Question about Reddit recommendation to create 5 posts [build your community feature]

Hello I just created community and posted welcome post and two posts align with theme of my community. I saw Reddit recommendations for moderation and I believe it's useful for new mods as myself but I don't understand about suggestion:

— create 5 posts (I saw that in community menue)

so question:

  1. should I create 5 posts today or in what period and it will help to better grow my community is that correct?

  2. Is that safe to make 5 quality contributions in one day?

Appreciate the response from other mods or administration, I'm new to moderation so I ask that to keep my community safe and grow it effective way.

sry fo my English I'm mlnot native speaker

reddit.com
u/DYOR_actually — 2 days ago

every journey begins with a single step

Not the easiest road to get here… but I finally started building my own community. Let's see where this journey goes. 🚀

u/DYOR_actually — 4 days ago

r/redditrequest post removed by Reddit filters despite meeting eligibility requirements

hi everyone

i'm looking for advice on what to do next

i submitted a request in r/redditrequest, but the post was removed by reddit filters

my account meets the eligibility requirements (older than 90 days and over 100 post/comment karma)

i also have two-factor authentication enabled

i contacted the moderators through modmail, but received an automated reply directing me to a form. unfortunately, none of the options on that form seem to match a reddit filter removal

i also left a comment on the recent community resource hub announcement from admin, but haven't received a response yet

has anyone dealt with this before?

at this point i'm unsure whether i should try submitting the request again or not. i'm concerned that repeated submissions could make the situation worse if the filters keep removing it

would you recommend resubmitting, or should i wait for a response from the moderators how long and what to do if they don't respond?

i've also seen one person mention that disconnecting a linked google account helped with a similar issue, and i'm wondering whether submitting from a desktop mobile browser instead of the mobile app could make any difference

thanks

reddit.com
u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago

i've been thinking about buying historical gold coins as a store of value, but i'm not sure where to start

hi everyone

i've been thinking about diversifying a some portion of my long-term savings into physical gold as a store of value

while researching, i came across historical gold coins such as sovereigns, vreneli, napoleon 20 francs, and similar european coins

what caught my attention is that some of them seem to have two potential sources of value

- the gold itself

- a collector premium that may increase over time

i'm not talking about extremely rare museum pieces worth tens of thousands of euros, but rather coins that an ordinary investor could realistically buy

does anyone here have experience with this niche?

what should a beginner know before getting started?

thanks

p.s. my biggest concern is that this seems like an area where you really need some numismatic knowledge or people who know the field. i'm worried that, as a beginner, i could easily make mistakes or overpay for something that isn't actually worth the premium

that's honestly my main hesitation, and i'm still trying to figure out whether this is something worth getting into or not

reddit.com
u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago
▲ 38 r/Monero

The Human Side of Monero

hello everyone

i'm new to this community and there is one thing that genuinely fascinates me

i became interested in a broader question about how unusual subcultures form in the crypto world, and monero caught my attention in a way i didn't expect

before looking into it, my impression was mostly shaped by news headlines and public discussions. i kept reading about bans, delistings, regulatory pressure, darknet associations, and claims that monero is somehow the "bad" cryptocurrency. it often seemed like a project that many institutions wanted to push out of the spotlight

but when i actually started reading discussions from people in the community, i found something completely different

compared to many other crypto communities, there seems to be very little hype here. i don't constantly see "TO THE MOON" posts, promises of getting rich, price obsession, or aggressive promotion. instead, the atmosphere feels surprisingly calm, thoughtful, and welcoming. people seem more interested in ideas, privacy, technology, and principles than speculation

what i'm curious about is how this culture formed in the first place

why do you think monero developed such a distinct community compared to many other cryptocurrency projects

what attracts people to it beyond the technology itself

and why does a project that is often portrayed from the outside as something suspicious or associated with wrongdoing seem, at least from my first impressions, to have such a friendly, respectful, and thoughtful community

i don't even own any monero yet. i'm simply fascinated by the culture around it and wanted to understand how it developed and of course about this privacy technology

i'd love to hear your thoughts on how this culture emerged and what makes it different from so many other crypto communities

reddit.com
u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago

When Communication Adapts to Systems Rather Than People

Lately I've been wondering whether social media platforms change the way we communicate more than we realize. not necessarily through direct moderation decisions, but through the constant background layer of algorithms, filters, ranking systems, and invisible rules.

For example, on Reddit I've had several normal comments caught by automated filters. Whether that is a false positive or not is not really the point.

What interests me is the behavioral effect.

Once you know a comment might disappear, you start writing differently. You simplify. You shorten. You avoid certain formats. You begin optimizing your message for what you think the system will accept, rather than simply expressing your thoughts naturally.

Over time, that changes the conversation itself.

Has anyone else noticed this?

u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago

Could tokenisation allow EU residents to buy fractional ownership in property across Europe?

I'm trying to understand the practical side of tokenised real-world assets, particularly real estate.

This question came to mind after reading about the EU's DLT Pilot Regime and ongoing discussions around tokenised assets. Most of the material focuses on financial infrastructure and regulation, but I'm more interested in what this could mean for ordinary investors and cross-border real estate investing within Europe.

I wanted to diversify my investments across several European countries rather than buying a single property in one location. For example, I might want exposure to residential property in Spain, Germany, Italy, or another EU country without needing enough capital to buy an entire property in each market.

Is this the kind of problem that tokenised real estate is supposed to solve?

And if this is where the market is heading, are there any practical steps investors should already be considering? For example, are there existing platforms, regulatory developments, or investment vehicles worth following?

I'd appreciate an explanation from people who follow this area more closely.

u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago
▲ 0 r/malta

Governor Alexander Demarco joins Cyprus stablecoin discussions — do people in Malta actually use stablecoins?

they discussed stablecoins and the challenges they could pose to the financial system.

But honestly, the article of MT itself was pretty vague and didn’t really explain what conclusions were reached or what direction Malta is moving toward...

Do you use them at all? Why yes/not?

And more generally — what do people in Malta actually think about stablecoins today?

u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago
▲ 23 r/malta

Malta keeps talking about becoming a fintech and digital finance hub, but honestly local banking still feels somehow old-fashioned.

Do people in Malta actually feel local banks are improving?

Or does it still feel like Malta’s fintech ambitions are moving faster than the banking experience ordinary people deal with?

reddit.com
u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago
▲ 2 r/bugs

[android] Bottom navigation bar overlaps post action buttons [2026.20.0.2620090]

Device: Motorola Edge 50 Fusion

OS: Android 16

Reddit version: 2026.20.0.2620090

The bottom navigation/menu bar sometimes overlaps the post action buttons (reply, vote, share area), making the UI partially inaccessible and visually broken.

u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago

I opened Reddit “for five minutes” 50 days ago. ⏳

Some people meditate. Some people journal. I opened Reddit every day for 50 days straight. 🫡

u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago

Any communities discussing crypto subcultures and community psychology?

I’m trying to find communities where people discuss how crypto subcultures form around coins, projects, and ecosystems.

reddit.com
u/DYOR_actually — 1 month ago
▲ 10 r/awards

Can gving too many Awards 5rigger Reddit spam filters?

Hi everyone, I wanted to ask if something like this can trigger Reddit’s spam systems etc

I had a lot of free awards on my account and finally had some free time, so I gave away around 50 awards in one day. Later, I made a normal comment in another subreddit, but it was automatically removed by Reddit and had to be manually approved by the moderators.

Now I’m wondering if giving too many awards in a short time can flag an account as suspicious or spam-like behavior. Should I be worried about continuing to give awards, or is this normal? For example, would giving 100 awards in a day be considered spam by Reddit systems (or other systems that thinking this is not good etc)?

Have a great Sunday everyone.

u/DYOR_actually — 2 months ago