Without any fanfare or hype, Facebook released, "Forum." It is a standalone app that looks and works a lot like Reddit, but for Facebook groups. You do still need a Facebook account, but it is a nice way to access any Facebook groups you are in without having to use a browser or the Facebook app itself. It makes a little feed of things you might find interesting from your various groups, as well as--sigh--having a bunch of built-in AI features designed to assist you in discovering new groups by chatting with the little bot-character. Facebook did have a standalone group app, which it killed in 2017 ("Groups,"), but this time the idea here seems to be going hard on mirroring Reddit and having a bunch of AI filler due to that being the new, "Hot," thing in apps.
I will say the design is nice, probably because everything about how this looks reminds me so much of Reddit, but with more blue-ish colors instead of reds and oranges. As I said, you need to have a Facebook account to use this, so the idea of people who merely want to engage in groups utilizing the app goes out the window--leading me to ask, "Who is this for?" I believe a lot more people would be intrigued if there were a way to use the groups and view them in a feed format without having Facebook itself--or as I saw some comments essentially say, "Just give me this, a standalone marketplace, and let me delete Facebook!" Without that, I believe a really niche audience will use this that fall into maybe two demographics--you'll have people who were hankering for their Facebook groups to resemble Reddit a bit more, and those who want to inject a ton of AI into their Facebook group experiences. I swear, find a way to let people have an account on Forum without nearly as much Facebook baggage (even if there is some), and this could really take off. Otherwise, this might just fade away as quietly as it was launched.











