Building a Community For Your Indie Game

25
Feb,2026

When you start marketing your indie game, you’re going to hear the term ‘target audience’ everywhere. Your target audience is your core group of players. Indie games don’t survive on mass virality; they thrive on loyal niches. In order to earn your place, you need to intentionally build a community around your game. Think of it like moving into a new neighborhood: No matter how many friends you made before moving, you still have to introduce yourself, meet your neighbors, and make new friends. That’s community building.

Where Do I Build My Indie Game’s Community?

The list of platforms you engage with can expand over time. It’s best to start with what you’re capable of maintaining. Your content across platforms doesn’t need to be vastly different for the sake of uniqueness, but it does need to fit the general purpose of the platform you’re posting on.

Platforms:

  • Discord – Your long-term home base. This is where you can provide updates, hear valuable feedback, run polls, and gather organic input from your community. Players can connect here more intimately than on other social platforms. Create clear channels that guide engagement and use bots to automate moderation and support.
  • Instagram & Facebook (Meta) – Ideal for visual content and networking. Use Meta Business Suite to post efficiently and stay consistent.
  • Bluesky & Twitter/X – Great for visibility and conversation. Share short clips, screenshots, and engage regularly. For a more in-depth explanation, check out our “Getting Started on Bluesky and Twitter” blog.
  • YouTube – Your trailer home base. Even posting Shorts consistently can improve discoverability.
  • Reddit – Find your niche through relevant subreddits. Participate before promoting.
  • Wildcard Platforms (Tumblr, etc.) – If you already have an audience somewhere, leverage it.

 

When Should I Start Building My Community?

As you begin to develop your game, you can start gathering screenshots and gameplay clips. Content is how you introduce your game and yourself to your community. Before you post anything, decide how you want your game to be seen. Is your brand chaotic and funny? Transparent and dev-log focused? Looking at how other indie developers present their games can help you spot patterns, but the goal isn’t to copy them; it’s to understand what works and shape your own strategy.

Start with a foundation. Attention spans are short, so preparation matters. Know what makes your game interesting. Have a backlog of content ready. Decide how often you can realistically post on social platforms. Consistency will build more momentum than chasing every viral trend you see, and it’s less likely to burn you out.

Most importantly, remember that community building isn’t just broadcasting. On nearly every platform, engagement matters as much as creation. Comment, respond, follow, post. Platforms reward interaction, not just output. The more you act like part of the community, the more your game becomes visible within it.

How Do I Manage Engagement And Stay Consistent?

Most platforms provide built-in analytics. Likes, views, comments, and shares aren’t something to obsess over, but they do provide useful signals. They tell you what’s resonating and what isn’t. If your metrics feel stagnant, experiment: adjust your posting times, refine your hashtags, or improve the visual quality of your content. Small tweaks can create noticeable shifts.

If managing multiple platforms starts to feel overwhelming, consider using a scheduling tool. Platforms like Sprout Social or Buffer let you draft and schedule posts in one place, so you can focus on engaging with your audience instead of constantly publishing posts manually.

Jumpstarting your game’s digital footprint is a great way to carve out a corner of the internet where niche groups can discover your work and follow your journey. By sharing your process and inviting people to see what you’re working on, you’re taking the first steps to intentionally build a community that will stick with you through launch. If you need help with logistics, reach out to Starfall PR below or through our contact page. We can create posting schedules, help you find a target audience, evaluate current engagement, and offer industry knowledge.

Image by freepik

Let's get to work

about-page-about
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.