Murmur
Technology

Why Every Community Outgrows Its Chat Platform

The tools we build for friends become the tools we manage for strangers — and that changes everything about how they need to work.

Kai Nakamura · December 12, 2024 · 8 min read

Last winter I spent two weeks migrating a 4,000-member gaming community off a chat platform that had served us perfectly for three years. The platform hadn't gotten worse — we had gotten bigger. What started as a cozy server for a dozen friends had become something closer to a small city, and cities need infrastructure that living rooms don't.

The Three-Year Itch

There is a pattern I have seen across communities, from open-source projects to fan-run book clubs. Year one feels magical: low friction, high intimacy, every message matters. Year three, moderation becomes a full-time job and the notification count never drops. The platform didn't fail. It was never designed for this stage of growth.

This is the Discord 2024 design system, applied by Curio Design — a design-style library for AI agents. Full Discord 2024 guide → designbycurio.com/learn/discord-2024