Friday, September 19, 2025

Reflections on the Revolution in Social Media

I'm sorry to disappoint you, but, no, this is not that kind of post. I'm not here to rant nor to make reference to current events. Rather, I'm here to express some mild frustration with the fact that I'm obviously old and out of touch and have expectations about the way people engage with social media that are woefully out of date. And, by "social media," I mostly long form, online writing of the sort I produce on a regular basis rather than all those other sites where I have no presence whatsoever.

I recently wrote about the origins of Grognardia. While doing so, I was reminded of the early days of not just this blog but many others from the early days of the Old School Renaissance, many of which no longer exist. One of the things I most enjoyed about those early days – and that I miss nowadays – are the conversations that were engendered. On almost every blog, hardly a post went by without some comments, often many. These comments were a big part of what made reading blogs so compelling to me. Readers were actively engaged with what was being written and that regularly led to unexpectedly thoughtful and insightful discussions. 

Similarly, blogs engaged with one another. There was a lot of cross-pollination in those days – as well as spirited argument. One of the reasons I look back so fondly on those early days is that there really was a sense that the OSR was a genuine community. That's a word I don't use lightly and indeed usually get suspicious anytime some makes use of it, but, in this case, I think it's apt. Even though we didn't always agree with one on specifics and occasionally got sidetracked by ultimately pointless disagreements, there was still a sense that we were all pulling in a similar, if not necessarily, the same direction.

Since I returned to blogging a little over five years ago, I feel like Rip Van Winkle. Granted, I was away nearly eight years, twice the length of time I had been blogging before I stopped. A lot had happened in the meantime, most significantly the rise of all manner of other platforms for online discussion. They all, in various ways, seem to have played a role in taking the focus away from blogs. That community feeling I once had seems largely to have evaporated, or at least to have shifted elsewhere. The vibrant engagement and thoughtful discussion that I so loved seem to be gone.

I bring all this up, because, as you know, I'm now posting regularly on three different platforms: this one, Substack, and Patreon. Each one has its own merits and flaws; each one allows me to do something slightly different. However, what's lacking in all three of them is much engagement with readers. I frequently feel as if it's the same four or five people who have anything to say and, while I'm grateful for such feedback, it's a far cry from what used to be commonplace on even the smallest of blogs. Has the center of gravity just shifted elsewhere, to sites and platforms I don't use? Is that what's happened?

Blogger, to be frank, is old and creaky. The only reason I still use it is that Grognardia has been on Blogger for seventeen years and the thought of transferring it, in whole or in part, to another site fills me with dread. I'm approaching 5000 posts and 80,000 comments, not to mention untold numbers of links into the site from places Wikipedia. Trying to move Grognardia to a more modern blogging platform is more than I can imagine doing. The task would be monumental and probably not worth the effort in the end.

At the same time, my experience with Substack has laid bare just how awful Blogger is. I used to be able to look at Grognardia's stats through Blogger and get a good sense of how many people were reading what posts and where they were coming from. I could also see what other sites were linking to Grognardia. All of this helped me to better engage with readers here and elsewhere and contributed to that sense of being part of a larger conversation about topics of mutual interest. In the last few months, that's proven even more difficult, as the stats seem implausible, thanks to being overwhelmed by bots.

Substack is, in this regard, so much better. I know exactly how many people are reading my posts and who's sharing them and where. Plus, the software is so much more user friendly and attractive than Blogger. I still get very little in the way of comments on my posts, but at least I know that people are reading what I write, which is something. Part of me just wants to shift over to Substack entirely, but I'm too wedded to Grognardia as it currently exists to do that. Plus, I have no more faith that it'll still exist in five years than I do that Blogger will. 

That leaves Patreon, whose primary virtue, if I'm being honest, is that I make a little money from my writing. Whether people read what I write is only a little clearer than on Blogger but I assume that, if people are willing to pay for it, they must be enjoying it. That's gratifying, of course, and I'd be lying if I didn't say I wished more fans of my work weren't patrons, but it's still nothing like what I remember from the height of the OSR during Grognardia's First Age. Sure, I'd love to have so many patrons I could make an actual living solely off blogging, but, barring that, I'd settle for a better sense that people enjoy what I'm doing and make use of it in some fashion. No writer wants to feel as if he's shouting into the void.

This post came out a little more serious than I’d planned, but I want to be clear: I have no intention of shutting down Grognardia nor of giving up writing. If you’ve been following along on Substack or Patreon, you already know I’ve got plenty of irons in the fire and even here on Grognardia I feel like I’ve been producing more (and better) posts than I have in a long while. Writing is something I do because I need to and I’d keep at it even if no one else were paying attention. That said, it’s always more rewarding when the words I put out into the world spark conversation, reflection, or even just a bit of appreciation. I won’t pretend I don’t sometimes wish I saw more of that.

Such is life, I suppose. Back to the salt mines!

53 comments:

  1. I’ve only just started reading blogs - got an rss feed set up after giving up on twitter earlier this year. I doubt that’s a common thing, but i’m having a great time (and am enjoying grognardia!)

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  2. "I'm sorry to disappoint you, but, no, this is not that kind of post."

    lol

    I don't have any special expertise in social media, but here are some thoughts fwiw:

    In your circumstance, I don't think traffic and comments are a function of choosing the right platform. Your natural audience are other grognards like us. So blogs and Blogger are just fine. As proof of that: other platforms like Substack and Patreon aren't getting you more comments.

    X (formerly twitter) is the rage with younger folk, but that isn't your audience and your work is best expressed in long form.

    So, if you can suffer the feeble analytics, I'd humbly recommend that you stay here and in fact, stop watering down your efforts by also posting to Substack. Why make it harder for us to find and comment on your stuff?

    To your point about diminished hits and comments: This isn't about the platform. I believe it's about the lifecycle of the OSR. That energy is common in the beginning of a movement. We're not there anymore. I don't think there is a lively community of the OSR that is happening elsewhere and can't find you. I don't say this to discourage you; obviously I want to keep reading your stuff.

    Finally: in terms of economics: Blog subscriptions is a hard model. I'd humbly suggest you have ads on your blog (at least trial it to see if it's acceptable to you. It will also give you more analytics to look at). And to do what you're already doing: selling books collecting your fine writing. You might also consider (paid?) guest appearances at gaming conventions, especially those that cater to us grognard types. At these conventions, you could also sell your books and games.

    Good luck!

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    1. I appreciate your taking the time to comment and offer suggestions, especially about "splitting the party" when it comes to my writing. It's definitely something I'll give more thought to in the months ahead, as I look toward 2026 and beyond.

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    2. Well said. I have never understood blog analytics and it's probably a reflection of my age or general fear of change but I prefer the blog for my Grognardia fix.

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    3. I understand the desire to monetize but please avoid the advertisement approach—some sites, particularly blogs (thinking about Tenkar’s Tavern here) are nearly unreadable thanks to the ads.

      Perhaps that’s another factor in the move away from blogs?

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    4. I won't be doing ads for the simple reason that they look terrible on a site. That's probably a dumb decision from an economic perspective, but I don't want to clutter up the blog with ads.

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  3. Good Afternoon, James.

    May this note find you, your family, and all the other Grognards hereabouts healthy and well.

    I apologise for failing to be a sufficiently good comrade, as for many years now I have merely consumed your writing, without making a reciprocal contribution.

    When the Covid pandemic took hold, due to an underlying health condition, I had to give up my academic work at the University of Oxford (as well as all physical contact with friends and family). Grognardia (both your posts and the readerr discussions) gave focus to my suddently untethered mind .. exemplifying a way to continue Philosophy for the public good, allowing me to perceive a way of being useful and creative rather than unproductive, and feel connected to a community of shared values rather than remain otherwise isolated.

    During the subsequent years .. upon these communal Grognardia posts, comments, debates, and discussions .. I have laboured to reacquaint myself with the roots of our hobby, and design new outgrowths .. both playable, and scholarly.

    It is no exaggeration that the intelligence, compassion, and Love shown throughout the various aspects of this blog not only enabled that worthwhile activity, but helped save my Soul .. as well as my Mind and Heart .. at a most critical time of my life.

    Thank You, James .. and everyone who has contributed to Grognardia thoughout the years.

    There have been so many times that I have thought to comment, but at the moment the stream of conversation seemed so wide in diversity of thought, and deep in Wisdom that I found it difficult (and a bit intimidating despite the kind atmosphere) to jump right in (I always loathed diving when learning to swim). I apologise for my timidity.

    Perhaps, now that I have made the initial plunge, I will be brave enough to write again .. but, even should I not, may you all know how vitally important is your contribution to Grognardia.

    With Humble Respect,
    M.

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    1. That's very kind of you to say. Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I am so pleased to know that my writing has been of benefit to you.

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  4. I think it’s just a shift all over the internet. People on the RPG scene have largely abandoned blogs and forums in favour of mainly Discord I guess? And other immediate (and immediately forgotten) social media with chats and shorts and whatnot? What remains on blogs or forums is just grumpy grognards who actually prefer text longer that three sentences, and there’s not many of them in this era of brainrot.

    Meaning: I don’t think it’s you, you’re just experiencing the same thing as everyone else - extreme shortening of everyone’s attention span.

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    1. Yep. I am utterly baffled as to why so many people on the internet would prefer to have D&D conversations that vanish rather than remain available. The wealth of well over 20 years' insight on dragonsfoot (for example) is invaluable. Why would anyone NOT want that and instead trade it for ephemeral comments that fade away?

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    2. Convenience, I think, plus the fundamental transient literacy of the middle generations. Phonics have been proudly eliminated from the English language curriculum since about 1993, if not earlier: we've metriculated two full generations of adaptive bad readers.

      Put another way: TikTok just makes more sense than the written word for the vast majority of the population.

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    3. Another downside to forums and blogs is they're just not as enjoyable to use on phones.

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    4. So many online communities have vanished into private or semi-private Discord servers, where, my experience, they tend to shatter as different cliques withdraw into hidden servers. The community members who stay behind find themselves unable to interact in any substantial way because the software is seemingly designed to make it difficult to read or write lengthy texts (even this post would be considered lengthy on Discord), and the software encourages users to toggle back and forth between a huge number of servers which are sending out alerts all at once. It's been a real disaster.

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  5. Hey James, I've always loved your blog but don't always have time to read everything and I usually see comments that say most of what I would.

    As for my interests, I play DND 5e and am mostly interested in that, but prefer an old school feel (the pathetic aesthetic, resource management, exploration, emergent play, rulings not rules, etc...)

    I like content on D&D, particularly reviews of obscure settings, modules or zines that may interest me. The Hill Cantons, Thousand Thousand Islands, Carcosa, the Ultraviolet Grasslands, Jorune, Tekumel, Metamorphosis Alpha, and ESPECIALLY the Alphabet Soup era D&D modules from 1e, 2e, and basic as well as anything Judges Guild.

    I sometimes like reading about Weird fiction like Lovecraft, Smith, Howard, Dunsany, Chambers, Bierce, Poe, Hodgson, James, etc... Mostly I want better ways to integrate those into a D&D game. If read about movies or videos games about those things for the same reason...to find stuff to swipe for D&D.

    I skim the actual play stuff and sometimes read the Tekumel one.

    I like nostalgic stuff so old school video games (Atari, apple pie, coin op arcade...) interests me.

    I LOVE fantasy and sci fi movies, real or animated. Just finished Scavengers Reign and it was incredible. (As a hard sci fi buff, you should check it out, really!)

    Anyway hope that helps.

    As far as social media I read you, Sly Flourish, and other than that it's FB or Discord (and Discord mainly for my friends' RPG groups and my own.)

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  6. I’m just going to leave a comment here to show my appreciation because I read almost every post you put out but generally don’t have anything to add. Thanks!

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  7. I think Daddy Rolled a 1 (Martin) is hands down the greatest vlogger of the OSR (and there are many), going strong with 3+ hours of deep research content, applied to current gameplay per week. His comment section is terrific, with tons of surviving designers from the 70s dropping in from time to time.


    This is a guy who clearly appreciates the written word: many of his segments involve him showing and reciting long quotes from forgotten rules from various editions. He plays B/X with a long ongoing campaign of five years or so, with PCs who progress so slowly that I believe they are at level 3 or 4 by now. He uses the hireling and henchman tables, he knows the typos in level names. He has played Braunstein with one of its original referees. This is a man who clearly deeply adores the written word and all arcana related to the Game.

    He has his character sheets from 7th grade. He has the boxes and his original crayon for the dice that came with the Moldvay Box (unused, even, as he did not want to damage his dice with crayon!!!)

    And his blog is a blasted wasteland. To my knowledge, he hasn't commented here, or at least not frequently.

    I think engagement has shifted (in my opinion unfortunately) away from written media as the primary channel, despite the primary context of the game depending on the written word. However, I think the OSR is more lively than every before, because D&D has become wholly given over to its devils, and has driven off - almost entirely - players who intuit that The Game(TM) is no longer The Game.

    I am often frustrated by the Triumvirate of the Maliszewskiverse: sometimes I can't log-in to one, other times I end up commenting at a mirror, many times I miss a post - dwelling fully in Grognardia is on occasion a fractured thing - what T.S. Eliot named "a heap of broken images." - yet even Eliot finds deep meaning in the partial, shattered view, and furthermore, the interintroversional conversation that takes place within James himself is beautifully illustrated in the multi-channel interlocking frequencies of the Three.

    The OSR is amplified - it is greater, more robust and esoteric, more angled and more pervasive - in these the Latter Days. I for one, have never been more content - nor more overwhelmed nor more oft aggravated - by the wealth of content laid throughout the dungeoncrawl of life. We're just leveling up, and, contrary to the skinsuit ethic of the Now, that means that things are about to get a whole lot more difficult.

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    1. I've often toyed with the idea of doing something video-oriented but the truth is that I lacked skills and temperament for that sort of thing, so I'm sticking with what I know, however frustrating it can be at times.

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  8. I bet you'll be pretty gratified when you publish those books of old Grognardia posts. I'm guessing they'll sell well. I started reading in late 2008 or maybe it was 2009. I was bummed when it went away in 2012, and overjoyed when it came back. It doesn't matter how the Internet morphs, what matters is good ideas, and you've got them in spades. I hope you pace yourself and take breathers. All work and no play you know ..

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  9. I miss those days. The decline of the blogs and forums coincides with my decline in gaming.

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  10. Hi James, I think I started reading you in 2021 when I began my crawl out of the 30 year deep freeze to actually playing RPGs again. I very rarely comment but totally appreciate your writing, reading probably most of your posts over my coffee in the morning (on a PC monitor - I work from home), as maybe I'd have read a newspaper in the long ago.
    I've read a few of your Patreon posts as I love the sound of your Dreamlands setting, but only really follow it from here. I do subscribe to yours and other substacks but rarely read as that appears in my inbox which is a scary place which tells me I have literally thousands of unread mail. I swore off social media years ago - I love long form blogs. Thanks for putting out so much great and thoughtful content! Long live Grognardia!

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  11. Keep on trucking! I check in every day to see what you have posted.

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  12. So, my free commentary, which is probably about all it's worth, really:

    Substack in general feels somewhat unfriendly to me. The design is, perhaps, intimidating. In addition, what you are posting there is material on which I do not feel qualified to comment.

    Patreon is great, but since I can't afford to give anyone even a dollar a month at the moment, and since comments there require posters to be subscribing, paying members, I can't comment there even if I were inclined to.

    Blogspot is my favorite platform, of those I've used since Livejournal collapsed (and yes, I do still maintain a Dreamspace account, even if I only use it very rarely now). It's always felt the most welcoming as a platform. Which is not to say that it is anything like perfect: I'd like to see an expanding window for entering comments, automated markup tools such as italicizing/bolding highlighted text, and a better - or any - comment preview, for example. That said, I've been tapering off in my use of it, and now tend to comment only when I feel I have something unusually compelling to share - and since I limit my engagement to instances where I feel like I really want to engage in a conversation, that also means that if I get no engagement in turn I feel like I've been left hanging. Which is not to say that anyone owes me that return engagement just because I typed some words, but it does mean that my emotional response is just a little bit dimmed the next time. I suspect that, to some degree, that's the case with everyone, and since it would be impossible or at least nontrivially inconvenient to engage with every comment, that may be at least a part of the inevitable decline over time that any particular blogger is going to see. Of course there will be some who have other reasons for continuing to participate, which is probably why you end up seeing the same few faces after a while.

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    1. "One of the things I most enjoyed about those early days – and that I miss nowadays – are the conversations that were engendered. On almost every blog, hardly a post went by without some comments, often many. These comments were a big part of what made reading blogs so compelling to me."

      faoladh makes an excellent point, James. I do see less comments from you in the comment sections today than can be found in the early years of Grognardia.

      For example, your last post, Pulp Fantasy Library from 9/17, has no comments from you in the comment section. This isn't meant to scold or shame you. I'm not looking for more comments from you but if *you* want more conversations and community, maybe you could shift to one less post per week to allow yourself the time to respond more in the comments, to engender the conversations you're seeking?

      "Be the change you want to see in the world," and all that. :)

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    2. @Etrimyn Cat: Exactly. A conversation goes both ways, and the blog host's involvement, as every successful host of any sort knows, has a great bearing on the character of the hosting. It is, of course, not a simple matter to find the balance between what one is seeking in the conversation and the effort required to maintain that level of conversation, but that's part of the gig, as it were.

      I do think that Grognardia has a certain advantage here over new blogs, even new ones by James, in that it comes with a certain built-in audience at this point based in part on its deserved reputation for excellent ideas, wide applicability within its general subject, and so on, but also just the long effort James has put into it, leading to a fairly deep well of articles for new readers to draw on and become hooked like the rest of us. I can think of several blogs from the older days, probably most notoriously Scott Driver's Huge Ruined Pile (and the several different blog names the creator used before he'd get bored and delete everything), that despite excellent, even brilliant, ideas hamstrung themselves by not paying even the slightest care to simply letting people find them, and even changing platforms once they did (Huge Ruined Pile had a blogspot incarnation and at least one wordpress one, each with different URLs, which doesn't even account for the names he used before, like World of Thool, Mandragora: The Mandrake March and so on).

      As usual, I'm drifting from the point - damn the lack of preview for comments - so I'll stop there.

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    3. Oh, right, my point: these are two opposing forces affecting blogs over time was what I was getting at.

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  13. Jim Hodges----
    I don't do social media but every day I come read Grognardia, because unlike most social media sites/activity, Grognardia is worth my time, makes me feel good, informs me, stirs my nerdly nostalgia, and does it all with intelligence rare online. May you ever enjoy doing this, and long may Grognardia continue!

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    1. +1 and all the upvotes, thumbs up and hearts to this!😀

      And as other people have said, the content on substack is game design stuff. By it's very nature it's not going to get as much commentary from the hoi polloi like me who have never published a dang thing.

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    2. Same here, re: no social media. I cancelled my FB account several years ago and am happier for it.
      Grognarfia is my only form of “social internet interaction “.
      And man do I appreciate it!

      I think the best praise I can give this blog is that it has inspired many awesome game sessions and even a couple campaigns. Just great, thought provoking material.

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    3. As is often the case, JH has said what I wanted to say. I will add, "social" media is a cancer that has manifestly *not* made the world a better place, and that's not bitterness speaking because I never had any accounts to cancel, nor am I so old that it's simple get-off-my-lawnism. But Grognardia is part of my morning coffee, every day (except weekends), since before the eight-year hiatus (was it eight years? Crom... one forgets how the years pile up). I never posted until this year, however, and still choose to do so anonymously as I have an allergy to any sort of online identity. Grognardia is an active part of my life - that's perhaps the highest praise I can give.

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  14. Grognardia might not be a daily read for me, but I make sure to check it out at least weekly, as the content is quality and has a character that is unique in this era of the net. Please know your labours are appreciated!

    - A Forever DM

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  15. I do comment occaisonally, and you do respond, which is nice. but most of the time, people have already said what I am trying to, or the conversation has moved on.

    I notice on a lot of things, any subject I care about, there are 30 people who know more, have more time, do more, and don't feel like explaining to a tourist what they mean. so why engage? I browse, take some information, and stay out of it.

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  16. Rarely comment here, but I check out Grognardia at least once a week. Yeah, the online world has shifted, and probably will shift again. And yeah, I keep my own blog going (mainly for myself) because it would be too much of a pain in the keister to try and move it elsewhere.

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  17. Is discord cheaper than a forum or is just insensate barbarity?

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    1. It's both!
      -a different Anonymous

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  18. I suppose the other place where conversation/community has partially migrated is the world of podcasts. I do hugely appreciate the high quality long-form writing here, and the comments on the articles (I'm always impressed with just how much engagement you get, James), but I also listen to pods like The Grognard Files, an excellent example from the UK, which is currently celebrating its tenth anniversary (as with Grognardia, I do think the importance of heritage and a huge archive should not be underestimated, regardless of the medium).

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    1. The migration to podcasts is very frustrating for me. I can't commit to spending 30-60 minutes listening to one, especially as really the only time I could listen to them is during work time. Other times of day I am either someplace I can spend a few minutes browsing on my phone (quietly) or two evenings a week, I drag my laptop to our bedroom and bang away on it while my wife watches TV, so again, I need to be quiet.

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    2. I know what you mean. When I'm in the office, I have quite a long drive to work so I manage to listen to some then. When working from home, I listen to them when I take my lunchtime walk. But outside of those times, it's music or nothing.

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  19. I probably have only made a half dozen comments, but I have read your entire blog. Covid found me isolated, and gave me the time to refamiliarise myself with my old passion and hobby of D&D, which led me to this enormous rabbit hole that is Grognardia. Your recollections of your youth, and your TSR fanboyism sounded very much like my own,at least in tone if not the particulars,and encouraged me to continue reading on topics with which I am unfamiliar, like all the pulp fiction and early 80's non TSR games. My horizons have been made broader, and my heart fuller with your posts, and I thank you!

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  20. I post tons of long form material on my discord. One just has to break it up into serial posts.

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  21. As one of those who had a blog back then, and participated happily in those conversation, I understand you feeling that something has shifted.

    I don't know what it is people are doing these days, but long(er) form writing in blog format is still something I like, even though the conversation has faded. I have actually considered writing about games and games played again, but like you say Blogger isn't very inviting these days.

    I do still read, and comment once in a while. It's good to have you around.

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  22. Speaking of bots, even if this blog hadn't been the catalyst for my getting into the OSR I would still have fond memories of it for the truly insane bot comment I found a couple years ago on one of your posts, which claimed to be selling a way to become a VAMPIRE (capitalization not mine). Still makes me chuckle to this day.

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  23. I think the blogger site is worth persevering with. It's your base and has a lot of Fans. Don't get me wrong, I'm a patreon subscriber but your blog is the meat in the sandwich. I see you're drawn by the metrics and reposting stats, but consider ads and keep the blog going... It's grognardia FFS!

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  24. I contribute modestly to you via Patreon because I think this blog is worth supporting, but I honestly don't read the Patreon content often and only go to the Substack content when you link to it here. (This is just to add another data point to the others above who argue against splitting your work across different fora.) Blogger may not be ideal, but it's where your history is. And for my eyes, the actual layout here is much more pleasant to read, without the glaring white background.

    One suggestion: add a recent-comments widget to this blog. Otherwise, I don't think anyone but you (being the moderator) see when older posts are being actively commented on. I will browse your front page to see if any of the posts there have had their number of comments increase, but after they go into the "older posts" they're pretty much dead to me, unless I'm going in search of a particular article. And so conversation on old posts never revives.

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    1. I subscribe to a comment feed so I see them all.

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    2. That hasn’t worked for me so far. Don’t the fed comments appear elsewhere, though, like your e-mail? That still means having to look elsewhere, rather than just on this blog. A recent-comments widget would show up here.

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    3. That was me earlier. I read using inoreader with this feed for comments:

      http://grognardia.blogspot.com/feeds/comments/default

      That feed may work other places too.

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    4. Thanks. I’ll take a look. I’ve never used an RSS reader before; it might be about time, though I rather like the distinct looks of various blogs. I suppose it can be used to just see if I have missed anything, and then link back to the original source.

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    5. When I reply, I actually pull up the blog. Sometimes I will read the post and its comments in the blog rather than in inoreader. But inoreader is great for tracking new content.

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  25. Oops, that last post was from Bonnacon. I just noticed after hitting "Publish" that Blogger signed me out. Arrgghh.

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    1. I’m close to giving up on signing in.

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