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Reddit

Reddit Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Reddit users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Reddit, make sure to submit a report below

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The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.

Reddit users affected:

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Reddit is a social news aggregation, web content rating, and discussion website. Reddit's registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links.

Most Affected Locations

Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:

Location Reports
Douai, Hauts-de-France 1
Olathe, KS 1
Da Nang, Da Nang 1
Chhindwāra, MP 1
Puteaux, Île-de-France 1
New Delhi, NCT 1
Paris, Île-de-France 1
Vigo, Galicia 1
Phoenix, AZ 1
Lima, Lima 1
Indio, CA 1
Rosenau, ACAL 1
Pélissanne, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 2
Adelaide, SA 1
Brisbane, QLD 1
Bengaluru, KA 2
Dhaka, Dhaka 1
Foligno, Umbria 1
Odessa, FL 1
Guayaquil, Guayas 1
Atlanta, GA 1
Helsinki, Uusimaa 1
Lübeck, Hansestadt, Schleswig-Holstein 1
Craiova, Dolj 1
Nanaimo, BC 1
Chicago, IL 1
Pāhoa, HI 1
Pittsboro, NC 1
Buffalo, NY 1
Minneapolis, MN 1
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Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

Reddit Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • geluhorotan
    geluhorotan (@geluhorotan) reported

    @pcshipp I am preparing to launch a reddit lead finder app. Basically you ll get a feed full of people asking about the problem your product solves. Let me know if you want free early access once I launch

  • elgermerlo
    Germán Merlo 💻 🇦🇷 (@elgermerlo) reported

    How I get new users without running ads: — reply to every Reddit post asking about the problem I solve (genuinely, not spammy) — post the same insight 3 different ways across a week and see which angle lands — DM people who follow competitors and just ask what they wish the tool did better — turn every user complaint into a public post about how I fixed it None of it is fast. All of it compounds.

  • rotcivlol
    v (@rotcivlol) reported

    @Dennis00979322 @DeadlockArchive You can get someone to add you via steam code in a deadlock reddit or discord server

  • 2irl4u
    armand type beat (@2irl4u) reported

    @wtfspez submitting on Reddit is so broken (sub rules, negative feedback loops), that this subreddit becomes the source of breaking news

  • imjudekim
    Jude (@imjudekim) reported

    @p_chefski i have no idea. seems like quite a few ppl on reddit encounter the same issue when running llm locally on their apple silicon mac’s.

  • RogueRevived
    Nice Victory Bro 👎 (@RogueRevived) reported

    The issue is that people REFUSE to understand Naruto because of biases Never will forget reading a Reddit argument and Madara's writing was explained to a guy on there and he pretty much said "I could see this being the case if it wasn't Kishimoto writing" I was like ????

  • amolitor99
    amolitor.dolt (@amolitor99) reported

    @DrFrancisYoung it's perfectly normal. this is just twitter/reddit imagining an education system that mostly does not exist, abetted by endless grifters who want to sell solutions to this problem that largely does not exist. just an odd corner of the outrage machine

  • xereeto
    kaylee ⏩ ˚✧ ゚. (@xereeto) reported

    @somewheresy Terrible epistemology + converting to Catholicism for the vibes has itself become soy and Reddit at this point

  • AIDailyGuy
    Jake Z (@AIDailyGuy) reported

    @andreyiscoding Finding the conversations where your problem lives is the whole game, agreed. The next version: people ask Claude or Perplexity for a tool instead of scrolling Reddit. We built Dashform so the funnel itself answers, agents read it, check fit, book. Same playbook, it's just a new reader.

  • isis_al70
    𝕻𝕽𝕺𝕱𝕱🎭 (@isis_al70) reported

    Reach actually and I have the direct link to that post on my page. I'm a top Amadeusz follower and I chose to drop this because I realised he's also clueless when it comes to keepers. I've been thinking a lot about how to fix GKs. I think about it more than I think about how to make money. Then I searched his page on Reddit for each Gk he has reviewed and noticed the trend. He doesn't really prioritise that REACH. Secondly, his build for the 107 Buffon was 99-98-99 Awareness - Reflex - Reach respectively and he concluded it was a very solid card. Top. His build for the 108 was 102-98-99 and he claimed any other build was **** except this. So you mean to tell me the solid 99 GK awareness is no more solid on the same card just because you can get the Awareness to 102?? So I thought why not replicate the same thing and pump the 102 or 101 towards reflex instead. That should make the difference. Old Buffon 99-98-99. If this is good according to him. Then the only way the new Buffon can be better is this 99-101-99 or 98-102-99. Thanks for reading.

  • KayFabe14
    Kay Fabe (@KayFabe14) reported

    @Luna55147371741 @atensnut "Reddit" There's your problem retard.

  • drive200132
    I (@drive200132) reported

    Edward Elric is essentially a reddit atheist jerk who learned the wrong lesson from the traumatic event happened due to his misguided yet sympathetic desire and keeps doubling down on it at the start of the story. I love how flawed he is.

  • RiTZiE_cdn
    Richard (@RiTZiE_cdn) reported

    @XboxCanada @XBOXSupport @MojangSupport it's not been 10 days and still can't use the Xbox app or sign into Minecraft on Android. This is a widespread issue reported here and Reddit, etc.

  • kmahjn
    KM | Reddit Marketing (@kmahjn) reported

    "Reddit hates marketing" is the most expensive lie in the SaaS industry. Reddit hates ads. It rewards usefulness and no product is better positioned to exploit that than Postiz. Here's the 90-day Reddit playbook I'd run if @wickedguro hired me: 1. Pick the right rooms: This is the basic mistake everyone makes. You built a SaaS and post about it on r/SaaS. That sub consists of other SaaS founders, not your customers. Postiz is about social media scheduling. Still not gonna post on r/marketing. Too obvious, too jaded, too full of other marketers. Instead, I'd go: → r/AI_agents → r/opensource → r/Entrepreneur → r/digitalmarketing → r/socialmediamanagers → r/sideprojects + r/SideProject → r/degoogle + r/privacy (own-your-data angle) → r/selfhosted (the goldmine, these people convert on "free + own your data" like nothing else) One tool, eight different angles. The self-hosted crowd cares about data ownership. The Entrepreneur crowd cares about the business story. The social media manager crowd cares about saving money. Same product. Different pitch per room. That's the part everyone skips. -------------------------------------------------------- 2. Warm the account first: A 2-day-old account posting about a product = instant removal, possible ban. Before anything else: → 100+ comment karma minimum → 2 weeks of genuine activity in target subs → Join the communities. Upvote. Reply to random threads that have nothing to do with Postiz. Mods check post history. Every single time. An account that only talks about one product is a billboard, and billboards get torn down. -------------------------------------------------------- 3. Comments before posts. Always: Weeks 1–2: zero posts. Just answers. Someone asks "cheap Buffer alternative?" You show up with a genuinely helpful comparison. Buffer vs Hootsuite vs Later vs Postiz. Honest pros and cons. Postiz mentioned once, in context, not as the punchline. Even mention where Postiz falls short. "The Instagram integration can be flaky since Meta keeps changing their API" builds more trust than ten feature lists. Here's what nobody tells you: Reddit threads rank on Google for years. Go and search "Buffer alternatives" right now on Google and you'll find Reddit threads on the first page. One good comment there gets read by thousands of buyers every month, forever, for free. That's not a comment. That's an asset. -------------------------------------------------------- 4. The founder posts, not the brand Nobody wants to talk to a logo. A brand account dropping a link = ignored or banned. A founder posting "I built an open-source Buffer alternative, here's what I learned" = front page. The post formats that print on Reddit: → "6 months of building an open-source SaaS — revenue, mistakes, numbers" (build in public) → "Buffer raised prices again, so here's how to self-host your own scheduler" (newsjacking) → "Why I made my startup open-source and what happened next" (transparency bait) → "I built X because I was tired of paying $99/month for Y" (origin story) Notice: none of these are about the product. They're about the story. The product is just the setting. -------------------------------------------------------- 5. Give away the whole thing: The product is free. Weaponize that. Post the complete self-hosting guide directly in r/selfhosted. Docker compose file included. Every step, in the post. No "link in bio." No "DM me for the guide." No newsletter gate. Counterintuitive truth: the more you give away inside the post, the more people click through anyway. Reddit can smell a funnel from three subreddits away. The posts that hold nothing back are the ones that get 500 upvotes and the traffic from 500 upvotes beats any gated funnel you could build. -------------------------------------------------------- 6. Mine the competitor complaints: This is the highest-intent traffic on the internet and it's sitting there for free. Search Reddit for: → "Hootsuite too expensive" → "Buffer price increase" → "Later alternatives" → "canceling Buffer" Those threads are full of people with their wallet already out, actively shopping for a replacement. A helpful comment there is worth 50 cold posts. Set up alerts (F5Bot is free) for competitor names + "alternative." Respond within hours, not days. First good answer in the thread wins the Google traffic forever. -------------------------------------------------------- 7. Handle the mod problem before it happens: Every founder eventually gets a post removed and rage-quits Reddit. Wrong move. → Read the rules of every sub before posting. Actually read them. → Some subs have "Self-Promo Saturday" threads: use them. → Message mods before posting anything borderline: "Hey, I built an open-source tool your community might find useful, is this okay to share?" Half will say yes. Some will even sticky it. A removed post isn't censorship. It's feedback on your approach. -------------------------------------------------------- 8. Turn users into posters: One founder posting = marketing. Fifty happy users mentioning you organically = a moat no competitor can cross. Postiz already has the raw material — an active Discord and GitHub community. I'd nudge it: → Screenshot-worthy dashboards = free content → When a user writes a genuine review or tutorial, amplify it everywhere → Ask users to share their self-hosted setups in r/selfhosted (people love posting their stacks anyway) Not scripted. Not incentivized with discounts (Reddit sniffs that out instantly). Just nudged. -------------------------------------------------------- 9. Build your own room: r/Postiz: Once the flywheel starts spinning, stop renting attention and start owning it. Create the official subreddit. But here's the thing, a dead subreddit is worse than no subreddit. An empty room with 12 members screams "nobody uses this product." So you don't just launch it. You seed it: → Move support questions from Discord/GitHub into the sub. Every answered question becomes searchable content that ranks on Google. → Post changelogs and release notes there first, give people a reason to check it before Twitter. → Pin a mega-thread: "Show us your Postiz setup" self-hosters love showing off their stacks. → @wickedguro does a monthly "what should we build next" thread. Reddit users vote with upvotes. Free roadmap prioritization AND engagement in one move. The compounding effect nobody talks about: every "how do I fix X in Postiz" thread answered in your own sub is a Google result you own forever. That's your documentation, your community, and your SEO, all in one place, at zero cost. Buffer has r/BufferApp with a few thousand members. It quietly does more for their retention than most of their paid marketing. -------------------------------------------------------- 10. Measure what actually matters: Upvotes are vanity. Track: → GitHub stars per week → Branded search volume → "Found you on Reddit" in signup surveys → Direct traffic spikes after each post (Reddit users don't click tracked links — they type the URL) Reddit attribution is messy and delayed. A comment from month one drives installs in month six. Judge the channel on a 90-day window, not post-by-post. -------------------------------------------------------- The Ideal 90-day timeline: Weeks 1-2: Warm accounts, join subs, comment only. Weeks 3-4: First value posts (guides, comparisons). Zero links if possible. Month 2: Founder story posts, build-in-public updates, competitor thread mining. Month 3: Community flywheel, user posts, AMAs, mod relationships, launch r/Postiz and seed it with support threads + changelogs. That's it. No hacks. No bots. No fake accounts asking planted questions (people notice, and the fallout is brutal). Reddit is the most underpriced channel for SaaS right now and almost every founder does it wrong by leading with just link and ending up getting banned. Lead with usefulness. The traffic follows. I would like to mention that while researching about Postiz on Reddit, I found @wickedguro's Reddit profile and he was already doing most of this stuff that I mentioned. But seems like he has taken a break from Reddit for now. Anyhow, this playbook can be replicated for any SaaS, any product. The basic premise would be similar to the above mentioned points. -------------------------------------------------------- P.S- I run exactly this for SaaS founders doing $15K–$500K MRR. If your Reddit channel is sitting idle, DM me.

  • honeydreamss
    Honey Syed (@honeydreamss) reported

    Your Google ad got the click. Your landing page built the interest. The buyer was close enough to purchasing that they did something most founders never think about. They opened a new tab and typed your brand name into Reddit. They wanted to know what real people think. What they found in that thread decided whether you got the sale. This happens constantly and never shows up in your analytics. The buyer doesn't click a trackable link from Reddit back to your site. They either return to your tab and complete the purchase or they close it and move on. Google Analytics records it as a lost conversion. Your marketing team blames the landing page. Nobody checks what Reddit said. The sale was lost in a thread you've never read where someone wrote "tried this, wasn't worth the money" or "their customer support is terrible" or "just use [competitor] instead." One comment. Three upvotes. No reply from your brand. Sale gone. Anyone spending more than $50 on something found through a Google ad is going to search "[brand name] Reddit" first. SaaS buyers do it. Ecommerce buyers do it. Course buyers definitely do it. Most founders design landing pages as if they're the last stop before purchase. They're not. They're the first stop. The buyer reads the page, builds a mental model of what you're claiming, and then goes to Reddit to check whether reality matches. Your page sets expectations. Reddit confirms or destroys them. Search your brand name on Reddit right now. Search "[your brand] review," "[your brand] worth it," "[your brand] vs [competitor]." Read every thread. Unanswered complaints and negative opinions with no counterpoint are actively killing your conversion rate, and until you look, you won't know they're there. Then be present in the conversations where your brand comes up. Not with fake accounts, with genuine responses from someone at your company who addresses concerns directly and provides context. The brands doing this well monitor Reddit daily with tools like F5Bot (free to start) and Syften, respond within hours, and don't argue with critics. That's still playing in someone else's environment. I acquired a niche subreddit with over 33,000 members for $0. When someone searches "content marketing tools Reddit," the conversations they find happen inside a community I control. The tone, the quality of responses, the pinned resources, all of it shapes what a buyer reads when they're doing that verification check. Most brands try to influence Reddit from the outside, posting in other people's communities, hoping someone says something nice, monitoring threads they can't shape. When you own the subreddit in your niche, you don't hope. You set the environment. Every conversation that happens there reinforces the story you want buyers to find when they open that second tab. Your Google ad budget is generating clicks. Your landing page is generating interest. Reddit is deciding whether any of it converts. DM me REDDIT. I'll ask you a few questions about your situation first, then recommend what your next step should be.

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