Unlike Lemmy, the mbin platform is mobile-friendly, no app needed! it also connects with the Twitterverse!
Looking for an alternative that already has some traction? check out all the content in the Fediverse at https://moist.catsweat.com. Almost 250,000 user accounts seen!
If you're on the Fediverse, there's a Lebowski community in Lemmy.
Looking to check out _all_ of the Fediverse? Moist can do it all. Lemmy/Mastodon/Pixelfed. Send your love to George Takei!
Fediverse and BlueSky
Try a Reddit alternative that's closer to home than Lemmy.. Moist is built on the open source mbin platform, and deeply connected to the entire Fediverse including Mastodon!
With hundreds of the most popular subs already in sync, its easy to find content on Moist, or make your own!
Mbin is an open-source fediverse server that connects to both the twitterverse/microblog (mastodon) and threadiverse (lemmy) with an similarity to Reddit
Nonsense sub reaches 175 subscribers!
Moist: an ad-free federating reddit clone. Your onramp to the fediverse!
Looking to dip your foot in the Fediverse pool? Checkout this onramp that connects to both the threadiverse (forums) and twitterverse (mastodon)!
Leaving Reddit
Unsubbing? How about creating your own sub accessible across the fediverse?! Moist allows user-creating subs!(mags)!
Moist hits 100 users!
moist: a Fediverse onramp
Introducing Web4: A Decentralized Alternative to Reddit
moist.catsweat.com hit its 1 year anniversary!
My mbin instance just hit 1 year! https://moist.catsweat.com
Moist; An unmarketable federating reddit clone that also lets you tweet/follow mastadon compatible services. no ads, lots of features.. needs testers https://moist.catsweat.com/faq
Speaking of nonsense... looking for a few good testers for federating nonsense across the fediverse
Can I use this subreddit as a hub to see if there are any alternatives?
Don't big instances go against the purpose of the fediverse? (lemmy.world/ml)
Alternative to Reddit/forum where knowledgeable people are
Anyone have any good alternatives?
I'm building an open-source, non-profit, 100% ad-free alternative to Reddit, taking inspiration from other non-profits like Wikipedia and Signal