this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2023
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This used to be true, but Reddit has been mainstream for years now. Today's average Redditor is likely pretty similar to the average Twitter user.
When a quarter of the replies on Reddit have become "this" or "๐ฏ" or "^^," which it feels like it became when I left, I'd agree with you.
bump
This
^^
nice
fr fr
๐ฏ
Is
I remember when you'd get ripped apart and down voted to hell for daring to use an emoji on Reddit when commenting. People hated it. Then one day it was fine to do it, no one cared anymore. I guess that's around when Reddit became mainstream, maybe.
@Busy @FlyingSquid
Probably cause more and more users gravitated to mobile where it became commonplace to include emojis in posts. I remember too when using emojis was a mortal sin. At most you could use an emoticon but that was it.
Back when I started using Reddit it was frowned upon to post OC. I remember some subs had rules that you would be banned if you more than like 10% of your posts were OC.
And my axe!
I feel like when the Reddit API controversy happened I was more inclined to switch due to the blackout vs Twitter which didn't have nearly as instant of an event that would happen to get me off. Now all of a sudden because of Reddit I'm on various Fediverse projects such as Funkwhale, Mastodon, Kbin, and Lemmy.
Plus there's some staying power to posts on here
I'm replying to what you wrote 10 hours ago. My local feed would be a lot of shit before I ever saw this
And it's 100% relevant to the area of content I wanted to read. Same if I went to a gaming or news related group
But in the other hand lemmy seems much more mature than lemmy.
Don't get me wrong, the experience has been rapidly growing in recent weeks thanks to the proliferation of third party apps ๐ But Mastodon's first party experience feels solid and their new official app just blends in any mainstream app.
Interesting. That is a good point