Reddit discussions feel increasingly hard to follow
Lately I’ve been spending more time reading Reddit during outages, breaking product updates, infrastructure incidents, and AI discussions.
One thing I keep noticing:
The same conversation fragments into dozens of separate threads very quickly.
A single issue like:
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“Cursor login broken”
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“OpenAI API timeout”
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“Supabase auth issue”
can suddenly spread across many subreddits and repeated posts within hours.
What makes this surprisingly difficult is not the volume itself — it’s the fragmentation.
Useful context gets buried:
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workarounds hidden in random replies
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partial explanations spread across multiple threads
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duplicate discussions evolving independently
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important updates appearing much later somewhere else
The current workflow is mostly:
search → open many tabs → refresh manually → scan comments → repeat.
It reminds me a little of incident response systems before proper alert grouping existed.
I’ve been thinking about a small experiment for this problem.
Not another Reddit client.
More like a lightweight “discussion radar”:
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detect related threads
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cluster evolving discussions
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generate compact summaries
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follow topics instead of individual posts
The interesting part is probably not summaries themselves, but continuity:
understanding how discussions evolve over time.
Phase 1 is intentionally small:
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Reddit JSON/RSS ingestion
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semantic grouping
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topic timelines
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simple AI summaries
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smart RSS feeds for tracked topics
No scraping at scale.
No growth-hacking automation.
Mostly just exploring whether Reddit discussions can become easier to follow during fast-moving events.
Still very early — mostly thinking out loud for now.
This article was AI-assisted and edited by Mervin. All facts were verified against primary sources before publishing.