this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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It's hard to put my finger on the exact problems but it feels worse than the typical decline of large subs.

This thread posted today in response to the protest shows a lot of what I mean: https://old.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/14cbtjv/who_here_is_in_favor_of_just_replacing_these_shit/

Mob mentality, selfishness, scapegoating, lack of critical thinking... It's just so toxic compared to where it was even a year ago.

I'm excited at the prospect of building a more positive, welcoming place here to discuss the NBA.

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[–] phario@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I’m mostly a nobody but it has been clear to me that most people can’t or don’t have any incentive on starting discussions or threads on r/nba. Over the last few years, the only thing that has appeared on the “hot” sorted posts are memes, robot posts, parody posts, etc.

The worst are those posts that are just attempts to garner upvotes, like statistical analysis of weird things like players going to strip clubs.

Then came r/nbadiscussion and even that wasn’t much better.

In the end, I think it’s just a matter of numbers. Having a discussion on r/nba or any other popular subreddit is like having a discussion in a noisy auditorium filled with thousands of kids, teenagers, adults, old people, trolls, etc.

The most enjoyable interactions I had on Reddit were via smaller niche communities where there were only a few thousand posters, max.

[–] crayons@lemmy.myserv.one 2 points 1 year ago

I completely agree with you, this place right here has the potential to become what r/nba was a couple of years ago