##Yes, *but*... I think that this will accomplish the stated goals, and in fact it can do it without harming the discussion that meta is so good for. However, I'd like to ask that you make a separate post (or edit this one?) specifying in as much detail as possible what your new rules are. That'll help us know where we stand, and it'll help us know that it's being done fairly, to everyone. It'll also provide a reference point to moderators, so that you can provide a very unified front, which is something that we need now. Obviously, you'll not be forcing every comment into a chat room; only the chains that are beginning to get long. The fact that they're getting long means that it's a somewhat complicated issue, or at least not clear to everyone. In that case, a chatroom is the perfect place to get it figured out. That said, I also have a suggestion. Every or almost every discussion that needs cleaning up will have a focus. There will be `n <= 4` points of contention, where one group thinks one thing, and another thinks the other. **Instead of saying *the comments were moved to chat*, say *users are discussing whether `<topic>` is xxx*.** Then, when the discussion has reached a conclusion, they could optionally post a second comment noting the conclusion. This will help some users' concerns about visibility, but make the focus still be on the post, not the comments. I know it might take a tad of extra work, but you're already reading quickly through the chain to make sure it's not 15 separate clarifications, and is instead a discussion. As usual, when a consensus is reached, the OP can also edit their post to incorporate changes. ---------- ### Good examples > The discussion on the exact meaning of "beginning to get long" has been moved to chat and is being discussed. Or > Some users are conflicted on whether these comments will help visibility. The discussion has been moved to chat.