Brave’s “Discussions” shows results from Reddit and StackExchange with more forums to come in the future.
Image: Brave

Brave Search has a new feature that makes it easier to find conversations from forums. You won't have to add Reddit to your searches when you're looking for thoughts from actual humans, not empty answers from websites just trying to get clicks.

You don't have to do anything in order to get these results. You will see results underneath a new section if your inquiry sparks conversation on the web. Brave chooses posts based on their recency, popularity, relevancy, and how many likes or upvotes they get. Brave says it will add more sites in the near future, but right now it only displays results from Reddit and StackExchange.

The “Discussions” section appeared in the middle of my search results.
Image: Screenshot via Brave

You won't see discussions for everything you search. Brave says the feature applies to hundreds of scenarios, but is best for questions about products, travel, current events, coding, and specific questions.

I tried the feature out for myself, and it's pretty cool. After searching for "how to find the best graphics card", I scrolled down to find a section dedicated to responses from the site. I tried the same inquiry on the desktop versions of both Bing and Google, but neither engine displayed results from any forum for that matter on the first page of results. As a Bing user who has tried Brave Search in the past and values input from other humans, this feature alone may be enough to make me a Brave convert.

You can shuffle through relevant replies instead of full posts on the comments section of the website. More people have been turning to Reddit to get authentic answers, a trend outlined in a post (which was mentioned in Brave's press release), titled : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Brave has a feature that can be used to circumvent pages that use the Accelerated Mobile Pages framework.