Its a rough estimate, yes, but I don’t think its an unreasonable one. I mean, one of the biggest Lemmy instances (.ml) is named for a political ideology. Unless you’re defederating from all of the biggest instances, politics will make up a majority of the active content available.
Regardless, thats besides the point. The point is the lack of non-politics content. I can’t find content for Counter-Strike, or War Thunder, or Dota. Even Minecraft gets almost nothing, and its likely the most played game in the world. I know there is some other niches out there, but I’m using those as examples because they’re all massive, multiplayer focused games, with content that lends itself to discussion or sharing, that I regularly have to go back to Reddit for to follow. Lemmy is lucky to get a post a week from all of them combined. If users can’t find discussion on things they’re interested in, at best they’ll end up looking at broad-appeal communities from top or active (like politics) and at worst, they’ll just leave.
Edit: I just did a quick check on my instance’s active feed. Of the top 20 results, 10 were undeniably political, and two more were debatably so. So for a more tame instance, around 55% of content being politics is a realistic estimate. I also checked Lemmy.ml, since its one of the main instances new users are directed to, and it was 14 political to 6 not, so 70% there.
At time of writing this comment, CS2 is most active on Steam, Dota is second, and War Thunder is 16th. Even if you write CS2 off for having too many bots, (which is fair,) the other two are still very active and very popular.
Its a rough estimate, yes, but I don’t think its an unreasonable one. I mean, one of the biggest Lemmy instances (.ml) is named for a political ideology. Unless you’re defederating from all of the biggest instances, politics will make up a majority of the active content available.
Regardless, thats besides the point. The point is the lack of non-politics content. I can’t find content for Counter-Strike, or War Thunder, or Dota. Even Minecraft gets almost nothing, and its likely the most played game in the world. I know there is some other niches out there, but I’m using those as examples because they’re all massive, multiplayer focused games, with content that lends itself to discussion or sharing, that I regularly have to go back to Reddit for to follow. Lemmy is lucky to get a post a week from all of them combined. If users can’t find discussion on things they’re interested in, at best they’ll end up looking at broad-appeal communities from top or active (like politics) and at worst, they’ll just leave.
Edit: I just did a quick check on my instance’s active feed. Of the top 20 results, 10 were undeniably political, and two more were debatably so. So for a more tame instance, around 55% of content being politics is a realistic estimate. I also checked Lemmy.ml, since its one of the main instances new users are directed to, and it was 14 political to 6 not, so 70% there.
Are those three still that popular? I’m a League of Legends player, and the game is much less active than let’s say 5 years ago.
!stardewvalley@lemm.ee or !pokemonTCGM@crazypeople.online on the other hand are quite active here
At time of writing this comment, CS2 is most active on Steam, Dota is second, and War Thunder is 16th. Even if you write CS2 off for having too many bots, (which is fair,) the other two are still very active and very popular.
I guess the overlap between those games populations and Lemmy is quite small.
When you think about it, !Football@lemm.ee isn’t that active for the most popular sport on the planet