There seems to be an annoying assumption in Lemmy communities that the best way to grow is to duplicate how it worked on Reddit.
Reddit’s r/nba has hundreds of thousands or millions of readers. Their system can support lots of game-day threads because they have the numbers.
I log onto this community and I’m turned off. There are too many bot threads and not enough critical mass of discussion. Before the bots, it was better because there were only a few threads so at least people felt there was something worth participating in.
I guess I could block the bot, but this doesn’t fix the issue for the community. I suggest that these game threads can be merged into groupings. Perhaps just one thread for all the day’s games.
The point is to grow the community with the current audience in mind, not to assume that what works for Reddit is going to immediately work for Lemmy.
Yep. Said it elsewhere but trying to force the fledgling Lemmy community to fit into the giant shoes of Reddit isn’t going to work.
Reddit had years of organic growth that started small and concentrated (user created subs weren’t even a thing originally).
A single game day thread sounds like a good way to get people in the same room for discussion. We’ll make more space when it gets crowded, not before.
Does a single game thread where the top level comments are similar to a game thread, then all regular comments regarding that game go under the top level comment?
From my perspective I was heavy user of the game threads on /r/NBA but can definitely see why there’d be too many here right now. But I also don’t want to wade through discussion of a more watched game on tnt looking for my game I wanted to discuss that was only on the local stations.
This will probably end up being a community poll at some point.
Yeah that’s probably a great way to go about it! I think r/nba did something similar for certain games but I forget which ones.