The view from the outside looking in.
This feels like a case of artificial community creation. The scenario, as played out in my mind, is that there was a need felt for a new collective. Mobile development seems like a catch-phrasecatchphrase in common use, so that's picked as the next target. Looking at it, for implementation, there was only a couple options, iOS or Android. Neither one was large enough to hold the umbrella for "mobile development" so both were selected. With both under one umbrella, the umbrella needed to be larger, so it could cover both. Now that the umbrella is larger, even with two poles holding it, the weight was too much. Needing something else to support the weight, a few of the common elements were selected. Perhaps, originally, there were other language tags included, but someone realized that too much non-mobile was being included. The final selection of flutterFlutter and dartDart seemed strong enough to work without pulling in too much extra.
I think the umbrella is too large, covering too much, and still doesn't have the support it needs to survive a day on the beach.
I've called it artificial community creation, because it seems SO is attempting to create a community were there is none. There are developers, I'm sure, who specialize in using their preferred language for developing mobile applications. Such also are likely to refer to themselves as "mobile developers." I don't think they have a sense of community with others who also carry that label,label; rather they have a sense of community with the language they use, and see "mobile" as a specialty therein.
I doubt there is a collection of, or even one, chat room on SO which is dedicated to mobile development that is also well populated and active. Other than a few hand-picked, perhaps contrived, tags from questions, there doesn't seem to be any sub-community of mobile developers to be served by a collective aimed at them.
Although it would be moderated out, I can see the topic of discussion most often gravitate to why iOS is better than Android, or why iOS development is so much harder than Android, and other debates with little of community value to it.
If a new collective is needed, which obviously isn't going to be a sponsored one, then look for an active sub-community which is not quite large enough, active enough, or specialized enough to qualify as a new site, yet which could benefit from one if it existed. Find the community and the need. Don't attempt to create the them. Creating the need, and then offering the solution might be a valid sales tactic. Not so much for finding a new collective.