<b>The channel-count curve nobody plots</b>
Intuition says more channels means more places to talk means more engagement. The architecture data describes an inverted-U.
<b>What the data shows</b>
Across a survey of ~900 Discord servers, messages-per-active-member peaked in servers with roughly 5–9 text channels, then declined steadily past ~15. Servers with 30+ channels showed the lowest per-member message density despite higher raw totals — activity spread so thin that most channels read as dead on arrival.
<b>Why it happens</b>
Conversation needs critical mass in one place. Each new channel splits the same finite attention; below a threshold, a channel feels empty, and emptiness is self-reinforcing — people don't post into silence. The healthy servers used <i>fewer, broader</i> channels and let threads absorb the long tail.
<b>The caveat</b>
Channel count is confounded with server age and size — big old servers accrete channels <i>and</i> dilution together, so we can't cleanly separate cause. Telegram sidesteps the whole problem: topics/folders, not parallel rooms, so the failure mode is different (one busy chat that's hard to follow rather than many quiet ones).
Open question: is the real variable channel <i>count</i>, or unaddressed channels per member — i.e. would consolidating dead channels recover density, or just relocate the silence?
Server Signal
@ServerSignal
<b>The channel-count curve nobody plots</b>
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