What is Remo and how does it work?
Remo is a virtual event platform designed around interactive networking. Its visual floorplan and table model let attendees join smaller conversations, move between groups, and participate in sessions in a way that feels closer to an event venue than a standard webinar room.
Remo standout strengths
The strength is networking design. Many virtual events fail because attendees only watch a presentation and leave. Remo gives event hosts a way to create structured mingling, sponsor tables, breakout conversations, and community touchpoints that can make the event more memorable.
Remo weaknesses and drawbacks
The limitation is that virtual networking needs enough people and facilitation. If attendance is sparse or attendees are not guided, the table metaphor can make emptiness more obvious. For pure broadcasts, Livestorm or Zoom Webinars may be easier; for persistent communities, Circle or Discord may be better.
Remo pricing & plans (2026)
Remo uses paid event plans with attendee, feature, and event limits to verify. Best for hosts running networking-heavy events, expos, mixers, and community gatherings.
Who is Remo best for?
| User type |
Why it fits |
Considerations |
| Conference hosts |
Networking tables create attendee interaction |
Needs facilitation and attendance |
| Community operators |
Good for mixers and member events |
Persistent community needs another home |
| Webinar marketers |
Less direct sales-focused |
Use webinar tools for conversion events |
Remo review: final verdict
Remo is useful when conversation is the product. It is less compelling for one-way presentations, but strong for virtual rooms where people need to meet.