Out of curiosity, how did you all find /soc/, since it's obvious that a lot of you don't lurk 4chan?.
started of on /b/ as I imagined most do, visited a few different boards to see what they're like
I use /b/, /soc/, /k/ and /wsg/ mostly
>>23837142
I used Chad's from here to catfish for lolz and I lurked Skype threads.
Either r9k or b brought me here.
Or we tried to organize a meetups and >>>/soc/ was listed. Never cared enough to go here then.
I was lonely and seeking social interactions t b h.
>since it's obvious that a lot of you don't lurk 4chan
soc used to be cool around the time moot posted on this board
>>23837142
Started in /b/, got /fit/ but stayed straight so I moved to /fa/. Saw that r8 threads with real people was a thing but the ones in /fa/ are catty and dishonest so I started trying the ones out here. I browse /x/ and /pol/ sometimes too
It's amusing how almost every board here, regardless of the official board theme, share a sense of smug insularity and nazi esotericism
People got tired of imt, rate, and other meetup threads on /b/ so they created /soc/. I just migrated with that crowd
>>23837597
Back before the majority of people used the internet religiously, 4chan was the place where high school losers came to feel special. They established the place as the 'popular kid's table' on the internet and developed their inside jokes that they smuggly carried on throughout the rest of the internet. Most other forum boards bought onto their memes and psuedopopularity for a while until they realized how pathetic the majority of 4chan users were. 4chan users still like to think they're the cool kids on the internet when their only relevancy is cropped greentext posts.
>>23837142
A man who I met from /v/ brought up this board in conversation and told me to never come here, which just made me curious. I ended up coming back here all the time just to see how people act. I don't talk to many people or go out at all, so this is pretty much my look into what people are like.