Experience perspectives.
PLURI is an urban edutainment brand for perspective shifts — guided by: Discover. Understand. Connect.
What PLURI means.
PLURI comes from "pluri" — many. The name is inspired by the idea of the Pluriverse: that many realities, viewpoints and lived experiences exist simultaneously — and that it's worth perceiving them and connecting them.
PLURI translates this idea into formats that make people curious, bring them into shared experiences, and open new perspectives.
We breathe life into places and turn neighbourhoods into interactive playing fields. Instead of dry facts, we go for gripping storytelling, curiosity and the fun of solving puzzles together. With a mix of a smart web app and analogue traces on site, we turn local history and culture into an unforgettable adventure for kids, families and teams.
Discover
We sharpen the eye for details, places, people, patterns — for what is often overlooked.
Understand
We make connections accessible: through story, roles, decisions and questions that stay with you.
Connect
We create encounters: in teams, in conversation, in viewing a place — and in respectful togetherness.
Making perspectives tangible.
Everything at PLURI starts here — not explaining perspectives, but making them tangible. From that follows what we do (mission) and where it should lead (vision).
Mission.
PLURI Edutainment develops innovative leisure formats that make perspective shifts tangible. Our goal: to make complex topics like history, culture and social values graspable for children and young people through gamification — playful mechanics. We create participatory experiences in real space that spark team spirit and curiosity, strengthen a culture of dialogue and open up new viewpoints.
Vision.
We're working towards a generation that moves through the world with curiosity: able to take on different perspectives, understanding their surroundings and their history, and helping shape the life around them. A society where learning is imagined as experience — outdoors, in real space, as a team — and where a plurality of viewpoints is simply part of it.
Values.
Curiosity
We don't settle for the first answer.
Openness
We build perspective shifts right into the experience.
Creativity
We invent formats that don't exist yet — and test them out in the Kiez.
Respect
We take people, places and their stories seriously — every station is researched.
Cooperation
Our games have no single-player mode. Decisions are made together.
Courage
We start before everything is perfect.
How it all started.
»Organising a children's birthday — with the pressure to deliver something genuinely exciting.«
What she kept observing: ready-made products existed — but they were generic, not anchored in the neighbourhood, without a real connection to the place. What was missing was a scavenger hunt that comes from here.
So she started in her own neighbourhood. Went for a walk. With open eyes. And discovered so many compelling stories right on her doorstep. It wasn't planned. It just happened.
Over time, more ideas were added: puzzles, roles, avatars, decisions that bring teams together. The creative work captivated her — and the best part: she could draw on her experience from social work, education and cultural practice. At some point it was clear: this is exactly what she wants to do. PLURI is the result of that conviction.
The person behind PLURI.

Behind PLURI stands Christine Möllers' conviction that there is no universal truth that stands above everything else. Rather, it is the countless individual stories that shape our reality. Drawing on narrative approaches, she creates spaces where this very multiplicity becomes tangible — away from a single dominant narrative, towards a world made richer by the diversity of its stories.
With degrees in Social Work and Refugee Care, and a qualification as a cultural manager, she knows how important it is to take different perspectives and not view the world only through one's own lens. She gathered her experience in child and youth welfare, the education sector and the creative industries.
As a lecturer and certified agile project manager, she brings together structure, didactics and method — for formats that are pedagogically grounded and hold up in practice.
Localnauts.
Localnauts don't travel through outer space, but through time and place — a walkable time-travel for kids aged 8 to 12. First route: The Lost Chest of Rixdorf, now playable in the Bohemian Village in Berlin-Neukölln.
For whom
Families, school classes, after-school care, holiday programmes, youth organisations — and birthdays. Ages 8+.
What's inside
Story and role-play, on-site puzzles, democratic team decisions, movement and local history — pedagogically grounded, without lecturing.
How it works
Entirely in the browser, no download, no account. GPS guides you station to station; learning happens while walking, solving and deciding.
Let's create adventures together.
Have ideas for routes, feedback, or want Localnauts in your city? Write to us.
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