Why Forums Are Better For DnD Than Social Media & Discord

Why Forums Are Better For DnD Than Social Media & Discord

In 2025 I promised myself to spend more time on D&D forums and less on social media.

We all know the issues with social media, so I won’t go into them here. Instead, I want to highlight the benefits of forums for roleplaying games in general, and Dungeons & Dragons in particular.

Overall, I find internet forums a much better place to have discussions about my favourite roleplaying games.

There are a number of reasons for this and this post will go through them and hopefully convince you that your time is better spent on forums than social media platforms, or even on Discord.

See below for a list of still-active forums.

Quality

Overall, the discussions on forums are of a much higher quality than that on social media.

On social media you tend to get the same five arguments going around and around and they always end up the same way: in a toxic mess.

Discoveries

I cannot tell you how many times I have found amazing material in old forum posts that I can use for my own D&D campaigns. One of the most recent being a whole list of material from the early 2000s on making the Night Below Boxed Set campaign even better than it is.

Rabbit Holes

One of the great parts about reading forums, especially some of the older posts, is that it will lead you down multiple rabbit holes of interesting ideas, allowing you to discover new ways to do something or just something pretty damn cool.

Threaded Discussions

The discussions on forums are easier to follow along with. Especially when compared to the chaos of social media posts.

You can respond to any post, or part thereof, that you choose to, making it super clear what you are responding to when making a point.

Threaded comments in a forum post

Searchable Archives

Forums hang on to their posts and responses in an easily searchable format. If you have ever tried to find a particular social media post you know this pain. Forums make finding a lost post simple.

Focused Communities

Forums are based on a particular topic, so those who come to them are at least somewhat interested in, if not passionate about, that topic.

This creates communities that are focused on that one topic (and perhaps several sub topics).

Mix this with the need to sign up before you can access the forum, and you have a dedicated group of people who actually want to be there and contribute to the discussion.

Detailed Posts

Users of forums often write longer and more detailed posts, which is perfect for discussing play logs, complex rules and topics, and even homebrew content.

Post length in a forum post

Formatting Options

Often the posts are much easier to read due to more formatting options for forum posts compared to what social platforms offer. In itself this isn’t a huge deal, but together with how forums are structured this makes life easier.

Dedicated Subsections

Broader topics can be, and often are, broken down into sub-topics with their own sections. This can be a boon to users as they can zoom in on the exact subject they are interested in.

Sub-Sections in a forum

Focused Moderation

Forums tend to have dedicated moderators that weed out spam and keep forums civil. Each has their own guidelines you need to abide by, but this keeps the forum a much friendlier and better place than most social platforms.

Reduced Trolls/Spam

The above reduces trolls and spam a great deal. Together with the fact that forums are not seen as high-traffic platforms any more, they are a much better place to be mentally and for the hobby you are interested in.

Play-by-Post Gaming

Forums can be used for play-by-post gaming, which is a great medium for a roleplaying game.

Speaking of gaming, have you signed up to my 1-hour long online sessions of OSE dungeon crawl yet? Dozens of gamers already have – come and join them! I would love to have you at the table. 

Focused Audience

As mentioned previously, forums are built with a particular topic in mind, and that lends itself to having a very focused audience who has a love for that particular topic.

Collaborative Projects

Due to the scope of forums and how much you can write in them, it can lend itself to spawning collaborative projects between members.

Minimized Noise

Forums typically lack the constant stream of unrelenting memes, trending posts, or advertisements that are found on social media platforms.

The last point is super important. Forums are there for the members. Social platforms are there to benefit their owners by selling your data to advertisers. Not to mention, without ads, forums are just a cleaner environment.

Community Bonds

Bonds can form between members which forms into a wider community very easily within a forum setting.

Less Algorithm Influence

You don’t need to worry about any algorithm burying your post. Members decide if a post becomes popular or not.

Overall

Forums provide a structured, lasting, and dedicated environment that is better suited for the deep and focused engagement roleplaying games like D&D require.

A List of TTRPG Forums Still Active

The Piazza
Giant in the Playground
Dragonsfoot
RPG.Net
THE RPG Site
RPG Pub
EN World

Over to You

Do you still visit forums? Is this something you may do in the future? Let me know in the comments below.

While You’re Here…

Since 2021 I have been publishing d12 Monthly, a monthly zine, which has a ton of articles for any edition of Dungeons and Dragons.

Printed copies are available in my store. The PDF is available on DriveThruRPG and you can get both, plus support my work, via my Patreon.

I will also be releasing some more products in the near future.

Feel free to reach out to me on Twitter or my contact page any time.


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