The shared-plate paradox
Korean BBQ. Hot pot. Dim sum. Tapas. Family-style Italian. These cuisines are designed for sharing — platters in the center, everyone reaches in, the meal flows. It’s communal eating at its best.
Then the check arrives and the flow stops. $312 for six people. One person ordered the premium wagyu upgrade. Two people didn’t drink. Somebody finished the lamb chops. Nobody tracked who ate what — because tracking would have ruined the entire point of sharing.
This is the shared-plate paradox: the communal experience that makes the meal great is the same force that makes the bill impossible to split fairly.
That triple effect — eating more in groups, losing track of portions, and ordering more when the bill is shared — makes shared-plate restaurants the hardest splitting problem in dining.
Sources: de Castro, Physiology & Behavior (1994); Wansink et al., Obesity Research (2005); Gneezy et al., The Economic Journal (2004)