This is how Run The Radius works. Tap streets on the grid. Build territory. Now you've played it. Want to do this for real, on your actual city?
Drop a pin. Pick a radius. Every street inside becomes a target. Run them down one at a time and watch your city paint itself gold.
Pick a side. Pick a date. Both teams have one week to claim more streets than the other. Coordinate. Strategize. Run for points instead of pace.
A flag drops somewhere in the city. The radius starts small and expands every 12 hours. First runner to hit the flag wins. Async, multi-day, a little ridiculous.
I'm 24. I just graduated from Georgia Tech. I live in Atlanta — a city I've technically been in for four years and somehow barely seen.
For years I tried to be a runner. I'd lace up, head out, get a few miles in, and remember that running is boring. Not hard. Boring. The same loop, the same pace, watching the same numbers crawl up. Running the same predetermined loop because I knew it was 5 miles and it made a full circle.
So I built the thing I wanted: a way to turn my city into a map I had to fill in. Streets I'd never walked. Neighborhoods I'd never crossed. A reason to actually leave the house.
Run The Radius is that, polished into an app. If you're tired of running for the sake of running — this is for you.
First 500 runners on the list get permanent founder status — perks no one else will ever be able to unlock.
Things people ask before they sign up.