By the way this is the growth chart for
https://www.reddit.com/r/MechanicalKeyboards/
So a lot of people actually re-discovered Mechanical Keyboards and it's a big movement now, there are many collectors too, back when I started in January 2015 - it was a very niche hobby, felt a lot like collecting vintage watches now
Many people still used branded keyboards unaware of what was lost, and a mechanical keyboard cost upwards of $1000 - Lately with the explosion of the hobby it can still cost upwards of $500, however there are also many budget options, switches and pcbs are very affordable and easy to find now, keycaps also halved in price, but a decent German set still costs $150~ ish
What's relevant is the collection aspect of it, there are a lot of collectors that drive old Korean custom keyboards prices to around $3000's
I stopped collecting myself, seems more sane to spend thousands on watches instead, but I always find it weird that there are so many people with similar collecting afflictions, people even collect sneakers, yet proportionally there aren't many watch collectors yet
This is the graph for
https://reddit.com/r/watches
And this is the graph for
https://reddit.com/r/sneakers
You can observe Reddit's growth in these graphs too, so it's a bit hard to make sense of the graphs
My conclusion is that Reddit fuels the growth of hobbies, as I first hand observed with mechanical keyboards, yet it doesn't happen for vintage watches this is probably because we all enjoy staying incognito and either consciously or subconsciously don't share juicy stuff to drive interest, at least this has been the case for me, and another reason could be the lack of momentum for vintage watches, and more interest on expensive/new watches
For example similarly
https://reddit.com/r/subaru doesn't grow
My family has been Subaru enthusiasts for 30 years, and there's a certain Subaru culture, instead this subreddit is filled with mostly American kids sharing their new WRX's, and kind of a subreddit where someone can boast a roadkill and not called out
In this sense for example this didn't get called out on
https://reddit/com/r/OmegaWatches either
However the Omega subreddit is still very new, and just at 30K users, this is really nothing, and the growth seems rapid
So maybe Reddit is yet to drive interest for vintage Omega's, but if I'm forced to make a small conclusion, I'd say it will need nurturing or it won't really drive much, in this sense Mechanical Keyboards was an awesome hobby to be a part of while it was growing, and that positivity was what drived a lot more people to become interested when posts hit the Reddit mainpage