Minecraft's devs exit its 7 million-strong subreddit after Reddit's ham-fisted crackdown on protestwww.pcgamer.comexternal-linkcross-posted to: technologyPCGaming@kbin.socialpiracy@lemmy.dbzer0.comgaming Sp00ky94 ( @Sp00ky94@lemmy.fmhy.ml ) Technology • 1 year ago message-square49fedilinkarrow-up1297
arrow-up1297external-linkMinecraft's devs exit its 7 million-strong subreddit after Reddit's ham-fisted crackdown on protestwww.pcgamer.com Sp00ky94 ( @Sp00ky94@lemmy.fmhy.ml ) Technology • 1 year ago message-square49fedilinkcross-posted to: technologyPCGaming@kbin.socialpiracy@lemmy.dbzer0.comgaming
minus-square Briongloid ( @briongloid@aussie.zone ) linkfedilink25•1 year agoI feel that every publisher/developer could self-host, basically having a subreddit that is more within their control than before. Game forums still have good information, this could unite what Reddit hadn’t fully.
minus-square Mirodir ( @Mirodir@lemmy.fmhy.ml ) linkfedilink3•1 year agoIf they fork the lemmy repo and care to put in some effort, they could even have all the in-game accounts work as Lemmy accounts on their instance. Now whether or not that is a good idea is an entirely different question…
minus-square Briongloid ( @briongloid@aussie.zone ) linkfedilink1•1 year agoI think it sounds like an awesome idea.
I feel that every publisher/developer could self-host, basically having a subreddit that is more within their control than before.
Game forums still have good information, this could unite what Reddit hadn’t fully.
If they fork the lemmy repo and care to put in some effort, they could even have all the in-game accounts work as Lemmy accounts on their instance.
Now whether or not that is a good idea is an entirely different question…
I think it sounds like an awesome idea.