Comment by carshodev
9 days ago
I think it depends on how the servers are setup. Chat channels with 1000s people participating are typically worthless as the signal to noise ratio ruins it.
But when the majority of conversations are happening in forums/thread style channels then it works well. You can still have some more niche chat style sections where typically 2-10 people participate
Chat channels are also fine for lots of people when its not about conversations but more just about sharing things. Like a "Share what you build" or "memes" channel work well as tons of messages are fine as you only care to see a few anyway.
Also limited size voice channels can be good aswell 5 people max.
My thought is that it just doesn't make sense to have a product which serves both communities of 1,000+ people and a small group of <50 friends. You end up making far too many compromises.
I used to just engage with my friends. Now it feels like a really noisy reddit. Sure I could leave all of them, but that is kind of my point. There is an identity crises for the product.
Did the "forum channels" feature not help handle the huge server usecase? I've only barely been in one.
Forum channels are poor replacements for actual forums
Your experience is largely dictated by the person that set up the server. If you want, make your own and keep it small.
What I am saying is that discord as a product has an inferior experience for small communities because it tries to cater all. It's just not a fun product to use.
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