I would say the problem with discuit, and other centralized alternative sites for that matter, is that there is no draw to them, other than being an alternative. I think people have been burned by traditional centralized social media going south after new leadership or poor decisions by existing leadership. They see that they are being monetized and manipulated and are sick of it. This is the draw of the fediverse, in my opinion, that no one can own it or control it, and people are free to run it in a decentralized manner, as a form of communication should be. That combined with lack of advertising for an overarching concept to draw people in (i.e., people might sign up for Mastodon looking for a twitter alternative and stumble across Lemmy or pixelfed), and it makes it hard for people to learn about this single centralized alternative site, unless they are really not into the fediverse as a concept and ok with the possibility of that alternative going to crap eventually. I had honestly not heard of discuit until you mentioned it, and I would imagine the people who are aware of it is pretty small. And I’m someone who is pretty well versed in social media alternatives. Compare it to a more well known (but arguably still pretty shitty) alternative Mewe, which has 20 million registered users and 170k active users as of 2023, and I think it paints the picture that there is a real desire for alternatives. See also, Bluesky, Mastodon, etc.
I’m not telling anyone how to do anything. Again, people are free to ignore my input if they don’t like it. I understand how limited time and resources work. Not sure why you think this is going to be some sort of amazing revelation. This is just how I see it, and what I think should be focused on. If people agree (which many clearly do), then they can help make my ideas a reality, and I will do what I can to help as well. I don’t know why there is such a rush to accuse people of not contributing the second you see an idea you disagree with. Seems like a pretty shitty and condescending way to engage with the conversation, and doesn’t really address the underlying points being made.