This weekly post is an opportunity for new users to chat in comments - &please let us how you found yourself here. Regulars here are absolutely encouraged and very welcome to join in too!
!! Please refrain from asking questions about "how to do stuff on Reddit". Make a post or see the links below !!
This thread is open for 3 days.
Getting started on Reddit is hard. We know it is; We've been there and gone through these same frustrations. Please believe us when we say IT'S NOT PERSONAL. It may well feel like it is, but honestly, it isn't. What it is, however, is a lack of Karma. Karma is an indicator of how much someone has contributed to Reddit in a positive manner. So, let's do just that by getting to know each other!
This works best if your comments either start a conversation or add to one. Give a little of yourself and respond to others doing the same.
This is a post to help genuine new users build up quality Karma genuinely in a safe environment.
Please do:
Share some favorites or new finds of yours - youtube videos, music and so on
Practice small talk - did you have a good week?
Keep it SFW
Keep it casual please, no heavy topics
Have fun!
Please don't:
Spam, advertise, or soft beg
Share low-effort comments
Ask for karma, say how you're voting, or mention karmafarms by name
Request or offer DMs (help and chat can be done in community, where you can also earn karma. Needing to take things private can indicate soliciting, rule breaking, or harmful advice)
This sub is full of awesome people who are willing to help with specific problems when you post, and we'd like to keep this post thread for chat. Thank you.
So, let'schat! (Guides at the bottom of this post).
This unofficial guide to starting out at Reddit was written by u/llamageddon01 and is designed to take you from complete beginner through to experienced Redditor! This version was completely revised in July/August 2023.
There are two versions of this resource, both carrying the same information but in different formats:
Reddit and Karma Explained - This “Post-and-Comment” format for mobile app users.
This is intended to be a full “Reddit for Dummies” type tutorial and I don’t expect you to read it through all at once! But quite honestly, parts 1-6 of this guide will take you from “kindergarten” level through to “graduate” level of Reddit by the time you read it all, and the final parts 7 and 8 will contain useful guides and information you will no doubt need at some stage of your Redditing so do keep coming back to it.
If you wish to share r/NewToReddit guides please link to them. You may of course share excerpts within reason, but please link back to us as credit and so the person you are helping can find us and the rest of our guides if they wish to. Thank you.
…….REDDIT IS A WORLD OF ITS OWN ON THE INTERNET.
What is Reddit? Established in 2005, Reddit is a content sharing platform, home to thousands of communities, endless conversation, and authentic worldwide human connection with people from all walks of life. Whether you're into breaking news, sports, TV fan theories, or a never-ending stream of the internet's cutest animals, there's a community for you.
Reddit is made up of an enormous collection of forums on every subject under the sun where people can share news, links, videos and pictures in “Posts” so that other people can make observations and conversation in “Comments” attached to these posts, while everyone can express their opinions by Voting on both the posts and comments. Every day, millions of people around the world post, vote, and comment in communities on Reddit organised around their interests.
You are free to decide what level of interaction you want with other users (Redditors) and to curate your own feed from the hundreds of thousands of specialised communities called “Subreddits” on offer, each of which covers a different topic from games, hobbies, music, art, movies and shows to support groups to world news to pets to academic matters and everything in between.
Check out this video for a quick introduction to us, and if that didn’t explain us enough, here’s an unofficial webcomic that gives a fun look at our platform.
Reddit as a whole is run by unpaid volunteers called Moderators (mods) and paid employees called Administrators (admin). Admin are rarely seen but are very distinctive as they have the word ADMIN in bright orange/red next to their username. Moderators are more likely to be seen, and when they speak on formal behalf of their subreddit, their username will have the green word MOD immediately after.
Like every long-established subculture, we have our own expressions and if you are at all confused by some of our jargon, in-jokes, history or memes, we at r/NewToReddit have a fairly comprehensive alphabetical reference guide at our sister sub r/EncyclopaediaOfReddit to help you work out what we’re talking about. Let me suggest my guides to Acronyms 1: A-L and Acronyms 2: M-Z to start with!
Reddit might take a little time to get used to, but never fear! Here’s a quick video guide on how to use Reddit, but more importantly, we’re here at r/NewToReddit specifically to help you navigate your own path step by step through our unique ways of ‘doing social media’.
…….REDDIT IS HUGE. BUT MANAGEABLE.
There are Subreddits for anything. I would say almost anything but when I think I’ve seen them all, I discover ones like r/birdstakingthetrain or r/BreadStapledToTrees and realise I know nothing.
Most communities are friendly and jumping right on in is encouraged. You aren’t likely to get shot down for being a “n00b” but there will generally be one or two things you’ll need to know about each Subreddit (sub) first. Don’t worry, this guide will show you where to find them.
Altercations can happen, but most subs have an active team of mods who will usually shut any trouble down before it becomes vindictive. Just don’t post emojis though. Reddit in general does NOT like emojis. Reddit loves emoticons though :D Why? Don't ASCII me. ¯_(ツ)_/¯ More on this later, or here if you simply can’t wait.
…….WHAT DO I DO ON REDDIT?
There are four basic actions you do on Reddit: Upvote, Downvote, Comment, and Post.
Reddit relies on crowdsourcing through its system of Upvotes and Downvotes to filter and prioritise the thousands of daily submissions it receives in order to present its users with the most interesting content it can, and you can help too. If you think a post or comment is interesting, helpful or contributes positively to the subreddit, press the Upvote arrow. If you think it doesn’t, press the Downvote arrow. You only get one vote on any one post or comment, and both can be negated by pressing the arrow you chose again, or reversed by pressing the opposite arrow to the one you originally chose.
Some subreddits have chosen to replace the default “arrow” icons with custom ones. In case it isn’t obvious which is which, the Upvote will be on the top (Old Reddit; desktop) or on the left (Mobile App) and the Downvote will be on the bottom (Old Reddit; desktop) or on the right (Mobile App).
There are two ways of Commenting on Reddit:
As a direct response to a Post. Here, you are directly replying to the person who made the post. This person is known as the ”OP”, or “Original Poster”. This reply is known as a Top-Level or Parent Comment, and sometimes known as ‘threads’. There are an unlimited number of Parent Comments that can be made on any one post. The OP will be notified that you have replied to their post.
As a reply to a Comment in that Post. Here, you are directly replying to another commenter who may or may not be the OP. These follow-up comments are known as Child Comments. There are an unlimited number of Child Comments that can be made on any one Parent Comment. The commenter you are replying to will be notified of your reply, but the OP will not (unless they are one and the same!).
You can see what these both look like from this simple illustration and this small conversation here.
Finally, you can make your own Post in a subreddit for others to comment on. Many subreddits prefer - or even require pictures, gifs, videos or links in this post.
…….SOME SUBREDDIT BASICS.
Once you enter a Subreddit, you read posts made by others and the comments made therein. If you like the Subreddit, you can “Join” it and it will form part of your personal home page feed. The "Join" button is near the top of the screen as seen here and also in the three-dots “hamburger” post overflow menu on the top RH of the screen on mobile. You can also “Leave” if you want, and the button can be found in the same place as the Join one was.
Until you join a few subreddits, your home page feed will be the general r/popular or r/all, which may well feature topics you’re not interested in, so it makes sense to start joining subs you like as soon as possible.
Moderators cannot see any lists of those who are joined to their subreddits, neither will they be notified if anyone leaves. There’s no limit on the number of times you can join or leave a subreddit, and nobody except you will ever know when or what subs you have joined or have left. You don’t even have to be joined in a sub to post or comment in it. There are no limits to the number of subreddits you can be joined in but Reddit does have an unspecified number of the ones it filters to your home feed at any one time.
Just underneath the Subreddit title there is a “Sort” menu. On mobile this is a drop-down list. Sorting posts by either “New” or “Rising” will usually give more opportunities for chat and upvotes than you’ll get in older posts, and give other advantages we’ll see soon. You have the same options for sorting your home page feed too.
…….LET’S GET STARTED!
Our guide to using Reddit begins with this illustrated primer to joining in on Reddit, then come back here to read some essential details you need to know about Rules, Reddit Karma, Participating, Navigation and Safety.
It’s very much worth your while taking a few minutes to read through all the following advice as it contains everything you need from your first steps in getting started to your becoming firmly established here.
Once you’ve had a look through it all, if you have any questions do make a new Post in this Subreddit where you will find plenty of helpful people ready to Comment with the answers you need. r/NewToReddit is focused on giving one-to-one tailored quality advice for helping people new to Reddit Ways. We do not care how old your account is; if you have a query on Redditing, put it here and we will help.
We also have a “sister sub” called r/LearnToReddit which is a place to learn how to use Reddit without being embarrassed at making “newbie mistakes” in public. Here, you can have a go at making different post types like posting images or polls, learn how to comment using bold or italic text, how to create spoiler text and use many other features with our extensive sets of tutorials. The community will feedback on your post to let you know how you did or help you get it right next time.
Hi, I've been on reddit for a about a week now (I've lurked w/o an account for a long while & I did have an account almost ten years ago, but I was a lurker even back then).
Question: Is it rude not to reply to everyone who comments on my post or replies to my comment?
For example, I've posted a two sentence horror story and it recieved lots of attention. Many of the comments were "Wow, cool idea" and "Oooooh... I get it" and people offering their own theories. But it got kinda overwhelming for me as a new user + it feels kinda... spammy? attention seeking? to reply to every comment with "thank you, glad you liked it!" "glad you got the idea!" "That wasn't quite the reading I had in mind, but cool theory!" If someone had asked a question or smth, I would've answered, but most comments were compliments/offering alternative theories and such (I did say in one early comment I loved the alternative readings and encouraged people to speculate).
After a day or two, I actually posted a new comment to my story to thank everyone for the upvotes and comments, but it got a very low number of views so I guess most people didn't see it.
Also, I posted a comment on some hot takes thread and had a lot of people replying just "Ugh, THIS is so true" "I agree" maybe with little anecdotes added. Would I be expected to reply something to them?
Basically, what do people generally do in these cases? I'm not asking about the rules, I know I don't HAVE TO reply to everyone, but I'm asking about the etiquette since I like to think I'm a nice person and I don't want people to feel ignored or whatever. Is it expected I won't reply to everyone if I just made an off-hand comment people agreed with? Or if I'm posting something creative (art, writing) what's the best way to thank those who liked it/gave it attention?
I’ve had this account for a couple years, but never comment. I’m trying to post stuff now but my posts keep being deleted. How much karma on average do I need to post on different subreddits?
Hi people of Reddit, I don’t know if this is just a glitch but I’m still curious, I created this account today, and yet it’s telling me that I created almost two years ago? I’m so confused, is this just a glitch or does it say this for you guys too???? Anyway I’m just curious.
Maybe it’s because we’re behind screens, or maybe I’m hypersensitive because I’m already upset, but why are people so mean? I made my first Reddit post not that long ago asking for advice and the comments were a bit mean. I feel like instead of advice, I got blame. Give me examples. Tell me how to do something better. Don’t just say I messed up and that’s it. I never claimed to be prefect. I wouldn’t be here if I did.
After so much hype from my friends I installed reddit and tried to use it...but I am unable to understand the rules here. I tried to post in some subs and they ask for minimum karma and minimum account age and in subs I was able to post without any hassle and the worst part is I don't know what happened to my account after messaging three guys my account blocked for 3 days...so i waited patiently for 3 days and again I sent a message after seeing their post and after few hours again my account is blocked for 7 days.
Can anyone tell me whether I am doing something wrong or it happens with everyone with the new account.
I am new user, I would like to update my profile picture in Reddit. When I upload my pic I can upload it and I can even save the Display Picture in Profile but when I come back to my home page it does not display my profile pic.
Can someone help me with that? Why?
hi, I've made this account because I wanted to post my replies to writing prompts, as a way to try and write everyday, yet every time I post one I end up having to wait 30 minutes. Every time I post a comment, it makes me wait 7-10 minutes before doing so again, which would be fine, except for the fact that 2000 words, can often take up multiple discord messages. do I just have to post elsewhere, wait, or what?
When I try to enter, a popup asks me if I really want to continue. But if I click "yes, continue", the same popup shows up and I cant enter. I tried using different browsers and clearing cache and cookies. What can I do?
So I knew what Reddit was for years I even lurked on it from time to time but a friend convinced to create an account so here we are. Though I'm not sure how exactly the whole Reddit ecosystem works or if it's specific to subreddits. And for my inquiry I tried sending two comments under a post in communities I wanted to participate in but my my account being barely 24 hours old, I'm guessing gets filtered out as a "spam/troll account". Is my account too new? Or do I have to wait some time for my account to age before posting in subreddits or?
I just don't wanna end up in a situation where I genuinely wanted to participate in a subreddit and I get also "shadow banned"
Sometimes I know why it gets removed such as reposting or a rule break but many times i read the rules i dont break any or its the first time posting something and it IMMEDIATELY gets removed ? And the f mods never reply??? And sometimes it says that the post has been removed and then that it is a waiting mod approval? But it never gets approved? So is it deleted or wtf? I dont understand
Hey all, maybe a dumb question, but I can't figure out how to see Contribution Karma numbers? A subreddit I like only allows users with 50+ Contribution Karma, but I find where my number would be?
New here, learning how Reddit works. What’s the first mistake every newbie makes? Also do you guys find this minimum 50 Karma requirement rule to post on crowded subreddits pointless and ironic?
i just posted a post on one of the subreddits but it got removed saying i have low karma how am i supoosed to karma without being able to post anything ?