The context in which the photo is shared in also matters. As far as I know, the now thankfully banned subreddit "/r/jailbait" didn't post nude content, but it was still basically child pornography because you knew why the pictures were being shared. The intent was in the name of the subreddit.
bezoar
Give me something like The Matrix Online again. I want missions/quests that are unique. Only one person/team can complete them. Failing is an acceptable outcome and has ramifications for the rest of the story. You would absolutely need writers and asset artists on staff as old things content gets completed. Let the players make content as well a la Eve Online where factions vying for control of territory IS content. This fills in the blanks between the written stuff.
- Barbarians of Lemuria
- Forbidden Lands
- Hillfolk
- Mythras
- Lancer
- ICON
- Eclipse Phase 1e
- Worlds Without Number
- Shadow of the Weird Wizard
- Swords of the Serpentine
There are probably a lot more that I'm forgetting at the moment, but these have been on my mind a lot lately. Everyone's gravitated toward D&D5e for the last ~10 years, so I haven't had a lot of chances to play in or run campaigns in many other systems.
You may want to link to the beta because they're directing people there instead and accounts made for the original site don't work for it. wts2.wt.social
/m/osr@lemm.ee works.
Edit: Is this just a lemmy/kbin difference that I wasn't aware of? None of the /c/ links work for me while using kbin, but I can change them to /m/ and they work just fine. Does lemmy use /c/ by default?
@BlueForestDev I think that anyone calling mods "hostage takers" should start their own subreddits and mod them themselves. When they have to do all the maintenance and go unappreciated by both users and admin, maybe they'll start to understand. Mods are a major reason why subreddits flourish.
What's your go to open source alternative? Jellyfin?