Bluesky introduced group chats in version 1.124, expanding its private messaging capabilities with conversations that support up to 50 participants. The feature is part of the platform’s broader shift toward smaller, community-driven interactions built on the AT Protocol, giving users more ways to connect beyond public posting.
Group creators can manage participation through invite links and membership controls, while users can choose who is allowed to add them to conversations, with default settings aligned to existing direct-message preferences. Invite links can also be shared in Bluesky posts as embedded cards, helping communities grow organically across the platform. Media sharing is not yet supported, as Bluesky says additional moderation and safety systems are required before rollout.
For users, group chats provide a more intimate and controlled communication option, reinforcing Bluesky’s strategy of emphasizing community ownership and focused social experiences over large-scale broadcast-style engagement.
Community-Focused Group Chats
Bluesky Launches Its Group Chats in Update v1.124
Trend Themes
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Private Community Messaging — Smaller invitation-based conversations create space for social platforms to differentiate through trusted, topic-specific engagement rather than public broadcast feeds.
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User-controlled Social Access — Granular permissions around who can invite or contact users signal demand for identity, privacy, and participation systems that reduce unwanted interactions.
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Embedded Group Discovery — Invite links shared as in-feed cards blend public discovery with private participation, opening new models for community growth inside decentralized networks.
Industry Implications
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Social Media — Community-centered chat features reshape platform engagement by moving value from mass visibility toward sustained private interaction among smaller groups.
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Messaging Platforms — Built-in membership controls and safety requirements highlight opportunities for messaging services that combine scalability with moderation-aware design.
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Decentralized Technology — AT Protocol-based communication tools illustrate how open social infrastructure can support portable, user-governed communities beyond centralized platform ecosystems.