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Home / Features / The best Bluesky tips 2024: replace Twitter and make social media fun again

The best Bluesky tips 2024: replace Twitter and make social media fun again

People who used to love Twitter are flocking to Bluesky. We explain how to get started – and make sure your experience beats anything from the X pit…

Bluesky tips and tricks

Twitter was once good. Ish. I’m less keen on X, which seems hell-bent on becoming a space where angry people scream at each other until the end of time. Fortunately, then, Bluesky exists. On the surface, it looks familiar the degree you might wonder if it is Twitter cosplay. But this fledgling social network has loads of great ideas – and an increasingly large user base. Interested and want to get the most out of the site? Here are Stuff’s top tips and tricks for getting started with Bluesky, and ensuring you have a great time while doing so.

Get started with these Bluesky tips

Feel the vibe

Bluesky might look like other social networks, but it has its own vibe. There’s no algorithm to fight, so post less rather than spamming people’s feeds. And don’t feed the trolls – mute and move on. Don’t expect brands either. So you won’t get to chat with KFC, but you might spark up a friendship with your favourite author.

Bluesky profile

Set things up

Even if your plan is to lurk and read rather than interact, fill in your profile. Blank profiles are suspicious – at least add an avatar and a description. Any links you put in the latter will be clickable on the live profile. You can pin any post to your profile too, but you’ll have to write one first…

Write your first post

If you’ve got used to the 500-character freedom of posts on Threads or Mastodon, I’ve got bad news: Bluesky posts are limited to 300. Still, that’s 20 more than free accounts on X. Anyway, be concise. In your first post, tell everyone on Bluesky about yourself, and use the #introduction hashtag if you like the idea of people browsing the noobs to spot your grand entrance.

Starter packs

Find your people

Social networks can feel like you’re shouting into the void. But unlike Threads, Bluesky doesn’t fill your feed with dross until you’re following people. So use search to find suggested accounts and feeds (more on those later). Also search for themed starter packs for single-tap/click sets of interesting folks to follow, and use hashtags to explore topics of interest.

Use a domain handle

By default, your handle on Bluesky will have ‘bsky.social’ at the end of it. But the folks behind the network are keen on decentralisation and verification, so you can swap your handle for a domain instead. Here’s how.

Alt text in Bluesky

Use alt text

Use ‘alt’ buttons to add image descriptions for the visually impaired. In fact, turn on ‘Require alt text before posting’ in Settings > Accessibility to force yourself to do so.

Manage the medium

Bluesky management

Restrict replies

In the Bluesky post window, tap ‘Anybody can interact’. Then adjust who can respond to your post. ‘Everybody’ and ‘Nobody’ are the two most extreme options, but you can also limit replies to a mix of mentioned users, followed users and those from a list.

Block quote posts

Quote posts have long been divisive on social media, due to being a major source of pile-ons and bullying. If you turn off ‘Quote posts enabled’, no one else on Bluesky will be able to quote-post your missive. 

Nix the noise

Muting posts

Mute posts

If one of your posts blows up, you may get inundated with notifications, which can become a bit much. For blissful silence, tap the post’s ‘…’ button and choose ‘Mute thread’, or use ‘Edit interaction settings’ to update who can reply.

Mute words

Another great Bluesky tip is to rid your feeds of posts about things and people you don’t care for. In Bluesky’s settings, go to ‘Moderation’ > ‘Muted words & tags’, add your word or tag, and decide for how long you’d like to exclude it.

Find the feeds

Bluesky feeds

Pick feeds

In Bluesky’s search, scroll down and explore feeds to follow. These shake up your Bluesky experience. For example, ‘Quiet Posters’ includes people you follow who rarely post. Or if it’s all about you, try ‘Mentions’.

Pin feeds

In Settings, go to ‘My Saved Feeds’. Pin favourites and reorder them. They’re then available at the top of the home tab on mobile. In the browser, access them from ‘#’ or the right-hand sidebar.

Make feeds

Lists of people can be created in-app, by tapping ‘Lists’, defining details and then adding users. Custom feeds are more involved and include filters, post types and date ranges. To build one, head to skyfeed.app.

Dump the dolts

Dolts

Mute and block

The Bluesky community prefers people to mute or block rather than interacting with bad actors, and you can do so from any profile’s ‘…’ menu. Manage and explore mute and block lists in the ‘Moderation’ settings.

Detach quotes

I mentioned earlier that quote posts can become a problem – but there’s a solution other than not allowing people to quote you at all. If you’re having issues with a specific quote post, tap its ‘…’ menu and select ‘Detach quote’ – your words will be removed from the other person’s post.

App it up

Icons for Bluesky apps

Skywalker

I like the Bluesky mobile app, and am happy using it. But it does have flaws, and Skywalker addresses them on Android – notably starting where you left off in your timeline rather than blazing to the latest post. It also has a smart way to help you craft threads.

Get Skywalker (free / Android)

Deck.Blue

Bluesky feels too chill to have ‘power users’. But if they exist, they’re using Deck.Blue. A multi-column take on Bluesky, it’s a bit like TweetDeck, letting you monitor multiple columns as if you’re living in some sort of online dystopia. Well, maybe we all are…

Try Deck.Blue (free or donation / web)

Croissant

If you’ve spread yourself across post-Twitter networks like butter, reach for Croissant. This app lets you stash drafts, build threads, and blast your brilliance at Bluesky, Mastodon and Threads. Then you can get on with your life.

Get Croissant ($19.99/£19.99 per year / iOS)

Profile image of Craig Grannell Craig Grannell Contributor

About

I’m a regular contributor to Stuff magazine and Stuff.tv, covering apps, games, Apple kit, Android, Lego, retro gaming and other interesting oddities. I also pen opinion pieces when the editor lets me, getting all serious about accessibility and predicting when sentient AI smart cookware will take over the world, in a terrifying mix of Bake Off and Terminator.

Areas of expertise

Mobile apps and games, Macs, iOS and tvOS devices, Android, retro games, crowdfunding, design, how to fight off an enraged smart saucepan with a massive stick.