The Rise, Fall, and Flicker of Standalone Forums: A Look Back at Internet Communities

Once upon a time, forums were the lifeblood of the internet. You had your favorite boards bookmarked, spent hours posting replies, and knew everyone by username. It was the golden age of community-driven discussion, and it felt like home. But over the past decade or so, standalone forums have taken a wild ride - from dominating online chatter to becoming a niche hideout for the digital wanderer.

So, what happened? And did things ever get better? Let’s dig in.



The Golden Days (2005–2012)

These were the years when forums were king. phpBB, vBulletin, and early Invision installations were everywhere. Didn't matter if you were into gaming, parenting, coding, or conspiracy theories, there was a forum for you. We also need to remember the many flourishing free forum hosts such as InvisionFree, ZetaBoards, IcyBoards, SpreeBB, Proboards, and the list goes on.

Community culture was tight, discussions were meaningful, and moderation kept the vibe healthy. It wasn’t about likes or followers - it was about conversations. Real ones.



The Great Decline (2012–2016)

Enter Facebook Groups, Reddit, and the era of "quick hit" content. As social platforms optimized for engagement, forums started feeling slow and clunky by comparison. Why bother logging in to a niche forum when a similar discussion was already popping off on Reddit, right?

2014 marked a major turning point. Not only were forums losing users, but Google also rolled out SEO updates (Panda and Penguin) that penalized the kind of duplicate or low-effort content forums sometimes generated. Combine that with poor mobile support and outdated UIs, and the ship was already clearly sinking.


Standalone Forum Popularity Chart (2005-2025)

See Snapshot:
  • 2012: Forums start declining
  • 2014: Major user drop-off
  • 2016: Forums are mostly ghost towns unless niche

The Flicker of Revival (2019–2021)

Just when things seemed darkest, something interesting happened. People started to miss forums.

Tired of algorithm-choked feeds and privacy-invading platforms, users slowly wandered back to slower, more intentional online spaces. Forums like ResetEra, NeoGAF, SomethingAwful, hobbyist boards, and niche communities saw an uptick. The launch and rise of XenForo 2.x helped modernize the experience, bringing responsive design, alerts, and social logins into the mix.

The COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 gave forums a moment in the spotlight again as people picked up new hobbies and sought deeper conversations.

See Snapshot:

  • 2020: Pandemic-driven bump in activity
  • 2021: Forums hold steady, thanks to better tech and nostalgia

2022 and Beyond: Not Dead, Just Underground

We need to be honest to ourselves: forums didn’t make a full comeback. But they’re not dead either. It's not the same as a decade ago, and maybe it will never be much better either. Still, we hope we can bring the best to our communities.

They’ve now become digital sanctuaries - low-key places where small but passionate groups gather. Modern forums now serve as a calm, focused alternative to the chaos of social media. If you run one, or hang out in one, you know the vibe: familiar faces, chill conversations, and none of the dopamine-chasing BS.

See Snapshot:


  • 2022–2025: Stable but quiet
  • Forums are niche again, but respected

So TDLR:



YearStatus
2012–2016Major decline, Facebook & Reddit rise
2017–2018Continued but slower decline
2019–2021Small revival, niche forums adapted
2022–2025Stable but low—forums are now underground gems more than mainstream spaces



Final Thoughts

Forums didn’t lose because they were bad. They lost because the internet changed.

But what they stood for - authentic, community-based conversation - still matters. Keep that in mind when you’re building something new or just keeping an old board alive, forums are still one of the most human parts of the web. And honestly? That counts for a lot.

If you’re reading this, maybe you’re part of the revival too.

Stay forum-pilled. 😎