You will see suggested posts in your Following feed, but these will be based on your dashboard preferences. There are various options that let you fine-tune your Tumblr experience depending on which post recommendations you’d like to see. For an in-depth guide on how Tumblr recommends content to you, have a look at this article.
The “Best Stuff First” setting gives you an algorithmic “Following” tab on your dashboard. Your “Following” tab will show you the stuff Tumblr thinks you’ll like, rather than just the newest content.
If you’d prefer a chronological “Following” tab, you can turn off “Best Stuff First” from your dashboard preferences (pictured above).
- Tap the account icon (the little human) in the bottom right corner.
- Tap the gear icon in the top right.
- Tap “Account settings.”
- Tap “Dashboard preferences.”
- Turn off “Best Stuff First.”
- Head to your dashboard settings.
- Turn off “Best stuff first.”
Turning off “Best Stuff First” will also remove “Since you’ve been gone” posts from your “Following” tab.
Turning this on will add new posts from communities you have joined to your Following tab.
If you see a post with the indicator “Liked by…” that means the post was liked by the indicated user, or an unnamed blog that you follow. You can turn these recommendations off from your dashboard settings on web or in the app.
If you don’t want other users to see which posts you liked you can set your Likes to be private. You can read more on how to set your Likes private in our privacy options.
With the “Based on Your Likes!” setting enabled, you will see recommendations based on your likes in your “Following” tab on the dashboard.
With the “Include followed tag posts” setting enabled, you will see results from your followed tags in the the “Following” tab on your dashboard. Disabling it won’t affect the tags you’re following, but you won’t see popular results from those tags injected in your “Following” tab on the dashboard.
With this setting enabled, certain tags will receive a splash of color and add a nice touch to your dashboard though they may be harder to read.
Some example colorized tags include (but not limited to):
