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Reddit is a social news aggregation, web content rating, and discussion website. Reddit's registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Reddit reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (63%)
- Errors (24%)
- Sign in (12%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Website Down | 7 days ago |
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Errors | 7 days ago |
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Sign in | 9 days ago |
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Website Down | 13 days ago |
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Website Down | 16 days ago |
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Website Down | 17 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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𝑏 𝑥 𝑛 (@bxn45I) reported@XDJGUNDAMX @iamrobtv I mean thats the same with people who are having problems with their consoles overheating or the ring of the death on 360, when it doesn’t happen to u it seems unrealistic but then u check reddit and see threads upon threads with people who are having that problem
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ポンチぃ🀄️ (@Blue1Mercury) reportedmade more natural by GPT { I'm not sure about the exact cause, but the 64-bit version of StreamFab appears to be broken. On all platforms, the top pages fail to load properly, making the software unusable. Some downloaders also display "0 of 3 left" even on a fresh installation and first launch. In contrast, the 32-bit version seems to work without any issues. What's more, StreamFab is the only application that still offers a 32-bit edition; other similar apps are available only in 64-bit versions. [slightly more formal] I'm not sure what the underlying issue is, but the 64-bit version of StreamFab does not appear to be functioning correctly. On every platform I tested, the main page fails to load, rendering the application unusable. In addition, some downloaders display "0 of 3 left" even on a fresh install and initial launch. By comparison, the 32-bit version works without any noticeable issues. Unfortunately, StreamFab is the only similar application that still provides a 32-bit edition; all other comparable applications are available only as 64-bit versions. } Gemini { Option 1: Natural & Casual (Best for Reddit, Discord, or forums) "I'm not sure about the details, but the 64-bit version of StreamFab is dead and won't display the home page for any platform. Some downloaders say '0 of 3 left' even on the very first launch. On the other hand, the 32-bit version seems to have no problem at all. And on top of that, StreamFab is the only one with a 32-bit edition. Other similar apps only have 64-bit versions." Option 2: Slightly More Clear/Technical (Best for a bug report) "I don't know the exact details, but StreamFab 64-bit is completely broken; it fails to load the homepage on all platforms. Additionally, some modules show '0 of 3 left' even during the initial startup. Conversely, the 32-bit version seems to work perfectly. To make matters worse, StreamFab is the only software that still offers a 32-bit edition, while competing apps only provide 64-bit versions." } Claude { "I'm not sure about the details, but the StreamFab 64-bit edition seems to be broken — it fails to display the top page on any platform. Some downloaders show '0 of 3 left' even right at the initial launch. The 32-bit edition, on the other hand, seems to work fine. On top of that, StreamFab is the only app that still offers a 32-bit edition — other similar apps only have a 64-bit version." }
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sad barista 🏳️⚧️ (@kepneram3lia) reportedNever realized {mostly bc I’m sitting infront of my tv and I’m blind lmfao} the ssg sign In Reddit story’s says “need extra help I’ll tutor your dumb ***” and now I’m cackling at 5am
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lunchtable 🇺🇸 (@lunch_table_) reported@reddit_lies Reddit needs to be shut down.
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Jackson Shaw (@bravesfanshaw) reported@reddit_lies The only creative writing that reddit produced was the fetish ****** broken arms guy, poop knife, and various power fantasies from beta atheists
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korchagin (@korchagin9) reported@SheetsWend59834 @_Jase_C_ @kajakallas Shure shure. Bronze age Stone age Dinosaur age. Dna illustrated bs corrected for invaders from Arabia and Bosnia to calm down bigots. Transformers of reddit piss hot hearing this stories.
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Ashwin (@Ashw1nKumar) reportedNobody cares about your product. 😞 That sounds harsh, but it's one of the most important lessons I've learned as a founder. We spend days, weeks, sometimes months building something we genuinely believe can help people. We polish the design, fix bugs, add features, and finally hit the launch button expecting users to show up. Most of the time, they don't. Not because the product is bad. Because nobody knows it exists. A few days ago, I launched a free invoice generator. Nothing revolutionary. Just a simple tool designed to solve a real problem. Like many founders, my biggest challenge wasn't building it. It was getting people to see it. So I did what most of us do. I shared it on X. I tried different channels. The response was okay. Then I posted on Reddit. And something unexpected happened. Within about 24 hours, I received 80+ new users. For some people, that's a tiny number. For me, it was huge. Because these weren't random visitors. Many were from the US, UK, and other Tier 1 countries. Real people. Real users. Real feedback. But here's the interesting part. The traffic wasn't the biggest benefit. The feedback was. Reddit is one of the few places left on the internet where people will tell you exactly what they think. Sometimes they'll love your product. Sometimes they'll completely destroy your assumptions. And honestly? That's valuable. Before posting, I was nervous. It was my first time publicly sharing something I built. I kept thinking: "What if people hate it?" "What if they think it's useless?" "What if nobody responds?" But then I realized something. Every successful founder has been judged. Every successful product has been criticized. Every successful launch started with putting something imperfect into the world. The founders who win aren't the ones who avoid criticism. They're the ones who learn from it. So if you're sitting on a product, tool, website, SaaS, or side project that you've been afraid to share, this is your sign: Post it. Not everywhere. Post it where people actually care about the problem you're solving. For me, that place was Reddit. Maybe for you, it's somewhere else. But don't let fear of feedback stop you from getting feedback. Because the market doesn't reward hidden products. It rewards visible ones. And sometimes all it takes is one post, in the right community, to get your first real users. What's been your best source of traffic so far? I'd genuinely love to hear what has worked for other founders.
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Nasty African Gyal 𓃠 (@noniyabusiness_) reportedi’m going through problems you can’t even find on Reddit
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Timo 🌱 (@TimoBuilds_) reportedi finally stopped trying to make @FocusMap_ sound bigger than it is the page was too broad the message was too smart the pain was too hidden reddit feedback made the real problem obvious: founders don’t need another roadmap theory they need to remember who asked and tell them when it ships so i rebuilt the whole marketing page around that loop request → vote → roadmap → shipped → user notified first time the page feels like it knows who it is for 👀 what do you understand in 5 secs?
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Guna (@gunaa_dev) reported18 days of building Clksy in public. still $0. here's what today actually looked like: - updated the docs page (Zapier native integration, added Slack guide) - scheduled next week's posts - wrote and scheduled Ship Log Issue #2 - replied to founders on Twitter and Reddit - added a new feature idea to the backlog none of it shipped a feature. none of it brought a paying customer. but I think this is just what early stage looks like. you do the unglamorous work. you don't see the result yet. you do it again tomorrow. 24 days left to get my first paying customer before my 27th birthday. the pressure is useful.
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NiteCapsLSU (@LSUomaha8) reported@AnonymousLeftie komi is a mentally ill reddit freak who needs to be put down. You live behind a computer and have no power in the real world
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Dragos Roua (@dragosroua) reported@thekitze Depends. Ads: FB ads, Apple ads. Inside Apple ecosystem: ASO (slow, but based, better user quality). Reddit (very hit and miss). But I guess you already know all of them :)
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Martles Movies, Reviews & Satire (@k79890) reported@EverythingDCU_ “The fans consider…” Yeah in THEIR fan-fiction and alt universes. This is the inherent problem with all these basment dwelling fan-fiction writers getting mainstream jobs. They keep making only what they and or their little Reddit group want to see, NOT what the broad public wants for how it has been portrayed in the MAINSTREAM.
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Dr. M.F. Khan (@Dr_TheHistories) reportedIn 2007, a woman in China refused to sell her property to developers, resulting in it being stranded on a mountain of dirt with no electricity or water services. This photograph became one of the most famous examples of a Chinese "nail house", a term used for property owners who refuse to move despite pressure from developers. The image was taken in 2007 in the city of Chongqing, where homeowner Wu Ping and her husband became national figures after refusing compensation offers to vacate their property. As excavation proceeded around the site, the house was left perched atop a mound of earth in the middle of a massive construction pit. Utilities were reportedly cut, and access became increasingly difficult, turning the home into a symbol of resistance against powerful development interests. The dispute attracted enormous media attention throughout China. At the time, China's rapid urbanization was transforming cities at an unprecedented pace, with millions of residents being relocated for highways, apartment towers, shopping centers, and infrastructure projects. Many citizens saw the case as a test of newly strengthened private property rights. After weeks of negotiations and national publicity, Wu Ping and her husband eventually reached a settlement with developers and moved out. The house was demolished shortly afterward. The term "nail house" comes from the idea of a stubborn nail that sticks up and cannot be hammered down. Similar cases have appeared throughout China, sometimes delaying multi-million-dollar construction projects. The Chongqing dispute became so famous that it was discussed internationally and is often cited as a landmark moment in China's evolving debate over private property rights and urban redevelopment. © Reddit #drthehistories
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al Zugern (@allzugern) reported@GlowanneLee Either X or Reddit. It was like a week ago. If Harry's people haven't said squat since. It seems clear that if the security issue isn't settled, only Harry will travel.
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Bijou🖤🖤🖤 (@Bijou_alors) reportedThis logic is so pathetic, because not k lt isn’t terrible it genuinely makes no sense… cause the group that said the relationship healed them is not the same group dissecting on Reddit….. can we please be fr…
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Arnau Mateu (@arnau_dev) reported@i_mika_el The problem is treating Reddit like a promo channel instead of a personal brand/trust channel. You give value first, people start trusting you, and then the link in bio/product does the selling for the ones who want more
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Johnny Five (@Do3Jonny) reported@InternetH0F The Backrooms didn't come from Reddit. This is terrible news.
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Ghostroot (@Gh0stroot) reported90% of startups fail. AI didn't change that number. It just made failing faster. Here's what's actually happening. In 2024 it took 6 months to build an MVP. In 2026 it takes 6 days. So founders build more. Ship more. Fail more. Faster. AI didn't fix the core problem. It amplified it. The core problem was never execution. It was never speed. It was never lack of tools. It was building something nobody actually wanted. The graveyard of startups in 2026 looks different from 2020. More polished products. Cleaner code. Better UI. Zero users. Because the founder used AI to build faster instead of using it to validate smarter. The founders who survive use AI differently. Before writing a single line of code — they feed Claude the market data. The competitor reviews. The Reddit complaints. The job posting trends. They ask: "Is this problem real? Is it painful enough? Is anyone already solving it?" Then they build. AI is the best tool ever built for executing on a validated idea. It's also the best tool ever built for executing on a wrong one. The tool doesn't know the difference. You have to.
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CL Art111 - freelance traditional artist (@callumlyal73631) reported@DungeonNoir Personally Reddit should shut down it’s not worth it.
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Cyber Bryce (@infohound311) reportedDuring a K hole I glitched out and tried ordering an uber to my exes for 7 hours straight. I kept missing random buttons and having to start from scratch which seemed to simultaneously unveil the recursive properties of the universe. During the glitch things would come and go out of conscious proximity, such as clips from The Office, an obscure stock image meme of an old man from the 2010s, and that black guy singing chocolate rain. Holy ****. That’s when it occurred to me. That very instant I realized death had passed me and this ostensibly visceral reality was in fact whatever remnants of my mind they gathered and uploaded to Reddit . Com. Then the uber glitch dissipated and I awoke in a white room where I was typing on a MacBook against my will that Drumpf is orange and senile.
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ere (@Z3Dino) reportedI doubt id add anything. Iam all tapped out of direct info Any more id have to break open caskets, smack the dead who ruined priceless books and break in every sort of library down near or have any connection. I had to trust reddit and quora since its the fastest place
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姉 Sophie (@pupgirltrainer) reportedBackrooms isn't even the first Reddit story movie. I've seen like 5 feature length films based on the broken arms guy.
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Shail (@Shail_2302_) reported@eliana_jordan Hands down reddit
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Dreadnought older than the Tau (@ArtoriusNZ) reported@PrinceOceanusVT The "Ciri has stockholm syndrome" thing is reddit lore, its nowhere in the books. The reality is that human relationships are complicated and Ciri genuinely did care for Mistle even though Mistle was a terrible person.
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OpSec Insider (@OpSecInsider) reportedTechnology Secretary Liz Kendall told BBC Breakfast the government will issue a dedicated VPN statement in July, alongside curfews for 16 and 17 year olds. Reddit threads about bypassing age checks rose from 1 in May 2025 to 65 in April 2026, per Belonging Forum research.
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Asmit (@coolcoder56) reportedStop burning your Opus 4.8 Max limits. Use this prompt to slash token costs. Someone on reddit shared how to utilize Opus 4.8 to its max limits . If y'all are running Fable 5 Claude Opus 4.8 on the Max plan, you already know it’s an absolute **** beast for engineering workflows. But let’s be real, because it defaults to high-effort adaptive thinking, it also chews through token caps and session limits like crazy. It loves to over-explain things, add polite conversational filler, and rewrite a massive file just to change two lines of code. To stop wasting generation limits, I’ve been using a highly compressed prompt that forces it to skip the fluff and maximize high-density output. Just copy-paste this into your custom instructions, project knowledge, or the start of your chat: Launch subagents. Output only the modified or requested code block. Do not provide line-by-line explanations, setup guides, introductory, concluding remarks, or markdown commentary unless explicitly asked. Adopt an ultra-concise, high-density communication style. Telling it to "Launch subagents" immediately triggers the model’s dynamic workflow architecture. Instead of the primary model burning massive reasoning tokens to plan out a sprawling task, it offloads task execution efficiently to parallel sub-processes. The biggest token saver by far is commanding it to "Output only the modified or requested code block." Opus Max has a terrible habit of rewriting an essay-script just to show a minor modification. This constraint completely shuts that down, forcing it to give you only the specific diff or function you actually asked for, which slashes your output token costs to almost zero (not really zero). On top of that, explicitly stripping explanations, setup guides, and polite concluding remarks eliminates all the redundant filler you already know anyway. Finally, demanding an "ultra-concise, high-density communication style" forces Claude’s adaptive thinking mechanism to heavily COMPRESS its syntax, ensuring every single token returned carries maximum technical signal.
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Mizz Elizabeth (@mizz_fieldss) reportedis anyone else’s @Reddit broken rn? my pfp, followers/following, bio and insights won’t display, and i can’t make a post or a comment but i can upvote…. i tried all the fixes and cleared caches , offloaded app… wtf reddit?
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hollow (@Cardern1) reportedI sat her down after dinner and explained that after reading a bunch of Reddit threads and watching some TikTok therapists, I realized I have “unmet needs.” Monogamy is a patriarchal construct anyway. She started crying immediately, classic female manipulation tactic. I was very calm and logical. I said: “Babe, you’ve let yourself go a bit since the kids. I still love you, but I need variety. You can have the house and the kids full-time. I’ll still pay the mortgage… most months. In return, you support my journey and never shame me for dating 22-year-olds.
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Rob Freund (@RobertFreundLaw) reportedHere's another ecom subscription lawsuit that includes a PR lesson. Public Goods was sued today for allegedly enrolling customers in subscription memberships without their knowledge. The complaint includes a screenshot from a Reddit thread. In the thread, Public Goods says, "our previous membership model wasn't always as clear as it should have been." It's natural to want to apologize, but there are ways to address issues without making harmful admissions that an adversary will use against you. Not that the case will hinge on that admission, but it's what you would call a "bad fact."