• @UnderpantsWeevil
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    34 months ago

    Are you kidding? They were some of the first to go.

    • @ClamDrinker
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      34 months ago

      What makes you think so? I read hardcore as ‘small and tight-knit’, exactly the kind of forum that could survive easily on user donations and due to the more personal relationship there’s more loss in leaving it. I know some forums that fit that description that are still around now.

      • @IAmNotACat
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        24 months ago

        None of the small tight knit ones I used have survived outside of VI Control. But even the remaining ones are barely turned up by search engines.

        • @ClamDrinker
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          24 months ago

          I’m sorry to hear that, that’s a shame. My experiences are more with gaming communities from the early 2000s, so perhaps my view isn’t universally applicable to other hobbies, professions, and such.

          • @IAmNotACat
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            24 months ago

            Nah, I’m happy to hear there are still some thriving out there. Gives me hope for the future. I’ve just noticed that I’m corralled towards Reddit any time I seek out the sorts of discussions that used to happen on forums.

            • @ClamDrinker
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              24 months ago

              Yeah I can definitely say for a while that was the case for me as well. It’s honestly why I like Lemmy, since by the nature of federation it can both be self-contained and owned by the people actually using it, but still kept around even if the specific instance doesn’t last forever.

      • @zzx
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        14 months ago

        So so so many of my old favorite forms are dead. I’m not sure I agree with you

        • @ClamDrinker
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          14 months ago

          I’m sorry to hear that. For me I’ve seen far more (relatively) big forums either turn into a discord, a subreddit, or just die out altogether due to being unsustainable for it’s cost. Just seems more logical to me that the less personal places have more trouble sustaining themselves, but we can disagree on that.