8 / 10
Jun 2024

Hello everyone. I want your help. I want to know how if the following helps the creators. I want to encourage people around me to read the manhwas legally!

1.Does WUF chapters pay out?
2. Does watching adds to unlock pay the creator.
3. How does the number of subscribers and likes and comments help creators?
4. In short, apart from promoting their work by sharing about it, is there a way to financially support artists for people lacking resources to buy the chapters?

Any help will be appreciated! Thank you so much!

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    Jun '24
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    Jun '24
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The first two I'm unsure about since I'm not a premium creator and I'm not privy to the exact specifics of that system.
But dependent on which program they're in and the details of their individual contracts, premium creators usually get paid regularly by Tapas for their continued episode creation and they receive a portion of any profits thereafter like ad revenue.

For number 3: All three of those things add up to engagement and the higher the engagement, the more likely a series will stay at the top of the page of the site and app due to their popularity. It's all about getting seen and if there are numbers behind the series, that usually makes it easier to get seen and continue the momentum.

For number 4: You can fill out surveys or complete promos and games to earn ink. With that ink you can support premium AND community creators and it will translate to real cash for them.

  1. You are waiting to read something for free, you are not paying for anything so no money goes to the artist.

  2. Watching ads, be it to unlock a chapter or to see a small section with them as you read is a viewership system, it doesn't mean anything if the creator is not very popular but if millions are watching, then yes they'll likely receive something, but its something more passive than proactive.

  3. By subscribing to a series, giving a like and commenting, you are providing engagement. Not only you get to interact with the Creator or just be an active vocal fan, but your engagement makes the algorithm to not only recommend the series to other users, but to be seen by many more, or even be recommended on the main page of the platform so it gets seen by more. More views = more chances of revenue

  4. Well, the only ways to financially support a creator is with money and promotion. Be it donating money to them through Ko-Fi/Patreon/Paypal or whatever virtual wallet they have, buying their products, merch, unlocking chapters*. You can support a creator without financial investment by talking about it, by being a fan, being part of reading communities, sharing the hype, liking, commenting, sharing the link and talking about what you thought about the chapter, etc.

  5. Unlocking chapters the most passive method to financially support a creator, mostly since part of the money goes to the platform where the series is hosted and a smaller percentage goes to the creator. You can get more of the platform's currency by watching ads, playing mini games, filling out surveys or checking out their "Free coin/gem" sections

I believe I covered most of it, unless you have something very specific to ask

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People in many manhwa communities argue that the creators are already paid by kakao or other platforms when they publish their original work in their language. They say Tapas overcharges just for translations. I know everyone works hard, but I can't seem to get my thoughts through them. Do you have any suggestions how to counter these baseless statements? I think my own lack of knowledge regarding the payment system makes me lose.

This is the only legit way to properly reward a creative online, @riasrijana. Revenue sharing from every platform on the internet amounts to a pittance for all but the hugest players. The online 0.01%. Mr. Beast, for example, is an exception and far from the norm. Same goes for Rachel Smythe and SIU in our world. Remember this!

Since the majority of creatives exist in the long tail, and platforms regularly pretend their long tails aren't still bringing in a pile of revenue for them, you must pay artists real cash as directly as possible. Even if that means dropping some dimes into their begging cup when you see them outside.

If that's impossible, then you becoming The Mouth in Word of Mouth is the second best option. We talk about algorithm a lot but it has always been people hyping what they like that gets it more eyes. Algorithm just abuses on that to place ads.

Creators are paid, however they are paid through a metric system, they have to reach certain milestones to be paid. Less people legally reading, less income to the platform, less income to the plataform less pay, less pay means the story is not worth keeping under a contract, thus risk of cancellation or rushed ending.

If a series is not being translated is ok to illegally read it, however one should support the original release by contributing to views or tagging th respective platform on social media, requesting a translation and generating passive free advertisement. Higher demand, better chances.

To be honest, try not to waste your time arguing with people, not many really care about creators, just to be entertained. You'll find people that thinks authors are ""mean"" for not releasing chapter sooner, when actually they are currently making them. Or those that think these stories are manufactured and that there is no real people behind them.

You'll also find people who get terrible upset if a fantranslating group lets go of a series after being sued by the creators (Cofcof, spanish illegal readers of "The Archmage's Daughter").

I understand your frustration, both as a creator and a reader, but its better to avoid fighting with these individuals