Remote delivery is the default for distributed groups. The gift still has to arrive on time, wrapped, anonymously, ideally near the reveal moment. Here is the playbook — and the small touches that turn a shipped box into a real gift.
Four moves for a remote-delivered gift
Ship a week before the reveal, not the day before
Postal estimates are estimates. A week's buffer absorbs delays and gives the recipient a chance to receive the package without the organizer chasing the courier on reveal day. International shipments need closer to two weeks.
Wrap before you ship, even inside the box
The wrapped present should be inside the shipping box, not the wrapping replaced by it. The recipient unwraps gift paper, not a courier label. A small step that makes the moment translate across borders.
Send a card with the gift
A short handwritten card — even three sentences — does most of the work that physical presence would have done. Recall a moment, share a wish, sign it from "your secret" or just leave it unsigned. The card is the bridge.
Time the arrival to land near the reveal
Aim for the package to arrive 1-3 days before the reveal date. Too early and the recipient may open it; too late and the moment is missed. If the package will be late, tell the organizer so they can adjust the reveal moment for that pair.
When physical shipping isn't possible
Streaming credits, e-books, online classes, restaurant gift cards delivered by email, a video-call experience together — digital gifts have caught up to physical ones in legitimacy. They arrive instantly, cost nothing to ship, and survive customs. Pair the digital gift with a physical card if you can; if you can't, a longer note in the email itself does the same job.
Cuchumbo coordinates remote delivery
Each player has a personal page with their match, the budget, the reveal date and a Delivered button. Send your gift, mark it delivered, and the organizer sees the circle close — even from a different country.