but for a community with nearly 5K members the top post having only 10 score and 11 replies seems underwhelming.
Some perspective:
As I post this, to find a question with 10 score on the main site I have to go back 8 hours. Getting that level of engagement involves 24 million accounts (there's no good way to know how many of them are active or compare that activity level to the 5k users in a relatively new collective, I think).
Questions with 10+ answers are much rarer - understandably, since it isn't really desirable to have that kind of interaction normally (the main space explicitly isn't for discussion).
If I filter to the [python]
tag (more than 2 million questions and one of the biggest tags on the site, but possibly attracts below-average-quality questions in recent years) I have to go back 3 weeks to find a question with 10+ score - right about as far as the top discussion you're talking about.
The really popular questions in the main space are much older, because it takes a long time for people to filter in and decide to upvote something that's already highly upvoted. Although every now and then you get something that gets quite popular rather quickly. IMX these tend to be questions about a common, one-off problem with installing something.
My take is that these discussions simply aren't getting the views that would be necessary for higher scores. In the long run, it seems that the standout questions on Stack Overflow are still looking at something like ~1k views per upvote, after the first few votes from more active curators.
The one question with a 10 score in the mobile collective is a real standout (the next few are at +3), especially getting that response from only about 200 views. It seems to describe a topic of extremely high interest to a very specific group of people.
I see no clear evidence of a quality problem here.