Documentation

Introducing Social Overview: All Your Social Monitoring in One Place
Back to Documentation

socialtwitterredditbluesky
Posted: March 21st, 2026

If you've been using Gameplainer to track mentions, videos, and discussions across YouTube, Reddit, Twitter, and Bluesky, you already know how valuable it is to have that data flowing in automatically. What's been missing is a single place to make sense of it all. That changes today.

We've built Social Overview — a dedicated hub for everything social, accessible right from the navigation bar.


What Is Social Overview?

Social Overview is a new section of Gameplainer that gives you a bird's-eye view of all your social search monitors in one place, organised by platform. Instead of navigating into individual forum settings to see what's been found, you can now see at a glance how active each of your searches is — how many results came in today, this week, and this month — and drill into the full analytics for any one of them with a single click.

Think of it as a dashboard for your social listening. It answers the question you probably ask yourself most: "What's happening with my game right now, across all the places people talk about it?"


You have more searches than you realise

Most Gameplainer users set up multiple searches per platform. You might be tracking your game's title, your studio name, a character name, and a few competitor titles across Reddit and YouTube. That's already eight searches, and keeping tabs on all of them previously meant jumping between individual pages.

Social Overview puts every one of those searches on a single screen, with live stats, so you can spot which ones are firing and which have gone quiet.

Some things only become visible in aggregate

A single YouTube search for your game might show modest numbers week to week. But combine three YouTube searches — your game title, your studio, and a key feature — and you can see the true total reach of video content mentioning your game. That combined view tells a different story than any individual search alone.

It surfaces problems before they become blind spots

The overview makes it easy to notice when a search has stopped returning results — maybe it's been paused, disabled, or hasn't run recently. Those things are easy to miss when each search lives on its own page. Here, the "last searched" timestamp and the disabled badge make the status of every monitor immediately visible.


How to Use It

Getting to Social Overview

Click Social in the top navigation bar. You'll land on the overview page, which groups all your social search monitors by platform — YouTube, Reddit, Twitter, Bluesky, and others.

Reading the overview

Each platform section shows a table of your searches with four columns of stats: results found today, this week, this month, and when the search last ran. Searches with no recent activity show a dash rather than a number, so dead searches stand out immediately.

If a search is disabled, it's hidden by default. Toggle Incl. disabled in the toolbar to bring those back into view — useful when you want to audit what you have set up.

You can collapse platform sections you don't need to look at right now, and your collapsed/expanded preferences are remembered between visits.

Drilling into a single search

Click Analytics on any row to open the full analytics view for that search. You'll see a monthly activity chart, top posts or videos, top creators, growth metrics comparing the last 30 days to the previous period, and a time range filter so you can zoom in or out on the data.

Combining multiple searches

This is where it gets powerful. If you have several YouTube searches and want to see their combined performance — total videos, total views, top creators across all of them — you can now do that.

Check the boxes next to two or more searches of the same platform (YouTube + YouTube, Reddit + Reddit, and so on), then click View Combined. You'll land on a combined analytics page that aggregates everything across all selected searches, with duplicate results automatically removed so your numbers aren't inflated by the same post showing up in multiple searches.

The combined view supports the same time range filters and exports as the single-search view. The URL is bookmarkable, so if you find a combination that's useful, you can save it or share it directly.

A note on combining: you can only combine searches from the same platform. YouTube and Reddit track fundamentally different metrics — views versus reach, for instance — so mixing them would produce numbers that don't mean anything. The interface enforces this automatically.

Exporting data

Both the single-search and combined views have an Export CSV button in the top right. This gives you a raw export of all result logs for the selected searches and time range, including URL, title, author, followers, views, and timestamp. Useful for deeper analysis in a spreadsheet or for sharing with someone who doesn't have Gameplainer access.


A Few Things Worth Knowing

Stats on the overview are live. The today/week/month counts are calculated at page load, so they reflect what's actually in your data right now.

The combined view deduplicates automatically. If the same YouTube video or Reddit post was found by two of your searches, it only counts once in the combined analytics. When there are two versions of the same result, we keep the most recently captured one, which tends to have more up-to-date information like view counts.

Search and filter are client-side. The search box in the toolbar filters your forums instantly without a page reload. Same with the disabled toggle and collapse controls. If you have a lot of searches, this makes it much faster to find what you're looking for.


Social Overview is live now. If you're already using social monitoring, head to the Social tab and take a look. If you haven't set up any searches yet, there's a link on the overview page to get started.

Stay in the loop

Get notified when we publish new articles on game development and player feedback.