Vividra

Canadian Social Norms Simulator

Practice real Canadian social and workplace scenarios with AI — before you face them in real life. Build the cultural muscle memory that makes belonging feel natural.

Step 1

Choose a scenario

Select from 40+ real Canadian social and workplace situations calibrated to your city and industry.

Step 2

Simulate with AI

Vividra's AI plays the role of a Canadian colleague, manager, or neighbour — responding naturally and authentically.

Step 3

Get scored & coached

Receive instant feedback: what you did well, what felt off to a Canadian, and exactly how to adjust next time.

Scenario Categories

Workplace Small Talk

Coffee machine conversations · Monday morning greetings · Asking about someone's weekend — without oversharing or under-engaging

8 scenarios·Beginner
Try free

First Day at Work

Introducing yourself to the team · Reading the room in an open office · Lunch invitation — accept or decline?

6 scenarios·Beginner
Try free

Performance & Feedback

Asking for a raise the Canadian way · Receiving critical feedback without losing face · Giving peer feedback honestly but diplomatically

7 scenarios·Intermediate
Unlock with Pro

Networking Events

Walking into a room where you know no one · Exiting a conversation gracefully · Following up after a professional event

9 scenarios·Intermediate
Unlock with Pro

Neighbourhood & Daily Life

Meeting neighbours for the first time · Handling conflict with a landlord · Canadian humour — when to join in

6 scenarios·Beginner
Try free

Handling Discrimination

Responding to microaggressions at work · Asserting your rights professionally · When and how to involve HR

4 scenarios·Advanced
Unlock with Pro

Sample Scenario Preview

The Monday Morning Check-In
Workplace Small Talk · Toronto · Tech Company
Hey! How was your weekend? Do anything fun?
Type your response... (3 free tries per day)
Cultural Coach Insight

Option B is the strongest Canadian response. It's warm, specific, shows you're exploring your city, and opens a natural follow-up conversation — which is exactly what Canadian colleagues expect on Monday mornings.