I know, we're on a forum. But I think it's clear to everyone here that forums as a whole have seen their heyday come and go - There's no comparison between say the activity of boards in 2008 vs. 2018. Even the huge boards are slowing down, and really that leaves nothing for the smaller guys.
I'll be honest; I basically grew up on forums, but there's only one or two forums that I continue to utilize. Both are private sites that have a rather tight-nit userbase I've interacted with for years. They're also on the older end of internet demographics (~30+ or so) and populated folks who tend to be more concerned about their privacy. They're communities that have continued to thrive to some extent despite themselves moving past the relevance of most people. Another community that has more or less survived the new age of online discussions is RPGCodex - a community geared towards folks less likely to be active on social media, and also less likely to share the kinds of views they do on that website with people they know IRL.
Reddit's a popular platform but it's not one I contribute to; when I want a quick answer to a specialist topic I use facebook groups. Why? Because I know I can get a response from someone within minutes to an hour, vs. waiting days on a forum. I wouldn't care about this if I didn't feel like there's still something incredibly unique about what a forum can offer - every interaction on a platform like reddit is fleeting, this being even more-so the case on facebook.
My question to those of you still here - what do you think that forums can provide in 2018 that isn't available on these newer platforms? More importantly, how do you get that idea across to the millions/almost billions of folks who are now on the internet who never used forums? I sure hope that the answer isn't to just give up and accept that we live in a centralized age of online discussions.
I'll be honest; I basically grew up on forums, but there's only one or two forums that I continue to utilize. Both are private sites that have a rather tight-nit userbase I've interacted with for years. They're also on the older end of internet demographics (~30+ or so) and populated folks who tend to be more concerned about their privacy. They're communities that have continued to thrive to some extent despite themselves moving past the relevance of most people. Another community that has more or less survived the new age of online discussions is RPGCodex - a community geared towards folks less likely to be active on social media, and also less likely to share the kinds of views they do on that website with people they know IRL.
Reddit's a popular platform but it's not one I contribute to; when I want a quick answer to a specialist topic I use facebook groups. Why? Because I know I can get a response from someone within minutes to an hour, vs. waiting days on a forum. I wouldn't care about this if I didn't feel like there's still something incredibly unique about what a forum can offer - every interaction on a platform like reddit is fleeting, this being even more-so the case on facebook.
My question to those of you still here - what do you think that forums can provide in 2018 that isn't available on these newer platforms? More importantly, how do you get that idea across to the millions/almost billions of folks who are now on the internet who never used forums? I sure hope that the answer isn't to just give up and accept that we live in a centralized age of online discussions.







