You can circumvent Reddit's genius heuristic by changing "look what I made" to "look what I found" so that it matches all of Reddit's other content. Boom, now you can do it across infinite accounts whereas when you were honest, you were limited to one account.
Those rules are so juvenile. Why shouldn't a website have an official reddit account from which they post? Especially when the circumvention is so trivial?
Sort of, people can still catch on by going to the reddit page that lists all the submissions by domain name and may notice trends if it's like only a specific type of submission being done repeatedly, like for example using OPs domain you can see all the posts linking to his domain https://www.reddit.com/domain/saaspegasus.com/
That's true, you have limited options when it comes to Reddit submissions no matter how crafty you are.
But comment promotion is unlimited, and for that reason, that's where my mind went.
For example, some of my highest volume referrals from Reddit were comment-replies I left on some submission that became the main result for, say, "best <product> 2020". People trust comments and they have weirdly-good authority in the SERPs.
Right now if you google "battery life of <product>", it parses a comment I made on Reddit in 2018 and shows in the instant-answer box.
I know I'm getting off the thread's rails. Just thought it was somewhat interesting.
Those rules are so juvenile. Why shouldn't a website have an official reddit account from which they post? Especially when the circumvention is so trivial?