this post was submitted on 11 Jun 2023
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Technology
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Does anybody know what is Reddit's userbase size? It's difficult to put some of the numbers in https://reddark.untone.uk/ in perspective. Using percentages on the Combined User Count would be more descriptive, for instance.
it's a bad judge IMO since people are subbed to multiple places and can be counted multiple times
reddit has something like over 2 million subreddits, but usually claims around 120,000 active subreddits.
As sad as it is to admit, 6000 subreddits is a drop in the fucking bucket.
There's some pretty big subreddits going down though, /r/tifu just went private and it has 10mil+ subs.
I’ve noticed “ELI5” also is on the list… that’s a huge one!
It may be a drop in the bucket, but the long term effect is that there will be fewer people, much fewer mods and those who will remains won't have the same quality of tools to moderate. And this is happening before they are going public
I'm not trying to say it is pointless, but I am trying to temper my expectations.
reddit likely did research beforehand, and thought that enough new users since 2017 wouldn't care, because it's quite clear they don't care about losing their older userbase.
I've seen users there mocking the protest. Even outrightly being hostile to individual users who post support. And when I look at their profiles I see that they are mostly 3 or 4-year-old accounts.
It seems that you are right. The users who came into Reddit accompanying its decline, simply do not care and are part of the mindless shitposters who partially ruined the site.
There's no way there are 120,000 active subreddits, unless 'active' means a least one post per month. The same 200 subreddits rotate in r/popular and r/all.
My local city subreddit is always pretty active, but it hardly has any users. I think there's lots of small, niche subs that have a decent level of activity. Just because they don't have enough users to ever hit the frontpage is kind of immaterial to that.