Deep Conversation Questions: Questions That Actually Go Somewhere
Most conversations follow the same script: job, commute, weekend plans. You exchange facts without learning anything real. The right deep conversation question breaks that loop — specific enough that the answer reveals something, open enough to go anywhere.
What makes a question actually good
Specificity does most of the work. "How are you?" invites one word; "What's something you changed your mind about in the last year?" invites reflection. That pointed framing creates the conditions for genuine self-disclosure. Research by Aron et al. (1997, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin) found that escalating personal questions produced significantly greater closeness than neutral small talk — and participants enjoyed it more than they'd expected. The best questions also feel two-way: ask something you'd genuinely want to be asked yourself, and the conversation becomes an exchange rather than an interview.
Questions worth asking
These come from our curated library, rated by people who've used them at Connection Games evenings.
- 1. What's something you changed your mind about in the last year?
- 2. What did you think your life would look like at this age?
- 3. What's a belief you hold that most people around you don't share?
- 4. What would you do differently if you moved to a new city tomorrow?
- 5. What's the most interesting conversation you've had recently — and what made it interesting?
- 6. When did you last feel genuinely proud of something?
- 7. What's a skill you're glad you learned, even if you rarely use it?
- 8. What's something that used to embarrass you that you're now fine with?
- 9. What's the best piece of advice you ever received — and did you actually take it?
- 10. If you could only keep one hobby, which one would it be and why?
Where to use these
These questions work anywhere two people are willing to slow down — on a date, with a new friend, at a dinner party that's gone flat, on a long journey. The trickiest part isn't the question; it's the transition. Context matters: what opens someone up in one setting can feel like overreach in another.
Makuma Connection Games
Where these questions live in their natural habitat
A Makuma evening is a cosy, carefully structured gathering where questions like these are already curated, the transitions are handled for you, and you don't have to engineer anything. Carefully crafted questions lead you toward meaningful discovery — no awkward silences, no small talk, no performing. The structure does the work; you just show up.
By the end of your session you'll know what connects you to the people in the room, and you'll have the start of genuine relationships. A diverse mix of friendly people absorbed into warm, meaningful conversation — that's a Makuma gathering.
See all upcoming Connection Games →
Tips for using them yourself
Don't fire questions like a checklist. One good question, answered properly, is worth ten rushed ones. When someone gives you a real answer, follow it — ask about the thing they mentioned, not the next item on your list. Offering your own answer ("what would your answer be?") shifts the dynamic from interrogation to mutual exploration.
Let silences breathe. A pause after a reflective question isn't awkward — it usually means the person is actually thinking. The best answers often come a few seconds after you expected them.