi Mirror quiz only if the thread wants a playful card next.
Start with group-friendly prompts
Try questions like: What color is the chat right now? Are we in meme mode or voice-note mode? What tiny plan would improve the next hour? What snack matches the group energy? Which result card would you send back first?
Turn one answer into one quiz
If the reply is about group energy, use Social Battery or Daily Luck Card. If it is about messages, use Texting Style. If it is about friend energy, use Friendship Style. If the group wants a quick fork, use This-or-that, Would-you-rather, or the random quiz picker.
Keep it optional
Questions to ask friends in a group chat are entertainment prompts. They should not ask for secrets, screenshots, private chats, phone numbers, proof of loyalty, personal data, risky dares, or serious decisions. They are not friendship tests, compatibility tests, diagnosis, predictions, texting advice, communication advice, relationship advice, privacy advice, health advice, mental health support, legal advice, or financial advice.
Quick answers
What are good questions to ask friends in a group chat?
Use easy prompts such as what color is the chat, meme or voice note, what tiny plan would help, what snack matches the group energy, or which result card would you send first.
How do I turn a group chat question into a quiz?
Pick one prompt, choose the matching Mi Mirror quiz, and send one link only if the thread wants it. Social Battery, Texting Style, Friendship Style, Daily Luck Card, and the random quiz picker work well.
Are group chat questions friendship tests?
No. Mi Mirror group chat prompts are entertainment and conversation starters. They are not friendship tests, not loyalty tests, not compatibility tests, not relationship advice, not privacy advice, not diagnosis, not predictions, not health advice, and not mental health support.