this post was submitted on 30 Oct 2025
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Worldbuilding

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Rules of !Worldbuilding:

See here for a longer, more explanatory version.

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For conlang (constructed languages) discussion check out !conlangs@mander.xyz Feel free to discuss the your conlangs in our community, as well!

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Not sure what I'm rambling on about here, but I took the time to write it so I might as well post it.

I assume many of you, like me, are on Lemmy because you fled Reddit for one reason or another. For me the API fiasco opened the door, and me realizing I was addicted to it made me leave.

I enjoy conworlding, both my own and that of others, differently than I do more polished works. It's raw unfiltered imagination. Sometimes the ideas are stupid or cringy or poorly presented (I know mine are at least), but they have an authenticity that you don't see in published works, and I think there's a joy in the very act of pretending, or, to dignify it with Tolkien's words, sub-creation.

The size of /r/worldbuilding meant there was always something interesting to see or read about, whereas other communities are less active. There were problems though. Art posts were disproportionately favored, a consequence of humanity being an overwhelmingly visual species, in my opinion. This left those of us without artistic talent feeling ignored. The mods could be trigger-happy about posts that they felt didn't provide enough context. I posted an image that I thought was adequately explained in the title, but got a warning from the mods because I didn't write a novel's worth of backstory. More "gamey" prompts were deleted. I once posted a "worldbuilding mad-libs" game where you had to fill in the blanks in a way that made sense in your setting, but it got deleted pretty quickly.

Besides the mods, there were a glut of posts asking about characters and characterization, which isn't really worldbuilding, as well as comments complaining about stuff that is worldbuilding, like realistic map making.

In a way I signed up for this. I've been trying to de-urbanize my online activity, separating myself from the massive centralized platforms that dominate the modern web and seeking out more niche corners of the internet to fill my needs. I guess I shouldn't complain about it in that case. Of course this community is going to be less active. It's smaller than Reddit, and that's what I wanted.

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[–] 667@lemmy.radio 6 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I appreciate your post because although I don’t worldbuild, it reflects a broader sense I also have about the fediverse in general.

Keep in mind that as far as platforms go, the fediverse is quite young and it takes some time for things like this to reach a network effect. Reddit benefited from a large exodus from digg, just as the fediverse benefited from the reddit exodus.

It’ll get there.