Happened to me a few days ago, and I just can’t believe how bad this redesign is!!

It’s hard to comprehend what goes into the heads of that dev team, but they basically ruined everything nice about the platform. The API changes were pretty much a fatal shot already, but this new redesign seems to be what tipped the scales for me, and hopefully many more.

It’s a great time to switch to Lemmy, and I think I’m going to make the effort to stick around and abandon the habit of opening reddit multiple times per day.

Do you think forcing this re-design will bring more people here? I’m hoping for that. Reddit betrayed us and I can’t find it me to keep forgiving them for every horrible, anti-user decision.

I noticed in some moderator subreddit, that it is planned to kill new.reddit.com as well. Old will likely stay for longer, but new is what I got used to, and if they take it down I won’t bother getting used to the newer, garbage UX.

    • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      11 months ago

      It’s a fair point, but i think it would be better to encourage those niche subreddits to jump ship to lemmy. Or create the community here yourself.

      If reddit has a reason for people to stay then reddit will remain relevant and continue to make money for spez.

    • throw4w4y5@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      6
      arrow-down
      9
      ·
      11 months ago

      Recipe for instant good Lemmy community

      Effort required from you: 1 hour

      1. Sign up two or three Lemmy accounts. 5 minutes
      2. Go to a niche reddit community and grab half a dozen good submissions in the last year or so. Post them to your Lemmy with different accounts. 10 minutes
      3. Now for the hard part. Go and create some good quality original submissions. Work hard on 2-3 good pieces of content that don’t exist on reddit. 35 minutes.
      4. Post links to those submissions on reddit. 5 minutes
      5. Spend a few seconds voting up and engaging with any commenters in your new community. 5 minutes

      Even simple upvotes from your few accounts can catalyse engagement and make the community start to come together.