If you look closely at the quoted monthly stats, there were an average of 50 active participation on the Nigeria board each month, and keep in mind that there are more new members who have yet to be added, and my reason is that I want to see how active they will stay on the thread and not someone who will just make a post and disappear. For the reasons stated on the Chart op, no newbies were added. A comparison should never be made in the first place. Creating a local board is more than just activities; many criteria must be met, and Nigeria has been without one for nearly two years. Nigeria is one of the top five countries in terms of crypto adoption. is also a big plus. It is unlikely that theymos will create a local board with 200+ pages for only 18 active members.
I am not against the creation of the Nigeria board. On the contrary, I am happy for another local painting. Which shows how the forum is still alive and active since its creation.
I'm just of the opinion, that one should not devalue something, to praise something else.
What the PB wanted was to take advantage of movements in this direction - the creation of new local staff, to propose the creation of a specific one for your locality.
As I said, there are many factors to be taken into account when creating a new local board. And I think that the number of active users doesn't always mean that a local board is bigger than another. There are boards with few active users, but very relevant to the community. Others have many users, but have less relevance. It will always depend on how the analysis is done.
Perhaps for @theymos, the number of views of a local board/post is more relevant, which it can analyze in the forum's internal statistics, than the number of active users, to decide whether or not to create a new local board.
Furthermore, I think that the fact that a local board has waited 2, 3 or 5 years to appear does not mean that a new local board has to wait the same amount of time. Each case is different, and should be assessed that way.
Either way, again, congratulations on the new local board for Nigeria.