Reddit Addiction: You're Not Researching

· Updated June 1, 2026
Reddit Addiction: You're Not Researching

Reddit has a defense that TikTok doesn’t. “I’m reading. I’m learning. I’m in a discussion. It’s not like I’m watching brainless videos.”

Except you’ve been “reading” for 90 minutes. You started in r/technology, drifted to r/relationships, ended up in r/AmITheAsshole, and now you’re 47 comments deep in an argument about whether someone was wrong for not inviting their sister-in-law to Thanksgiving. You are not researching. You’re doomscrolling with a literacy veneer.

Reddit averages 34 minutes per visit. That “5-minute check” never existed.

Why Reddit addiction feels different

Reddit wraps the same dopamine loop as TikTok in an intellectual package. You swipe through short-form content. Each post is a micro-reward. Variable ratio reinforcement keeps you scrolling. But because the content is text-based and often informative, your brain classifies it as productive instead of wasteful.

This classification is a lie. Compare what you learned on Reddit today to what you’d learn reading a book for the same duration. Reddit gives you fragmented, context-free snippets of information about 40 different topics. A book gives you deep understanding of one. The Reddit version feels like learning. The book version actually is.

Reddit also weaponizes discussion. You read a post. You disagree. You write a comment. Someone replies. You reply back. Now you’re invested. You keep checking for responses. The argument itself becomes the scroll — not videos, but a thread you can’t abandon because someone on the internet is wrong.

Comments sections are Reddit’s Reels. The post is what gets you in the door. The comments are what keep you for 90 minutes.

The subreddit migration problem

Most screen time advice tells you to unsubscribe from addictive subreddits and only keep useful ones. This fails for the same reason blocking individual apps fails: the compulsion migrates.

Unsubscribe from r/memes. You drift to r/funny. Leave r/funny. You end up in r/interestingasfuck. Leave that. You discover r/BestOf. The content changes. The scroll doesn’t. Reddit has millions of subreddits. You can curate your front page into something “productive” and still spend 2 hours scrolling through “useful” content you’ll forget by tomorrow.

The home feed also defeats curation. Reddit’s algorithm surfaces content from subreddits you haven’t subscribed to based on your engagement patterns. Even a carefully curated subscription list gets contaminated by algorithmic recommendations within days.

What works against Reddit addiction

Use old.reddit.com in a browser. The old Reddit interface has no infinite scroll. It has pages with a “Next” button. That stopping point matters: your brain hits a boundary and can decide to stop. The new Reddit app and redesigned website were specifically built to remove that boundary.

Set Reddit to a specific purpose. Open Reddit to search for something specific. Read the top 3 results. Close Reddit. Treat it like a search engine, not a feed. If you catch yourself browsing the front page, you’ve already lost.

Block the Reddit app, keep browser access. The Reddit app is optimized for engagement. The mobile browser version is deliberately worse (Reddit wants you in the app). Use AppBlock to block the app and only access Reddit through a browser, where the experience is slower and less addictive.

Time it. Set a physical timer for 10 minutes before opening Reddit. When it goes off, close the app. Physical timers work better than in-app timers because they’re harder to dismiss — the sound comes from outside the device.

Make the scroll uncomfortable. Cursed Screen doesn’t care what you’re scrolling. Reddit, TikTok, Instagram — the phone’s screen gets progressively ugly the longer you use it. After your grace period, overlays creep in. The “quick check” of r/technology stays clean. The 90-minute deep-dive into r/relationships happens through a screen covered in hellfire.

Reddit addiction is harder to address than social media addiction because the content genuinely feels useful. You tell yourself you’re learning, and sometimes you are. Cursed Screen doesn’t judge the content. It judges the time. Five minutes is fine. Ninety minutes means your screen is on fire. You decide whether r/AmITheAsshole is worth the visual decay.

The honest test

Open your Reddit history. Look at what you read yesterday. Write down three things you remember. Now write down three things you’ll act on.

If you can’t fill both lists, your Reddit time wasn’t productive. It was consumption dressed as education. The smartest-sounding doomscrolling is still doomscrolling.

Cursed Screen has a free trial on Android. Subscribe monthly or annually, or pay once for lifetime access. It doesn’t block Reddit. It doesn’t care that you’re “reading.” It just makes your phone look worse the longer you’re on it, regardless of how intellectual the content feels.

The 47th comment in that Thanksgiving thread isn’t going to change your life. Put the phone down.

Want a tool that does this automatically?

Cursed Screen makes your phone progressively uglier the longer you use it. No blocking, no willpower needed — you'll want to put it down.

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