Your daily Reddit dive just got more predictable. The company officially killed r/all this week, redirecting users to the personalized Home feed instead. After years of experiments and gradual removal from mobile apps, Reddit has completed its transformation from chaotic content discovery to algorithmic curation.
The End of Unfiltered Browsing
The deprecation follows months of testing that began in December 2024. First, r/all vanished from mobile apps in January 2025. Then desktop users watched it disappear from sidebars by February. After concluding these experiments, Reddit made the permanent removal official in early April 2025: r/all was dead, replaced by machine learning-powered personalization.
You can still access it through old Reddit (i.reddit.com), but that feels like visiting a museum exhibit of what the platform used to be.
Why Reddit Chose Algorithms Over Anarchy
Reddit’s CEO Steve Huffman telegraphed this shift last year, stating the company was “moving away from” discovery feeds toward personalization. The math is simple: algorithmic feeds keep users scrolling longer than chronological ones. While r/popular remains available as a filtered alternative, Reddit clearly believes your attention span belongs to an algorithm, not random community upvotes.
It’s the same playbook every platform eventually adopts—Instagram ditched chronological feeds, TikTok never had them.
What Power Users Actually Lost
You’re losing something genuinely valuable here. r/all offered unfiltered glimpses into Reddit’s ecosystem—weird subreddits, emerging trends, content that algorithms might never surface. That serendipitous discovery made Reddit feel different from other platforms.
Now your feed learns what you like and serves more of it, creating the same echo chamber effect that makes Instagram Reels feel so predictable.
The Simplification Strategy
This change accompanies Reddit’s broader “simplification” efforts, including new text-optimized Read feeds and video-focused Watch feeds. The company also implemented stricter privacy defaults for users under 18, including hidden profiles and no followers allowed.
Reddit’s betting that streamlined, personalized experiences matter more than preserving its chaotic, community-driven identity. Whether longtime users agree remains unclear—but their preferences no longer drive the platform’s direction.





























