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by esdi 5771 days ago
You're so right. I used to think reddit had deteriorated until I discovered subreddits. Some subreddits have very high quality and relevant content.
2 comments

Reddit has to solve this problem if they want to grow. The fact that "unsubscribe to front page" is the best advice for new users is ridiculous. They would be much stickier if they could figure a way to automatically determine what subreddits would appeal to a person.

I can't believe "beg for money" was higher on their idea list.

That's probably good advice businesswise, but as a user I sort of like that people aren't really thrown into subreddits. The fact that the smaller ones (not on the front page by default) only have people who went out of their way to find them keeps them a little higher quality imo, and keeps the influx of new users at a manageable pace.
I see where you're coming from, but "new users should have a worse experience than those who've cracked the code" is not a viable long term strategy.
Absolutely. Most who complain about Reddit just haven't discovered or don't use the subreddit feature.

Rule #1: Unsubscribe from the Front Page reddit, and Politics and Atheism (even if you're atheist) subreddits if you're subscribed to them.

Then go find the good ones.