Your favorite movie, series, or anything else really that you can't find a community here (or maybe it just doesn't exist)
Your favorite movie, series, or anything else really that you can't find a community here (or maybe it just doesn't exist)
I'll just be honest, from my perspective on lemmy everything outside of porn, linux and shitposts is lacking. Interaction outside the top of hot is a wasteland of non-existence, questions go undiscovered, comments are never read. We could all be more generous with upvotes to improve visibility.
For me sfw art communities, sports, and life protips would all be nice to see grow. I miss the old photoshopbattles too, but I think that's just fallen out of style in general.
The porn is definitely lacking. Or so I am told. By a random person who knows a friend of mine.
No, it's a question of volume. Before reddit turned to shit, it used to work the same way, but niche communities could still thrive because there were enough people. Lemmy will be able to hold more communities as more people join
You're welcome to post about papers and discuss them over in !general@lemmy.world to try to get this going for more specific communities!
Initially in general, but if there was enough interest breaking into specific topics would be nice to
Hopefully not as a bunch of really good question posts full of mod-deleted answers.
A history subreddit would be nice to see. It genuinely brings joy to my face to learn some interesting facts about the middle-ages. And overwhelming amount of Lemmy users need reminding of what happened in Cambodia in the late 70s.
Basically all the media.
There is (or at least was) a special kind of joy in discovering a new piece of media (movie, TV, book, video game, comic, etc), getting to the end, and hopping over to the relevant subreddit to sort by "top of all time." Bonus points if you loved the series and would get to essentially relive it all over again through the sub, but even media that you hated or were neutral about could be fun subs to peruse; maybe you would get to revel in seeing something you hated turned into a meme highlighting how stupid it was, or get to feel justified in your negative assessment upon reading an epic rant from another user; maybe instead you'd find hidden details or explanations pointed out by other users that made you reassess the work ("huh, I though that was a stupid plothole but it actually was perfectly explained by that one scene that apparently went over my head"). The ATLA subs especially were treasure troves of tiny details and "holy shit I just noticed on my fifth rewatch" posts that really elevated my opinion (and thereby enjoyment) of a series I was initially kind of "meh" on.
When I think about what it would take to feel like Lemmy had sufficiently replaced Reddit for me, the number one practical answer is for comprehensive news (political, world, cultural, meme, etc... Reddit really did at one point feel like "the front page of the Internet" if there ever was one), and the second is to have the critical mass to be able to ask a question and get a good recommendation for any specific product or service, via regional subs, hobby subs, etc (although thanks to LLMs and corporate astroturfing that may simply be a bygone part of the Internet). But the "fun" answer is to have the critical mass for a wide range of specific fandoms.
Given the absence of specific communities (or active ones so far), if people would like they could start these conversations over in !general@lemmy.world.
I recognize it's not the same, particularly for getting to those deep dive points you mention with ATLA, but gotta start somewhere, right?
Also I can easily give this go-ahead being one of the mods there. Up to now I've hesitated popping into threads like this and pointing people there because I'm not a fan of consolidation, but it's become apparent some simple meeting area may help to get more niche communities spun off and going.
A lab work group, like that one on Reddit. I cannot remember the name and I sure as hell will not go to that damned site, but it was basically full of graduate students and technicians that shared stories from their labs.
The labrats subreddit was kinda fun. Iβm a chemist, but the chemistry subreddit was overwhelmed by people asking for homework advice, showing off bad caffeine tattoos, and getting upset when they couldnβt talk about drugs or explosives.
!bicycles@lemmy.ca isn't super-high volume, but it's definitely not inactive. It gets a post every other day or so, and there's discussion on those posts.
I feel like the real problem is where there aren't enough people to even have a conversation. Once you've got people there, then just posting more isn't that hard.
Micromobility is pretty active if you're interested in product coverage and news. As for more organic content, it's pretty infrequent in any of the existing bicycle communities βΉοΈ
I miss the nonsexual nudes groups from Reddit, Normalnudes and NakedProgress.
Also wish the curly hair group here was active.
It's ok though, trading off for the smaller community here, it's still better.
I miss weird niche creative silly roleplay reddits like
r/vxjunkies
r/enlightenedbirdmen / r/madmudmen
r/earth999
r/nsfwworldbuilding - mostly bees with boobs
I've got one! Obscure textile crafts.
There are knitting/crochet communities of course, but all the super niche ones like ply-split braiding or smocking are too rare to warrant a whole community to themselves. On reddit there was a defunct sub called bistitchual, both for all obscure fibercrafts and for combinations of unrelated fibercrafts in one work. I wish we had it here.
More outdoors stuff. They exist, but not very active. Mountaineering, climbing, camping, overlanding, etc. Love people sharing their adventures and all the gear and tips & tricks discussions.
Yeah, I searched for hiking and backpacking to replace my equivalent subreddits and just crickets everywhere.
While it's a good idea, things are a little too decentralized right now.
There are lots of communities that are just stealing users from each other.
I've no desire to be joined to 17 'different' communities with maybe a few dozen members each and content that is mostly crossposted between those same communities.
Pinball machines and Arcade games. I can't say I would be the backbone of such a group, but I would enjoy reading the posts from one.
More Star Trek and Linux communities. "I've got a fever, and the only prescription is more [Star Trek and Linux communities]!"
why have just a community when you can have a whole instance
e: oh jeez, the irony flew right over me
My town. It has an active subreddit but last I checked there were only 2 in the Lemmy community.
Terrariums. I love miniature things, including tiny ecosystems. Thereβs a few communities on Lemmy, but theyβre mostly inactive, and have a tiny amount of subscribers.
Oh we need a Jarrarium community too. As well as one to talk about isopods and springtails.
Old School Runescape.
Also, I'm really confused as to why chess doesn't have an active community on Lemmy. Online chess has seen a big boom in recent years, and the demographics of chess players and Lemmy users should have a lot of overlap (i.e. the nerdy IT people), but for some reason the chess community here is more or less dead. Only anarchychess is active, which is great, but I'd love to have an active replacement for r/chess.
I mean it makes some sense as memes take less effort to post (they can also just be copied from r/anarchychess or similar places) and lead to some quick upvotes. I'm still confused about chess@lemmy.ml having so little activity though.
It's weird, but you need to prefix an exclamation mark to have the links to communities work in lemmy: !chess@lemmy.ml
Otherwise it tries to have you send it an email.
For me, it's any community of Tradespeople. I can find relevant manufacturer and adjacent code regulations for modern equipment or building techniques anywhere online. The problem comes from obscure-ancient technology that was discontinued 60+ years ago, the only references to those are on Reddit and very specific forums.
I recently ran into an electrical panel that was built in the 60's and was promptly made illegal (split bus residential panel, no singular main disconnect switch). Even being trained and educated as an Electrical Engineer, it only gave me the ability to understand what the panel was doing, not the history and use cases of the past (since their use in residential applications is obsolete). I was able to find discussions between inspectors and electricians, how things played out with local authorities, and the on going debate of their practicality by actual professors discussing regulations and safety. I will miss these resources if they become unavailable at a future date (the whole enshitification process).
That being said, places with higher than average traffic (like reddit now) tend to give a lot of crappy answers. Lot's of diy'ers thinking their way is best (whether it's code compliant or not), and others who don't care about discussion and only want to say you're doing it wrong because it's not how they would do it (and nets them the highest profit margin on a job). There's lots of owners out there that are probably afraid to ask a question now adays because of the responses (same linux community effect), even though the information around it could be important.