36 / 105
Dec 2020

Nope. Don't worry, you're awesome. I just don't like people who aren't receptive to improvement in any form. Sure, they don't have to listen to every single person but there is a fine line of difference between being confident about your own work and being outright arrogant. I've seen this in other websites, not just in matters of writing.

It's literature man, it's limitless. If someone loses the sense of wonderment, respect for the art and receptivity and eagerness to learn, and replaces it all with their inflated sense of self, that is when they cross the line.

Hmm... I can't think of any authors I've been turned off of due to their attitude. In the past I have been turned off of a few artists on varying social medias for being egocentric (pushy, begging for likes/engagement on my posts or in DMs, being aggressive with other creators, acting like they were better than other creators, etc). I'm honestly really glad I haven't seen that on Tapas thus far. :heartbeat: (I even have some friends on here from the socials I left!) Overall, the community is so warm here... There's not really any trying to "beat" other creators in a popularity competition. Social media tends to create a cold abyss where nothing matters but likes,likes,likes. That is why I prefer to engage with people on forums and Discord. So I can... actually talk to people in depth.

Not really encountered anyone as yet. Generally everyone's is supportive.
I'm sure I will rub someone the wrong way at some point as I tend to say what I think and have zero tolerance for internet drama.

Lifes too short.

Yes, actually. I was into this one story because the art was really fluid and clean, the story and characters were interesting too. But as I kept up with it and followed the creator on social media, they increasingly came off as bitter and negative to me so I unfollowed them. I don't need more negativity in my life. I might have continued to read their comic since it wasn't as negative, but they stopped posting on Tapas anyway.

As for titles I've yet to read, definitely if someone rubs me the wrong way I am more disinclined to check out their work.

I'm pretty sure the artists of Solo Levelling consists of a team under a single username (as most professional Korean manhwas are made) so it's hard to know exactly who to contact. I think a number of people have reported the comic already, but most of the comments state they don't want the comic taken down. Instead, they want it revamped using original art.

Also fun fact: the comic is also posted on Tapas and it has over 1.4k subs gained since September 2020 and so far, (surprisingly) ONE comment about the tracing from Solo Levelling. Oof :disappointed_relieved:

Maybe we should report it then? Do you have the link to the story?

I don't really want to get banned for putting the name of the comic in case it falls under witch hunting :disappointed_relieved: but I would be happy to talk to a moderator over it! Including the link to the compiled evidence of the tracing so, they could judge it for themselves.

Yes! Definitely consider doing that! Try a moderator from the forums, or if not, you can probably send an email to Tapas.

I'm not really sure who to contact tbh. I don't know if the moderators on the forums are also handling reports over series titles as well :weary:

I just think that Tapas is a great place with nice people overall.
When or If I ever had said or done something that steppede over some toes, I have always apologist directly and tried to keep the drama out of the public debate, and take the debate with the persons involved.

And I hope you will do the same with me.

It hasn't happened to me yet, but I'm sure I'd stop reading it.

Haven't ever experienced that, but yes, it's a big turn off if a writer keeps bringing themselves down or personally contacts readers to advertise their stuff constantly.
I have stopped reading because of a work's audience tho.

I haven't had this happen with a comic (or other story) that I can think of, at least in recent memory, but I have been coming head to head with this kind of situation with an artist I follow on Twitter of late.

Discovered them earlier this year through some Youtube and Twitch content of theirs, love their work, decided to drop them a follow on Twitter. Unfortunately this creator's mental health seems to be in a bad place which is, of course, totally understandable & valid & I hope they are able to begin healing soon but.. man, seeing their social media posts every day borderline makes me want to stop following them ngl x__x

Their posts are just a big ol' cocktail of self depreciation and resentment towards their following and ways that said following interacts with them that they don't appreciate/contributes to said poor mental health. This taps into my feelings about creator self care and being able to identify when you need to step back and take a break for your own well being. It feels (to me at least) like it does more harm spewing essays of constant negativity every day than it would to just say "hey I need to take a social media break. I'll be back if/when I'm ready".

Again it's really too bad because they do awesome work and I haven't unfollowed yet but... maybe I just need to disable notifications from their posts or something for a while @u@;;

Never on Tapas have I stopped being interested in a work I was previously interested in, but on other sites and places yes, absolutely. There have been some writers in the web fiction world who have some pretty interesting stuff, but are extremely vocal and angry as well, and it really turns me off reading their work.

There was also an author on another site who came out very strongly as a COVID denier back when it was still contained in Asia and a little bit in the West Coast of the U.S. They doubled down even as the true scope of the threat became clear. I dropped that person like a rock and will never forget it.