Things will never be like they were in the late 90s on up until Facebook and Twitter came around. Those were the golden days of the internet for sure. However, I don't think niche sites like these will ever be completely out of the picture.
A lot of forum owners thought Facebook groups were the death knell for small communities like ours. There's a forum I used to visit a lot called
The Admin Zone and there's hundreds of discussions there about this topic. Now that those have been around for a while, what I mostly see is "low effort" communities now just spring up on one of those platforms. 20 years ago if I wanted to make an "off topic" sort of forum, I'd have to buy a vBulletin license and figure out how to set it up. Now, any soccer mom can create a group and get some followers. It's definitely an option to go that route for a lot of people (especially those without any development background), but it's certainly not for everyone or every audience.
The difference between a site like ours and a Facebook group is Facebook owns your accounts and your community. They can shut you down at any time, and. the owner is left out in the cold with zero recourse.
We can play by our own rules, we own our content and we're not subject to the whims of Jack or Mark Zuckerburg. I suppose you're subject to MY whims, but I try to do the right thing based on my own moral compass... Not those of investors.
Reddit, for example, just banned about 2000+ subreddits because they "redefined their content policy". I support free speech. I can handle someone else's opinion without daddy coming in to shield me from feeling an emotion I dislike. I never want to be so big that a board of directors and investments from China dictate how we interact with each other here. You'll never get banned just because you have an unpopular opinion.
Me and my family run this site. That's the way it'll stay, and you're all like an "extended" family to me even though we'll probably never meet. I love. that I can provide a place like this for myself and others to read the ideas and thoughts you guys share, and I plan on keeping this site alive until I'm dead or my daughters take over.
That's just my perspective, but I imagine other people who run other niche sites feel similarly. I know
@Num7 loves Paranormalis, and I loved it enough to hand it off to someone I knew would do a great job.
There will always be a place for niche communities, though it becomes a question of how well do you curate interesting content and stay "modern". Facebook and Twitter do a lot of things poorly, but they also do a lot of things right. Elements of those should be incorporated in communities like ours so things stay modern, but the reason we're here is something that shouldn't ever be overlooked.