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r/techsupportgore

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Subscribers

649,096

Created

February 29, 2012

14 years ago

View on Reddit
RedPulse insight

How to think about r/techsupportgore

This community showcases humorous and often cringe-worthy examples of poor technical support experiences, hardware failures, and bizarre tech-related situations. It serves as a cathartic space for users to share and laugh at the absurdities of technology mishaps, often highlighting the incompetence or negligence involved in tech support. The distinct blend of humor and horror makes it a unique destination for those who appreciate the lighter side of tech troubles.

Confidence 4/5

  • Audience

    Members are typically tech-savvy individuals, ranging from casual users to IT professionals, who enjoy sharing and consuming content that highlights the absurdities of technology. The community attracts a diverse demographic, including younger users who are familiar with meme culture and older tech enthusiasts. The overall vibe is light-hearted, with a focus on humor and relatability in the face of tech failures.

  • Posting culture

    Content that thrives includes images and stories depicting outrageous tech support scenarios, hardware disasters, and humorous anecdotes. Posts that are overly promotional or lack a clear humorous angle tend to get downvoted. The community values originality and creativity, so reposts or low-effort submissions may not perform well. Posting frequency can vary, but members are generally active, contributing regularly to keep the content fresh and engaging.

  • Brand engagement notes

    Brands should approach this community with caution, as overt promotion or advertising is likely to be met with hostility. Authentic engagement, such as sharing relatable tech mishaps or humorous content that aligns with the community's vibe, may be better received. Brands could consider leveraging user-generated content or participating in discussions without pushing products directly. Transparency and humor are key; members appreciate brands that can laugh at themselves and the tech industry.

Top keywords

What r/techsupportgore talks about

Weighted by how often each term appears in posts and comments, relative to baseline frequency. The largest words are the strongest signals of community focus.

chromebooksfaradayday'dvicat6repaste220vemfself:cloroxtrackpadspci-ecrawlspacecladdingset:feelsbadmanracewayshowbizneaterharddriveclackentrywaywalkinautobot456clunkflippinnetworkedrepeaters2020-2022lacingantiviralembossedusb3'eroverwritingreseating~100toxicologybejeweledyounglings110vinhalestrebuchettraceablezapper5hr🥒udders10-year-oldsheathingdissipationeraserschlorinated÷confused…gypsumdarasdi

External signals

Where the community looks

Top external domains linked from posts and comments — a quick read on the sources of truth this audience trusts.

Top contributors

Who shapes the conversation

The most active and most-upvoted posters and commenters in this community. Useful when planning outreach or studying a community's tastemakers.

Top posters

By post count

By votes

Top commenters

By comment count

By votes

FAQ

r/techsupportgore — frequently asked questions

Quick facts about this subreddit's size, history, focus, and related communities.

How many subscribers does r/techsupportgore have?

r/techsupportgore has approximately 649,096 subscribers as of May 27, 2026.

When was r/techsupportgore created?

r/techsupportgore was created on February 29, 2012 (14 years ago).

What is r/techsupportgore about?

This community showcases humorous and often cringe-worthy examples of poor technical support experiences, hardware failures, and bizarre tech-related situations. It serves as a cathartic space for users to share and laugh at the absurdities of technology mishaps, often highlighting the incompetence or negligence involved in tech support. The distinct blend of humor and horro…

Who are the most active posters on r/techsupportgore?

The most frequent posters on r/techsupportgore include u/[deleted], u/the123king-reddit, u/DiogoSN.

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