Be proud! Without your activity others might leave too. Which would cause more people to leave. And pretty soon it will all be dead and users back in the commercial grip of whatever social network that is pushed on us.
That's true, I choose to believe that nagging gamedev newbies to use version control and posting photos of random yarn tangles is officially a public service. Thank you for the new perspective 🫡
Wow, that makes me feel better in perspective. I seem to have around 400 comments over a two month period. I have always been kinda self conscious and thought I comment too much, though, at the time of commenting, restraint is hard.
Makes me wonder how many conversations you and I have had, since I don't really pay attention to usernames unless someone irritates me. I know you're the lemmings.world guy, (you mentioned it in a recent comment) and we've interacted at least once over that.
I'm a power commenter though, I tend to sort my new, and my approach is "think of something to say, c'mon, you can do it...". In the initial weeks I was checking in maybe once an hour and dropping something like 50-100 comments/day. This basically was my recreation for a few weeks. But I did burn myself out and had to scale back to something more sustainable, and I now use it at just about the same level as I used to use reddit.
Anyways, just click my name over there to see my stats.
Mine are similar. 227 posts and 1.44K comments since 09/2021. Although about 800 of these came from explaining how Lemmy works and answering questions during the API exodus ^^
Heh, might seem that way, but I somehow also manage to work and take care of my child. And also work on my side projects (like Lemmy bots and Lemmy api). Though I don't sleep very much if you were wondering.
About a month on this account. 0 posts, 65 comments
I'm about as active here as I was on reddit. What surprised me more though was how effortlessly Lemmy has mostly replaced Reddit for me. I check reddit once or twice a day, just to scan for anything I missed, but I honestly haven't missed much.
Most of the subs I regularly checked were tech related, and those all moved over here fairly quickly. So it was pretty seamless.