First up on the chopping block is the Activity Feed. I’m sure someone out there used it, but I—a person who is on Discord during all of my waking hours seven days a week—did not. Apparently it lets you launch games you’ve recently played even from other launchers. Ah, hello to Sims 4, Red Dead Redemption 2, and Stardew Valley. Good to see you tucked up there. It tells you what your friends have recently played. Oh, and it links to blog posts from official websites, as Discord put, “for a game you played once 8 months ago…oh Activity Feed…” Instead, Discord remind users that they have access to the newer feature “Channel Following” which lets you get announcements from partnered and verified servers (often official game servers, big communities, and #contentcreators) and have those announcements replicated in your own server. It gives you more control over what you’d like to see than the Activity Feed’s slapdash information overload. Though, as users have already begun pointing out in the comments on Discord’s announcement, Channel Following requires them to actually be in a relevant server on Discord, further cluttering their server lists instead of getting that news from an external source displayed in the app. Second up to cut are the Library tab that hangs out above your list of direct messages and the related Universal Games Launcher. Discord’s take on the library to end all libraries apparently wasn’t hitting the mark. “We’re removing both of these to keep your Discord experience fast and clean,” they say. But wait, what about those of you who’ve bought games from Discord? You may have forgotten (I did) but Discord have actually dabbled with selling games to users. The rest of us who’ve yet to buy a Discord game will be kissing the Library goodbye. You can read Discord’s blog post explaining these changes on their blog. If you’re looking for another server to call home, what about joining the RPS Discord server?