Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

Why Gen Z is Trading Deep Friendships for ‘Fry Meets’ with Strangers

Daniel Kim Views  

Translation result

Young
Young people are embracing \”Fry Meets\” — gatherings where participants pile up and share mountains of French fries — and making them popular. After the \”Cops and Robbers\” craze, these so-called \”light gatherings,\” in which strangers spend short, intense time together, appear to be spreading (photo: Korea McDonald’s Instagram). 

After the \”Cops and Robbers\” craze faded, \”Fry Meets\” — pop-up gatherings centered on piles of French fries — have moved in. They require no special occasion or elaborate planning. Young adults, especially those in their twenties and thirties, are rapidly adopting these so‑called light gatherings: brief encounters with strangers meant to be enjoyed in the moment and then left behind.

The trend traces back to grown-ups reviving a childhood playground game: cops and robbers. Adults began taking that nostalgic tag game seriously. Recruitment posts for \”cops and robbers\” started appearing on neighborhood app Danggeun, and the fad quickly peaked. According to Danggeun, searches related to \”cops and robbers\” surged an astonishing 67,044% as of last December, and registered meetup listings jumped 9,929%.

A
A Danggeun neighborhood post recruiting members for a Fry Meet (photo: Danggeun screenshot). 

As interest in cops and robbers cooled, a quieter meetup emerged: people gather at fast-food restaurants, heap fries into a mountain, and share them. On Danggeun’s local meetup boards, dozens of Fry Meet recruitment posts appear regularly across neighborhoods.

Participants describe the events as light and enjoyable. One attendee joked, \”Maybe because it’s a carbs-eating group, everyone’s so mellow,\” drawing laughs. At actual meetups, conversation stays casual — debates about thin versus thick-cut fries, talk about favorite celebrities — small talk that brightens the daily routine.

No names, no jobs—why Gen Z eats fries with strangers

Cops-and-robbers games and Fry Meets share two clear traits: they gather people who don’t know one another, and they are typically one-off encounters with no expectation of continuity. Why does Gen Z gravitate toward this format? Analysts point to two main explanations.

First, these loose gatherings help ease deep-seated loneliness through a kind of casual solidarity.

A Macromill Embrain survey of 1,000 adults nationwide last April found that 59.2% of people in their 20s and 52.8% of people in their 30s feel lonely in everyday life. Those age groups also had the highest rates of saying they have no one to confide in or find it difficult to open up.

For many, light meetups offer a welcome escape. Unlike ongoing friendships, these encounters don’t demand emotional labor or maintenance. People can meet once, soothe a sense of loneliness, and leave without pressure — the relaxed connection itself is the appeal.

A
A \”Cops and Robbers\” segment from the YouTube channel \”Channel Sibo-ya\” featuring Lee Young-ji. About 100,000 people signed up in advance to participate (photo: Instagram screenshot).

Second, the trend reflects a shift in values: people now prioritize what they do over who they do it with.

Both cops-and-robbers and Fry Meet gatherings define a clear purpose and attract people who share that interest. Asking a close friend, \”Want to play cops and robbers at the park?\” might feel awkward, but posting an invite in an anonymous community reframes it as a curated, trendy experience. Coming together with strangers to execute an offbeat mission has itself become a kind of playful social culture.

Adults who once ran around playgrounds now gather in fast-food restaurants to devour mountains of fries. Gen Z is shedding some of the burdens of traditional relationships while preserving moments of fun and belonging — a pragmatic approach to social life. After cops and robbers and Fry Meets, what clever, joyful meetup will catch on next? 
 

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[Beauty] Latest Stories

  • He Only Planned to Find the Kitten a Home—Then It Changed His Life
    He Only Planned to Find the Kitten a Home—Then It Changed His Life
  • Why Billionaires Never Hit Snooze: 6 Morning Rituals for Success
    Why Billionaires Never Hit Snooze: 6 Morning Rituals for Success
  • Meet the Tiny Kitten Acting as a Bodyguard for Its Sleeping Siblings
    Meet the Tiny Kitten Acting as a Bodyguard for Its Sleeping Siblings
  • Stop Following Old Car Rules: Why Your Modern Engine Doesn’t Need Them
    Stop Following Old Car Rules: Why Your Modern Engine Doesn't Need Them
  • Stop Throwing Away Banana Peels: The 60-Second Hack to Save $75
    Stop Throwing Away Banana Peels: The 60-Second Hack to Save $75
  • Inside a 747 Sq Ft Swedish Apartment: A Bold Modern Makeover
    Inside a 747 Sq Ft Swedish Apartment: A Bold Modern Makeover

Weekly Best Articles

  • Choi Dong-seok’s Family Bond: How a Simple Engraving Reveals Deep Love for His Children
  • Kwak Sun-hee’s Stunning Wedding Photos: A Celebration of Love and Courage
  • Is ‘I Am a Natural Person’ Just a Big Lie? Comedian Yoon-taek Reveals Shocking Secrets!
  • Health Scare: Why Fans Are Worried About Go Ji Yong’s Dramatic Weight Loss
  • Discover the Winter Gongju Chestnut Festival: A Taste of Korea at H-Mart in the USA!
  • 2026 Spring Wildfire Prevention: How Gyeryong City is Cutting Response Time to 30 Minutes!

You May Also Like

  • 1
    Trump Slashes AI Review Window to 30 Days Amid National Security Debate

    Politics 

    Trump Slashes AI Review Window to 30 Days Amid National Security Debate
  • 2
    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks

    Politics 

    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks
  • 3
    Trump Backs Colombia's 'El Tigre' — What It Means for U.S. Relations

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s ‘El Tigre’ — What It Means for U.S. Relations
  • 4
    Trump Backs Colombia's Far-Right Outsider—What's at Stake?

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s Far-Right Outsider—What’s at Stake?
  • 5
    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties

    Politics 

    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties

Popular Now

  • 1
    12.5% Tariff Alert: Why the U.S. Is Targeting South Korean Imports

    Politics&nbsp

  • 2
    Marta Kostyuk Makes History at French Open Amid Ukraine Crisis

    Politics&nbsp

  • 3
    37 Years in Exile: The Tiananmen Leader Who Just Wants to Go Home

    Politics&nbsp

  • 4
    South Korea's Cheongju Airport Faces Crisis as Passenger Numbers Explode

    Politics&nbsp

  • 5
    Nuclear Submarine Race: South Korea's High-Stakes Bid for U.S. Fuel

    Politics&nbsp

Weekly Best Articles

  • Choi Dong-seok’s Family Bond: How a Simple Engraving Reveals Deep Love for His Children
  • Kwak Sun-hee’s Stunning Wedding Photos: A Celebration of Love and Courage
  • Is ‘I Am a Natural Person’ Just a Big Lie? Comedian Yoon-taek Reveals Shocking Secrets!
  • Health Scare: Why Fans Are Worried About Go Ji Yong’s Dramatic Weight Loss
  • Discover the Winter Gongju Chestnut Festival: A Taste of Korea at H-Mart in the USA!
  • 2026 Spring Wildfire Prevention: How Gyeryong City is Cutting Response Time to 30 Minutes!

Must-Reads

  • 1
    Trump Slashes AI Review Window to 30 Days Amid National Security Debate

    Politics 

    Trump Slashes AI Review Window to 30 Days Amid National Security Debate
  • 2
    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks

    Politics 

    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks
  • 3
    Trump Backs Colombia's 'El Tigre' — What It Means for U.S. Relations

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s ‘El Tigre’ — What It Means for U.S. Relations
  • 4
    Trump Backs Colombia's Far-Right Outsider—What's at Stake?

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s Far-Right Outsider—What’s at Stake?
  • 5
    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties

    Politics 

    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties

Popular Now

  • 1
    12.5% Tariff Alert: Why the U.S. Is Targeting South Korean Imports

    Politics 

  • 2
    Marta Kostyuk Makes History at French Open Amid Ukraine Crisis

    Politics 

  • 3
    37 Years in Exile: The Tiananmen Leader Who Just Wants to Go Home

    Politics 

  • 4
    South Korea's Cheongju Airport Faces Crisis as Passenger Numbers Explode

    Politics 

  • 5
    Nuclear Submarine Race: South Korea's High-Stakes Bid for U.S. Fuel

    Politics