One of Reddit’s biggest communities is suggesting users move to Discord

https://lemmy.world/post/1476722

One of Reddit’s biggest communities is suggesting users move to Discord - Lemmy.world

One of Reddit’s biggest communities is suggesting users move to Discord r/malefashionadvice, the biggest Reddit community still inaccessible in protest of Reddit’s new API pricing, is encouraging its users to congregate on Discord and view guides on Substack.

Discord is VERY different from link/thread aggregators such as Reddit and Lemmy. I just don’t understand subreddits that move to Discord.

/r/buildapcsales/ has an official Discord server now, and it just sucks compared to Reddit’s format.

つ ◕_◕ ༽つ Low prices take my energy つ ◕_◕ ༽つ • r/buildapcsales

A community for links to products that are on sale at various websites. Monitors, cables, processors, video cards, fans, cooling, cases,...

reddit

Discord actually has “Forum” channels that work like Reddit. You can create posts and search for them. So if you use Discord right you could more or less recreate Subreddits inside a single Discord server.

Not a fan of them moving to Discord instead of Lemmy, but anyway, fuck Reddit.

I didn’t know about Forum channels, thanks for the heads-up. Are they crawled by search engines, though? I feel like with people deleting their reddit posts and moving to discord, it’s already becoming a lot harder to find information online.
They cannot be crawled by search engines, unfortunately. Information online is going scarse.

Considering you don’t find Discord server logs on Google I’d say: No.

Discord is its own thing.

Google results have been down the drain for years, the only reasonable results I found were by appending reddit or site:reddit.com. Now even that is gone :-/

Duckduckgo and Brave Search often shows Reddit results for me even without site:reddit.com. Though now because of how Lemmy works with all of these instances, we can’t easily use site: anymore. Hoping that search crawlers will be able to just index Lemmy/Kbin instances fine to pull the results in search engines in the future.