The Current, Lamentable State of Hobby Forums
Posted: Wed Jan 15, 2025 11:44 pm
I feel like I've had this percolating for a couple years (yes, years), but never fully fleshed out what I think is a really sad state for sports card talk, forums, and social media in general. I'll try to keep this focused and intentional, rather than treating it like a rant...sorry if I fail either partially or wholly.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think at this point it's fair to say that there has been a total shift of collectors from forums like Hobby Kings, Blowout, Sports Card Forum, etc. to Instagram. I'm sure the impetus for that is multi-faceted:
1. the influx of investor/flipper/breaker/market focused influence into and consequential emigration of card-focused collectors from the forums leading up to and through the pandemic (namely Blowout, since that was the only one still standing at the time)
2. the modern societal preference for social media platforms like Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, and Reddit over traditional forums
3. the ability to personalize one's social media experience towards his/her hobby interests (I guess falls under #2?)
4. Probably more, but anything else that comes to mind falls under one of those first two categories
This has had me pondering a couple things (with my basic thoughts on each)
1. Is this bad? Is there a downside to Instagram being the main internet avenue of collector hobby consumption?
I would argue the answer to this is a resounding YES. I think this is frankly awful and sad for collectors and the health of (basketball) card collecting. Kyle touches on this a lot in episode 125 of his podcast on the history of hobby message boards. One of the really good points brought up was that message boards maintained a record and history of the hobby. It's obviously so crucial to be able to look back at past conversations about cards, releases, sets, authenticity, scams, fraud, pricing, markets, trends, etc. I'd highly recommend listening to the episode for more info.
Beyond that, one thing that none of these modern platforms elicit is the long form discussion of forums. If you think about it, is there anything significant that comes from utilizing instagram from a hobby perspective? Of course, you get to see a lot of cards, and efficiently. But is rare that an instagram post includes any information by the poster, and if there are any comments, the few that even contain words rather than emojis won't usually be more than oohs and aahs telling the poster that they have a nice card. Blekh. Such a dearth of anything meaningful or interesting.
2. Does anyone else miss this?
Like, I can't be the only one who feels unfulfilled and bored by Instagram being the only real means of interacting with the hobby online?
3. Should there be a sense of responsibility by (basketball) collectors to invest time and effort into reestablishing forums as a part of hobby culture?
I mean, I'm creating this thread, and doing so on a forum, so obviously I think the answer is yes. But the rationale isn't as ego-centric as it may seem. My rationale comes from looking at the baseball collecting culture. Baseball card collectors are so much more committed and interested in, you know, baseball cards. Do yourself a favor and take some time to peruse the baseball section of Blowout, r/baseballcards on Reddit, or the comments section of some baseball card YouTube videos. All of these are incredibly active, and way more so than the equivalent in basketball cards. Sure, there are probably more baseball card collectors than basketball card ones, but there are surely TONS of basketball card collectors, and for the most part everything outside of Instagram is a relative ghost town. I think the longevity, or even shifting back towards a love of collecting, of collecting basketball cards depends on us being actively involved in discussing cards and our love of them.
As a simple example, on Blowout's baseball card talk section, there are two threads with 222 and 429 replies that are one month and one WEEK old, respectively on the topic of the 2025 Topps Baseball release. I know that Topps flagship baseball is a lot more intricate and nuanced than a Panini Hoops release, for example, but how great would it be to have a place to be able to talk about a basketball release at that depth? Obviously, these are only two of countless threads in the baseball section on Blowout, but I think it indicates a health and passion for collecting by a bunch of baseball card collectors. I think that encourages more people to collect and continue building their passion for collecting.
Anyway, I'm sure there's more I can say, but I think my point is clear (too late, long, and tired for me to revise) and I don't want to beat a dead horse. I'm really interested on some thoughts about these questions and whether or not anyone else shares some of these feelings. Not a small chance I'm just being dramatic. It'd be interesting to have someone with a wider instagram network than myself gather the opinions of a broader audience too, in my opinion.
Happy collecting!
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think at this point it's fair to say that there has been a total shift of collectors from forums like Hobby Kings, Blowout, Sports Card Forum, etc. to Instagram. I'm sure the impetus for that is multi-faceted:
1. the influx of investor/flipper/breaker/market focused influence into and consequential emigration of card-focused collectors from the forums leading up to and through the pandemic (namely Blowout, since that was the only one still standing at the time)
2. the modern societal preference for social media platforms like Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, and Reddit over traditional forums
3. the ability to personalize one's social media experience towards his/her hobby interests (I guess falls under #2?)
4. Probably more, but anything else that comes to mind falls under one of those first two categories
This has had me pondering a couple things (with my basic thoughts on each)
1. Is this bad? Is there a downside to Instagram being the main internet avenue of collector hobby consumption?
I would argue the answer to this is a resounding YES. I think this is frankly awful and sad for collectors and the health of (basketball) card collecting. Kyle touches on this a lot in episode 125 of his podcast on the history of hobby message boards. One of the really good points brought up was that message boards maintained a record and history of the hobby. It's obviously so crucial to be able to look back at past conversations about cards, releases, sets, authenticity, scams, fraud, pricing, markets, trends, etc. I'd highly recommend listening to the episode for more info.
Beyond that, one thing that none of these modern platforms elicit is the long form discussion of forums. If you think about it, is there anything significant that comes from utilizing instagram from a hobby perspective? Of course, you get to see a lot of cards, and efficiently. But is rare that an instagram post includes any information by the poster, and if there are any comments, the few that even contain words rather than emojis won't usually be more than oohs and aahs telling the poster that they have a nice card. Blekh. Such a dearth of anything meaningful or interesting.
2. Does anyone else miss this?
Like, I can't be the only one who feels unfulfilled and bored by Instagram being the only real means of interacting with the hobby online?
3. Should there be a sense of responsibility by (basketball) collectors to invest time and effort into reestablishing forums as a part of hobby culture?
I mean, I'm creating this thread, and doing so on a forum, so obviously I think the answer is yes. But the rationale isn't as ego-centric as it may seem. My rationale comes from looking at the baseball collecting culture. Baseball card collectors are so much more committed and interested in, you know, baseball cards. Do yourself a favor and take some time to peruse the baseball section of Blowout, r/baseballcards on Reddit, or the comments section of some baseball card YouTube videos. All of these are incredibly active, and way more so than the equivalent in basketball cards. Sure, there are probably more baseball card collectors than basketball card ones, but there are surely TONS of basketball card collectors, and for the most part everything outside of Instagram is a relative ghost town. I think the longevity, or even shifting back towards a love of collecting, of collecting basketball cards depends on us being actively involved in discussing cards and our love of them.
As a simple example, on Blowout's baseball card talk section, there are two threads with 222 and 429 replies that are one month and one WEEK old, respectively on the topic of the 2025 Topps Baseball release. I know that Topps flagship baseball is a lot more intricate and nuanced than a Panini Hoops release, for example, but how great would it be to have a place to be able to talk about a basketball release at that depth? Obviously, these are only two of countless threads in the baseball section on Blowout, but I think it indicates a health and passion for collecting by a bunch of baseball card collectors. I think that encourages more people to collect and continue building their passion for collecting.
Anyway, I'm sure there's more I can say, but I think my point is clear (too late, long, and tired for me to revise) and I don't want to beat a dead horse. I'm really interested on some thoughts about these questions and whether or not anyone else shares some of these feelings. Not a small chance I'm just being dramatic. It'd be interesting to have someone with a wider instagram network than myself gather the opinions of a broader audience too, in my opinion.
Happy collecting!