2024 Retrospective

Real talk: 2024 was rough. So I’m gonna take a minute to celebrate some wins and share some thanks. I’ve already written about the past year on my gregpak.net blog, which you can feel free to check out for a more personal angle on all of this. But please read on for some highlights of the creative work I was able to do with awesome collaborators — and a big Happy New Year to you!

Finished a 50 issue run on DARTH VADER

Darth Vader #50 cover by Leinil Yu featuring Luke, Vader, Sly Moore, Sabé, Ochi, and an ominous floating head of the Emperor.

Working on the DARTH VADER comics throughout the pandemic has been one of the great joys of my comics career. So I’m particularly proud of the way we wrapped up the run this year with an oversized issue #50 in September. Artists Raffaele Ienco, Paul Fry, Luke Ross, and Adam Gorham absolutely knocked the four stories in the book out of the park, with glorious coloring by Federico Blee, Frank William, Alex Sinclair, and Guru-eFX, cover by Leinil Yu, letters by Joe Caramagna, and editing by Mark Paniccia and Mikey Basso.

DARTH VADER #50 concluded the Schism Imperial arc and featured a final showdown between Vader and the Emperor with major denouements for Sabé, Ochi, and even Kitster and Wald and little Anakin Skywalker. We were able to pay off our big themes and put a button on our exploration of the tragedy of Darth Vader, and I loved the whole experience.

Thanks so much to all the readers and retailers who supported the book and massive love to everyone who worked on the entire series.

I’m also honored that the series was declared Best Comic of 2024 by TheHoloFiles.com — also nabbing the Fan’s Pick citation. Huge thanks, y’all!

Worked on some fun STAR WARS oneshots

Cover of the STAR WARS: PHANTOM MENACE 25TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL drawn by Phil Noto - showing kid Anakin surrounded by head shots of a bunch of characters from the movie, including Shmi, Obi-Wan, Jar Jar, Padmé, Qui-Gon, Palpatine, and a Tusken Raider.

Speaking of Star Wars, I also had the awesome chance to write two one shot comics this year — the PHANTOM MENACE 25th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL draw by Wil Sliny and the DARTH MAUL: BLACK, WHITE, and RED #4 book drawn by Luca Pizzari and Wil Sliny.

The PHANTOM MENACE book gave us a tremendous chance to dig deeper into the heart and soul of young Anakin and serves as a great companion to the main DARTH VADER series. The NerdyNook called it “truly incredible” and named it one of the best books of the year.

And the DARTH MAUL book was just a blast — a dark, bleak fable that along with the other Maul stories in the series ended up on Chad Burdett’s Top Ten best books of the year at Comic-Watch.com.

Worked on the Stop Project 2025 comic

REDUCE THE NUMBER OF FREE SCHOoL LUNCHES. THE COMMUNITY ELIGIBILITY PROGRAM (CEP) "ALLOWS SCHOOLS OR SCHOOL DISTRICTS WITH HIGH RATES OF POVERTY TO OFFER MEALS TO ALL. STUDENTS WITHout HAVING TO QUALIFY EACH STUDENT INDIVIDUALLY.* PROTECT 2025 STATES "CONGRESS SHOULD ELIMINATE CEP. (2025, P 303] HTTPS://FIRSTFOCUS.ORG/RESOURCE/HOW- PROTECT-2025-WOULD-LEAVE-KIDS-BABIES -HUNGRIER-LESS-HEALTHY/

A D AL

ON SECOND THOUGHT...

ELIMINATE SUMMER MEALS FOR MANY KIDS. FURTHERMORE, PROTECT 2025 SAYS "THE USDA SHOULD NOT PROVIDE MEALS TO STUDENTS During the summer unless STUDENTS ARE TAKING SUMMER-SCHOOL CLASSES." THEY CALL SUMMER MEALS FOR HUNGRY KIDS "A FEDERAL CATERING PROGRAM." [2025, P 303]

SCRAM!

I was proud to join an all-volunteer group of comic book artists and writers who worked like hell to put out the Stop Project 2025 comics, which you can read here. They remain a valuable resource to get a handle on what Project 2025 supporters have in mind for our country in the months and years to come.

Edited the A STORY IN EVERY OBJECT! Asian American comics anthology

Cover of A STORY IN EVERY OBJECT: AN ASIAN AMERICAN COMICS ANTHOLOGY from the NYC DOE Civics for All Comics Group. Featuring full body self portraits of the seven contributors - MariNaomi, Greg Pak, Trung Le Nguyen, Nidhi Chanai, Shing Yin Khor, Kolbe Yang, and Gene Luen Yang. Behind the self portraits are the objects their stories are about, including a cleaver, a table, a cookbook, a name plate, wedding dolls, and an altar.

A STORY IN EVERY OBJECT! features six stories by brilliant Asian American cartoonists about the history of personal objects in their families. The book was produced for the NYC DOE Civics for All Comics Group and is free to download in PDF form right here!

It’s one of the best books I’ve worked on in the last decade and I hope you’ll check it out. If you’re a teacher, you might find it really helpful as a way to get kids to think about history — and there’s a fun “make your own comic” section at the end of the book!

The incredible cartoonists include MariNaomi, Trung Le Nguyen, Nidhi Chanani, Shing Yin Khor, Gene Luen Yang, and Kolbe Yang. The stories they share in this anthology are so personal and funny and moving all at once; I’m so grateful to them and I hope you’ll love the book as much as I do.

Launched LAWFUL

Panel from LAWFUL #7 showing our hero Sung flying towards us looking fierce with red scales and wings. Eris in the background holding a woman shot by arrows. Art by Diego Galindo and Irma Kniivila.

In June, BOOM Studios launched the comic series LAWFUL, which tells the story of two young heroes coming of age in a world in which any time you break the rules, you turn a little more into a monster. The book’s drawn by the great Diego Galindo with colors by Irma Kniivila and letters by Simon Bowland, and it’s absolutely gorgeous. Our amazing editors are Shantel LaRoque and David Mariotte.

LAWFUL’s one of the most personal books I’ve ever written and might be one of the best. Please feel free to check out the FreakSugar interview for more about the series.

Wrote eight issues of LILO & STITCH

LILO & STITCH #1 variant cover by Jennifer L. Meyer featuring Lilo in a grotto looking up at a small flock of red and black birds.

LILO & STITCH is my favorite of the modern Disney animated movies and I was thrilled when editor Nate Cosby approached me about writing it and even more thrilled when we were able to bring Moana McAdams on board as a cultural consultant. The book’s drawn by the brilliant Giulia Giacomino with letters by Jeff Eckleberry, and you can buy signed copies of the first issue at the Greg Pak Shop!

Worked on a secret project I think you’ll love

sketch of a log cabin on a hill. rustic wooden fenced garden in the foreground. horse in a fence by the cabin, a few pines to the left. mountains in the background. smoke coming from the stone chimney of the cabin.

Here’s a sketch I did in preparation for a secret project. I can’t say anything more about it except that it’s been a dream project for years and I think it’ll blow your minds. Cross your fingers for us in 2025!

What’s coming up?

Cover of SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 by Taurin Clarke showing Sam Wilson in his Captain America outfit flying across the screen with his falcon. Red Hulk looming in the background. Wild floating facilities in the sky overhead. Patriot, War Machine, and Storm along the bottom of the page.

SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 hits comic shops TODAY, January 1! And it’s already getting rave reviews! Please do check it out. The book’s written by yours truly and Evan Narcisse with interior line art by Eder Messias and Valentine De Landro, colors by Fer-Sifuentes Sujo, letters by Joe Caramagna, editing by Alanna Smith, and cover by Taurin Clarke.

Taurin and I will be doing a signing of the book starting at 2 pm on January 5 at Anyone Comics in Brooklyn — please do come by, NYC!

I’m also working on three (3) different unannounced and very exciting comics projects — more news on everything soon!

I hope you’re all having a restful day and wish you all as good a 2025 as we can make!

2025-01-08 – CRUEL KINGDOM #1 hits comic shops!

Cover of Oni Press's CRUEL KINGDOM #1 featuring a crowned robot king with a sword and red cape standing in front of a horde of awed looking humans in medieval-style clothing. By Adam Pollina.

I’ve got a story called “Blood of the Robo King” inspired by that phenomenal Adam Polina cover and drawn by Leomacs in Oni Press’s CRUEL KINGDOM #1 anthology book that hits comic shops on January 8!

My Kind of Weird has a rave review of the book – feel free to check it out here, but be warned – it’s full of SPOILERS!

Ask your local comic shop to hold a copy of the book for you!

2025-01-01 – SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 hits stores – check out the preview!

Splash page from SAM WILSON CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 showing Sam descending from above in Cap costume kicking a vampire in the face, saving some civilians. Text at the top says "Captain American Sam Wilson Better Angels Part 1." Balloon for a civilian at the bottom says "...I think Sam Wilson does." Drawn by Eder Messias with colors by Fer Sifuentes-Sujo and letters by Joe Caramagna.

SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 hits comic book shops on January 1, 2025 – and Comic Book Club has a five page lettered preview!

The official synopsis:

SAM WILSON SOARS AGAIN! When Captain America attends a birthday party for Isaiah Bradley, he catches wind of a new tech venture that sounds too good to be true: magnificent floating platforms in the sky, where the disenfranchised can apply for land grants and establish their own farms. But after Sam discovers the organization’s dark underbelly, he’ll have to tangle with its head of security: Red Hulk! Greg Pak (INCREDIBLE HULK, WEAPON H), Evan Narcisse (RISE OF THE BLACK PANTHER) and Eder Messias (PHASES OF THE MOON NIGHT) join forces for a high-flying Cap adventure!

Ask your local comic shop to hold a copy for you, or if you’re in NYC, come get your copy signed by Greg Pak on January 5 at Anyone Comics!

2024-12-25 – LAWFUL #6 in comic shops!

Pleased to report that LAWFUL #6 is in comic shops now! Written by Greg Pak (hey, that’s me!) with line art by Diego Galindo, colors by Irma Kniivila, letters by Simon Bowland, and a main cover by Qistina Khadilah.

The Super Powered Fancast gives the book 9.2 out of 10 and says “Pak continues to create great drama and tension throughout this series and this issue is no exception.”

Dontcha dare miss it! Ask your local retailer to hold a copy for you today!

2024-12-04 – New ETERNAL WARRIOR collection in stores today!

I did not know this book was in stores today! Brand new collection of ETERNAL WARRIOR stories, including the comics I did with Trevor Hairsine, Robert Gill, and company a few years back! Check it out and ask your local comic shop to hold a copy for you!

WAR NEVER ENDS!

A new ETERNAL WARRIOR collection is out now featuring stories by @gregpak.bsky.social & Peter Milligan with art by Trevor Hairsine and Clayton Crain!

Plus, a sweet cover by @patrickzircher.bsky.social!

[image or embed]

— Alien Books (@alienbooks.bsky.social) December 4, 2024 at 1:40 PM

Pre-order SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 today, friends!

Cover of SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 by Taurin Clarke showing Sam Wilson in his Captain America outfit flying across the screen with his falcon. Red Hulk looming in the background. Wild floating facilities in the sky overhead. Patriot, War Machine, and Storm along the bottom of the page.

Hey, friends! Today is the final order cutoff for comic shops to place their orders for SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1, so you’d do me a HUGE favor if you’d call your local shop and ask ’em to pre-order a copy for you TODAY, Monday, November 25!

You can find your local comic shop at comicshoplocator.com!

SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 is written by yours truly and the great Evan Narcisse with line art by Eder Messias and Valentine De Lauro, colors by Fernando Sifuentes, letters by Joe Caramagna, and gorgeous covers by Taurin Clarke – just check out that image above!

The story follows our social worker turned super-hero Sam Wilson as he gets pulled by his cousin Billie into a billionaire’s scheme to use mindblowing technology to help Black farmers. But is it all what it seems? And what about that Red Hulk on the cover?

The book’s been a tremendous chance to play with huge super-hero adventure, delve into big sci-fi futurist fantasy, and explore the very specific ways this specific Black Captain America embodies, analyzes, and fights for the promise of America.

For more about the book, here’s an interview from the fine folks at the Captain America Comic Book Fans podcast with me and Evan:

I think you’re gonna freaking love it. Please do ask your local comic shop to pre-order it for you today, and check out some stunning interior pages below!

Interior art from SAM WILSON CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 showing Sam Wilson as Captain American descending down to smash some vampires on the streets of New York City - flying white pigeons and his falcon beside him, backlit by a glorious flare from the setting sun. Art by Eder Messias and Fernando Sifuentes.

Page from SAM WILSON: CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 showing a flashback sequence with Sam Wilson and his cousin Billie seeing their grandfather on the farm looking grimly at letters that he and other Black farmers have received. Snow is falling. In the last panels, their grandfather gazes solemnly out over his field as the snow falls and geese fly away. In the last panel, we see Sam Wilson as Captain America in real time flying out over the fields of upstate New York, glorious in the sun, accompanied by his falcon. But still a solemn feeling. Line art by Valentine De Lauro, colors by Fernando Sifuentes.

Be an Early Voting Hero!

Hey, friends! Early voting is underway in many states – and starts today across Florida and in Michigan, New Jersey, and New York!

Please do vote early if you can. It’s SATISFYING and FUN and it helps you avoid any possible Election Day voter suppression shenanigans.

Time to shine, Early Voting Heroes!

Why I ditched Twitter for Bluesky – and hope you will, too!

THE SHORT PITCH

Twitter is a cesspool and I’m only posting there now to tell people to find me elsewhere. That elsewhere? Bluesky, a new social media site that’s become the best place on the internet for me… and maybe you too?

If you’re not already on social media, congratulations — you should probably stay off! But if you liked the feel and functionality of old Twitter but want an alternative, Bluesky should feel right at home, and there are loads of interesting folks to follow. Below are a few starter packs of great accounts. Just click on a starter pack, make a Bluesky account, follow some folks, come back and follow more folks on more starter packs, and see if you like it! And then please feel free to read on for a more detailed explanation of why Bluesky feels so good to me right now as an independent creator and a human being in 2024.

People Who Get It – folks I follow with solid info, good vibes, or practical thoughts of how to help in troubling times.

Awesome Artists/Creators I’ve Worked With

150 active comics creators!

Another bunch of active comics creators!

150 news outlets / journalists / explainers!

A bunch of local journalists / news sources!

A bunch of AANHPI writers, artists, and creators!

Some analog film photography folks!

Some sharp folks who frequently post practical suggestions of things we can do to make the world better in 2024!

THE LONGER EXPLANATION

You might not be reading this post or even know who I am if not for Twitter. I’ve built much of my career as an independent creator using the internet – from plain old email lists back in the day to making my own website to blogging and embracing social media — and for years, Twitter played a huge role in helping me reach new readers as a comic book writer.

But Twitter is now run by someone who regularly platforms bigotry and transphobia and shares unconscionable lies and conspiracies. The site is also becoming less safe all the time, allowing harassers and even literal neo Nazis to post and, most recently, promising to deprecate its block function. So almost exactly a year ago, I deleted most of my posts and stopped using the site for anything other than pointing folks to other, better sites to use instead.

The best of those alternative sites? I don’t generally love cheerleading for corporations and realize that any product can fall apart at any time. But after a couple of years of trying almost everything, I’m pretty sure the best Twitter alternative for me is Bluesky — by a long shot.

Bluesky is a social media site that on the surface feels pretty much like old Twitter. You follow people, people follow you, and everyone can make short posts of up to 300 characters, which can include images and video. You can like, reshare, and comment on other people’s posts, and vice versa. Your default feed on Bluesky is chronological and features the folks you actually follow instead of a bunch of random people that an algorithm pushes on you, which is absolutely fantastic for an independent creator like me whose posts will often never reach people who have chosen to follow me on Instagram or similar sites.

So far, so great! But a number of other features and services make Bluesky really shine.

The Nuclear Block

Bluesky’s single most valuable feature in terms of safety and community may be its so-called “nuclear block.” When you block someone on Bluesky, all of their posts disappear from your feed and posts and all of your posts disappear from their feed and posts. So if they’ve replied to you and vice versa, once one of you has blocked the other, those arguments disappear from your respective feeds.

That means that trolls and bigots who literally make money on other sites from ginning up fights for public entertainment get stripped of any incentive or ability to monetize their hate on Bluesky. Their posts just… vanish! They can’t hijack threads so they don’t get eyeballs and thus don’t get new followers and clicks on their merch links or whatever else they’re pushing. And they have vastly less power to create online mobs to harass people.

The one drawback to Bluesky’s block feature is that a user’s block lists aren’t private. Through third party apps, you can find lists of everyone anyone’s blocked. That probably won’t bother most people, but it’s a potential issue for those who worry that public block lists could be used perniciously by persistent stalkers or harassers.

Other User-Controlled Moderation Settings

Individual users on Bluesky can also set individual posts to disable quote posting and limit replies and can detach a post from someone else’s quote post, all of which can help decrease harassment. You can also temporarily deactivate your account, which removes it from use and public view but allows you to reactivate it later.

The only missing function is the ability to lock your account or go private as you can on Twitter, which would let you hide your account from non-followers while still posting to folks who already follow you.

Solid Site-Wide Moderation

After a few hitches over the last year and a half, Bluesky’s administrators seem to be doing a pretty solid job of site-wide moderation — never perfect, but vastly better than Twitter’s apparently non-existent efforts.

Any Bluesky user can report suspect accounts to the administrators, and I often see bigots, scammers, and spammers disappear within one to three days of reporting them, a level of responsiveness I almost never saw on Twitter, even before Musk took over.

Bluesky also has a labeling system that tags accounts and individual posts with warnings. The tags include a controversial “Rude” designation, which I’ve worried could be used to hide posts that rightfully criticize politicians or the New York Times, for example. But so far I haven’t seen that happen. I’m keeping an eye open for it, though!

Moderation Lists

Bluesky also allows individual users to create public moderation lists that other users can subscribe to. So if a friend has identified a bunch of bigots or trolls, you can subscribe to their list and automatically block whomever they suggest. That can be great, but it can also lead to conflicts and moderator burnout. Normal people really aren’t generally equipped to handle the incredible pressures of running moderation for a social media site, so it takes a special person to maintain a popular moderation list. Since they’re public, moderation lists could also potentially be used to increase instead of decrease harassment.

So I appreciate the existence of moderation lists, but I use them with due diligence and caution.

Starter Packs, Feeds, and User Lists

A starter pack is just a list of accounts that you like that you can share with other people. This post began with a big list of starter packs I’ve created. Folks can click on a starter pack and follow accounts individually or all at once. Brand new folks can click on a starter pack link on a different site and open a new Bluesky account to follow the folks in that starter pack. It’s a great way to share the love with accounts you like and build community.

A feed is a slightly different creature. Any user can create a feed that includes the posts of certain users or posts that include keywords or hashtags or otherwise match certain criteria. When you “pin” a feed, a new tab shows up on your front page that shows all the posts in that feed. You could think of a feed as a custom algorithm — a way to make sure certain kinds of posts pop up without having to follow specific accounts or search for specific terms. Creating a feed is a bit more complex than making a starter pack. Despite my old school mastery of HTML 2.0 (lol), I don’t have the coding knowledge necessary to use the Bluesky feed generator, so I used a simpler third party app called SkyFeed to make the #DidThisToday feed.

Finally, a user list is a list of accounts that you can share and pin to your home page. Pinning a list to your home page creates another tab that shows all the posts from users on that list, so as I undertand it, a list basically functions like a feed. Lists can also be added to feeds (or starter packs!).

These different options can admittedly get a bit confusing. I personally find starter packs to be the most intuitive, simple, and easy-to-use of all of these features — just sharing a bunch of accounts that other people can follow! But lots of folks get a lot out of lists and feeds, which is great.

Community and Ethos

From the beginning, Bluesky had a lot of users who were LGBTQIA+ and a lot of users who were very wary of Twitter’s collapsing moderation — two heavily overlapping groups, no doubt. One result is that the users of the site established an ethos early on of immediately blocking and reporting harassers and bigots. Combined with the nuclear block, that’s has resulted in less arguing with (and thereby less spreading the reach of) bigots, which is fantastic.

But Bluesky has gotten considerable criticism at key points over the last year and a half for failures in handling anti-Black racism in particular. Rudy Fraser wrote extensively about some of these issues along with a deep dive into his goals and challenges as the creator of the now legendary Blacksky feed in a great post a year ago.

As an Asian American creator, I’ve noticed fewer accounts and posts by AANHPI folks than I saw on Twitter in its heyday, which is one of the reasons I launched the AANHPI Creator Rollcall starter pack.

I think Bluesky’s constantly getting better as its userbase grows and more diverse communities expand, but it’s still a work in progress.

Bluesky has also been criticized as a left wing “echo chamber” by folks I won’t link to here. I’m not particularly bothered by these critiques since they often seem to boil down to thinking that a social media site should allow transphobes and racists to post freely. That’s not what I’m looking for.

Possible Future Issues

It’s a bit telling that I’m around 1500 words into this post before even mentioning the AT Protocol, the big technical dream that the site was created to showcase. As I understand it, the AT Protocol, like the ActivityPub protocol that Mastodon is part of, is designed to federate social media, meaning that anyone can use the underlying code driving Bluesky to create their own social media server that existing Bluesky users could interact with or migrate to, if they desire.

That’s a lot to wrap your head around, isn’t it?

But from years on Mastodon, I internalized this kind of “federation” as a positive thing — it means that your following and follower lists are yours and you can take them with you to another site if, for example, your current site gets bought out and ruined by a billionaire. And I still value that very much conceptually.

But in practice, I’m realizing that what the vast majority of users mostly want on a day-to-day basis is a social media site with good functionality and great moderation where we can post without getting dogpiled by bigots and scammers. That simple ask requires enormous resources to maintain quality moderation and safety, which (again, from years of Mastodon experience) I’m not sure most everyday people can ever deliver without burning out or destroying themselves.

I gather this was a journey the Bluesky developers themselves had to take in public for the last year and a half. My impression is that they launched the site mostly as a demo for what folks could do with the AT Protocol. But instead of creating other sites using the AT Protocol, users really just wanted the Bluesky site itself to be a great place to post. And to their great credit, the developers have been very responsive, adding feature after feature and improving trust and safety to get it to this point.

But in the long term, I don’t know how Bluesky will make its money back. I’m not privy to their plans and it’s not really my business. But I hope that if and when they need to monetize more aggressively, they’ll do so in ways that don’t undermine the remarkable features they’ve already implemented.

COMPARISONS TO OTHER SITES IN A NUTSHELL

Bluesky vs. Twitter

Twitter still presumably has “reach,” with many more users than Bluesky. But even when Bluesky was in its infancy, I’d regularly get more interaction from a couple thousand Bluesky followers than 50,000 Twitter followers. I absolutely understand that many folks, particularly folks from marginalized communities, have friends and networks that only exist on Twitter, and I will never judge them. But aside from that, the algorithm on Twitter is trash and I don’t think “reach” feels like a good excuse.

Bluesky vs. Instagram

Instagram’s algorithms notoriously limit the reach of your posts through mysterious and ever-changing formulas so you never know if anything you throw up there will be seen by the people who chose to follow you. Instagram also notoriously doesn’t allow active links in posts, so folks have to resort to the sad “link in bio” tag.

Bluesky has no overall algorithm and delivers all posts in chronological order, so the people who follow you will get your posts in their feed, and Bluesky allows live links so you can drive traffic to whatever you want.

Instagram also crops images so that the top and bottom of vertical comic book pages and 35mm photographs get chopped off.

Bluesky presents vertical comic book pages and 35mm photos fully, without cropping. (Only REALLY disproportionately vertical images get cropped, and you can still click a button to see those images fully if you want.)

Bluesky vs. Mastodon

Mastodon has many of the positive features of Bluesky, but the interface remains kludgy. The fact that folks are spread over different servers on Mastodon is a feature, but it’s also a bug that can make it hard to follow or see the posts of folks on other servers. Mastodon also does not natively allow or display quote posts, which decreases conversation, and its direct messages have a quirk that sends the message to anyone who’s mentioned in it, which can result in messaging folks when you’re just talking about them behind their back (which no one reading this would ever do, of course, lol).

Bluesky vs. Threads

Threads is constructed like a tiny blogging site, with main posts and comment sections. It’s also driven by a bad algorithm and has a bonus system that pays people for viral posts, so every time I visit there, I see annoying “story time” posts by folks trying to gin up engagement. For me, it’s a feel-bad site that discourages actual conversation in favor of broadcasting. Bluesky feels a place real people are just posting their weird (complimentary) thoughts, which is much more my speed.

CONCLUSION

I hate what Twitter’s become. I dislike what Instagram and Threads are. I like Mastodon but feel limited by the interface. So…

…Bluesky still has work to do, but it’s by far my preferred social media site right now, and if you’re still on social media and everything I’ve written here hasn’t scared you off, I hope you’ll give it a shot!