avatar! wrote:jb wrote:Adam Corn wrote:For a while now there has been a small number of members here (VERY few - "small number" almost overstates it) who have posted a proportionately very high number of off-topic or no-substance posts.
I couldn't have said it better myself and I feel exactly the same way.
Well then, you should get rid of the "open topic" forum, and it make it clear that this site is only for soundtracks. You may want to get rid of "gaming" too, since that is a bit off-topic as well. Or maybe you want to keep gaming and add "movies", and other categories. At any rate, it's your call, but I feel over the years this site has become a husk of what it once was. If people don't feel welcome, why would they join this forum? I think alienating two people that have contributed much to this forum (myself and Ashley) is not exactly conducive to such a small niche place, but whatever.
I've actually advocated getting rid of the Open Topic forum because it just seems to invite, well, open topic discussion. Which normally isn't a bad thing but has been basically ruined by prattle and bloviated posts over the last 5 years. There are a few people that post here that I feel use open topic as a personal blog or notepad or idea dartboard and ... that's just not what it is.
I've been here for a very long time so I think me and Adam are on similar pages. I think ultimately this is just a generational gap. 15-20 years ago sites like this, Cloud's Villa, gmrdatabase, Chudah's Corner, RPGFan, SlightlyDark were essentially gateways into an incredibly small, niche hobby that was expensive, time-consuming, and difficult to navigate. Those barriers no longer exist today due to changing technologies, changes in consumer consumption, and even to some extent some of those same early "players" moving on and doing bigger and better things, like VGMDB, SEMO, etc.
Is this site smaller and less trafficked than it used to be? Are there less users here than back when I started? Is there less activity in the marketplace? For sure, on all counts. Is it something that needs to be addressed or remedied? I personally don't think so, or at least not much more than what Adam has already done over the last couple years (modern forum layout, modern web design, still posts reviews, at one point at least maintained a few social media accounts).
I think there is a pretty big generational gap between the "old" vs. the "new" in that the older generation are consumers of content and the newer generations are engagers of content. I see this a lot in gaming right now.
At the end of the day, this is Adam's site and we're all just visitors on it.