I honestly feel that a lot of the rules are fine, but I have a few suggestions. Let me start this off by saying my reddit accounts might not have been created a long time before, but lurked this sub with no accounts as like october. I believe reposts are kind of
Animal Crossing Nook Miles Ticket a Issue here, but I understand on a few subreddits like repostsleuthbot automatically checks ifI believe that you guys should follow other subreddits' illustrations and do daily/weekly sticky posts on particular subjects. For instance the WoW subreddit does a monday thread for match questions, a brag thread, etc., even the unresolved mysteries subreddit does so using a meta monday and material. Usually bots/auto-moderators can be set up to perform this if a mod doesn't wish to do it themselves.
This way the most contentious articles: memorials, generic outfit spam,'check this out villager/item I got', and edited screenshots are all relegated to their own area where people who want to see them may, while the most important subreddit focuses on anything else. Keeping the threads on a cycle and removing/posting/stickying new ones will ensure they stay fresh and people continue to make use of them.
If folks are time-traveling into an event that has not released then yes there should be spoiler tags. The best example of this was the Halloween update when people kept posting screenshots of the carriage they time traveled for. Like I am alright with seeing someone post bunny day screenshots at this time, because that event released this past year so we already know what the items are. However, should they include, IDK, an arbor day event with new items that folks TT to, I would like if they spoiler mark their articles so that I can decide whether I wish to view the articles or not. Some folks do want to find spoilers, others don't. As long as people are able to choose whether they wish to see it, I don't think there'll be any issues.
Thank you for the feedback. The main thing with megathreads is we've already got two operating in a time (two stickies is that the limitation on Reddit): Simple codes and questions. Those are just two things that attract a lot of clutter, and there's a maximum of two slots that are tacky. Throughout the time something else is taking that slot, the questions or code thread for example, wouldn't be visible and it'd get very little usage.
A directory thread could operate, but frankly, in my view having a huge collection of megathreads is a little messy/unintuitive.
Another thing with megathreads that rely on images, there is no way to comment pictures at this moment, so the user would have to upload the pictures off themselves and place it. Which can be a huge hassle.
Can codes and questions be united? People already place their codes from the questions thread despite the rules anyway. That leaves a spot open for a daily/weekly megathread for some other subjects. Or create the codes ribbon its own daily/weekly scheduled article together with another ones and keep the
Animal Crossing Items For Sale questions thread. I feel those threads are nice and all, but the fact that they take precedence over important news or events is weird.
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