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Sep 2021

Here are a few platforms to post content (novels/comics/both) on that I don't see a lot of people talking about compared to others. Any thoughts on them if you've used them? Or if you think you may want to use them whether to post your content or just for reading?

And please comment any others you know of!

NoirCaesar6
A new app/site called Noir Caesar allows users to upload content like books, comics, videos, music.
Most content seems to require a $4.99 sub, but if you have a free account it seems you can access some for free, like these comics: Yeehaw Blue, Spacepop1, The Evolution of Autumn Walters, Shade Of Red, God Punch2
It was released like a month ago, but the content looks interesting for people searching for diverse content. I don’t think creators are able to earn money at the moment.

Voyce.Me9

The site Voyce.Me seems relatively new. All content (novels and comics) seems to be free. Allows creators to earn from ad revenue. Has a lot of manga-inspired content.

Underlined5
This is a site from Penguin Random House, it allows you to upload serialized novels for free, but it doesn’t seem to offer monetization.

GlobalComix2
GlobalComix is the one I’m least familiar with. Creators can upload content seemingly for free or only available with the site-wide $7.99 unlimited subscription, or they can use reading credits they pay for. Offers earning for creators.

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There's honestly not much point.

  • There's very little actual audience on any of these sites.
  • Some of them use bots to artificially inflate your view and follower count to trick you into thinking you have a way larger audience there than you do.
  • The more sites you join, the more time you have to dedicate to ensuring that the terms and conditions you agree to when you post on them aren't trying to screw you over in regard to your IP rights. (The debacle here around 'Right of First Refusal' spring to mind, and this is the second most prominent webcomic site.) They can change these terms and conditions at any time, so you have to check often.

If any of the platforms actually became big enough to be worth the time commitment of publishing there, I'd definitely reconsider. But as it stands right now, they're not worth it.

Surprised you didn't mention Comicfury, Itchio, Google Play Books, OR Comixology!

They're all free to use, and the majority of these let you monetize your work as well as having big built-in audiences to work from. (Er, except for Comicfury, but it has other strengths.)

I have heard of GlobalComix (which has gotten a good UI update recently it seems) ​but never any of the others. NoirCaesar doesn't seem to qualify as a "web fiction" platform if it's almost all paid and requires accounts, but maybe that'll change in the future because it does look nice.

Voyce.me I have never heard of despite being an entire year old. They have typos on their site, even their FAQ, which is never a good sign, but it's hard to say there. They're at least legit in that this comic God Game is marketed as an exclusive, and indeed the author links to voyce.me on his carrd page2.

However, they are probably (EDIT: Eh I give it 50/50) inflating their viewcounts. 400,000 views for a single comic on a site that launched a year ago, with an Alexa score of 753,0002? Very unlikely. 90 days ago it was rank #250,000, which is more impressive, but it's sunk a lot for reasons I don't know. They have a few other comics with giant viewcounts and not that much content, too.

Comparison: Here is one story (which I like) called Atk 0 Crit All. On Voyce.me, it has almost 9,000 views. In comparison, it has 335k views on Royal Road1 and 53k views on Honeyfeed2, both proven sites that don't inflate viewcounts. Those are comparably much bigger, but keep in mind that Royal Road is in the top 24,000 sites, and Honeyfeed, while only around 490,000, has an ongoing contest partnership thing with MyAnimeList which has seen a huge boost in views there recently. Actually... this wasn't so evident when I looked at it again. The Originals with their huge 200k+ views make me suspicious, but not this one. I would delete this whole segment except it took too long to write lol

Voyce.me got a licensing deal for some webcomics1 a couple months ago, so it's definitely a viable platform, but it's a heck of a lot smaller than those top stories imply. Look at the Discover tab and you'll see.

As for Underlined, I don't know when it launched, but it's clearly marketing itself to young teens, basically a community hangout for creative kids rather than a place to share novels and gain readers. There's not many stories, a lot of them are spam, and they don't show views at all. There was another major publisher web fiction site like 10 years ago, and it shut down likely for the same reasons this one will; the major publishers are just clueless to how to make web fiction work, or else they'd already have created a Tapas/Wattpad/Royal Road competitor worth talking about.

Anyway, I have a big web fiction directory7 (also includes comics) of basically all platforms on the whole internet you can post stories on. I got to add two new sites today thanks to this thread, so there's probably more lurking out there I don't know about. Let me know if you find them.

Some people may be interested in platforms that offer different audiences/content than the more popular ones, and some people seem to search for more platforms to have a presence on so they can use it if they want to.

This is a pretty definitive statement. Do you have definitive proof of this?

I seriously doubt the vast majority of users actually read through the terms of conditions of these platforms (or just about any site whatsoever). The most they may do is a cursory search or query on a forum to see what others have to say about them to make sure there aren't any obvious flags (like shady publishing contracts.)

Google Play and Comixology (Amazon) are more digital stores. They have much stricter approval processes than something like Tapas or any of the platforms I mentioned. And most importantly, they aren't really designed for user-generated serialized content. Never heard of Comicfury or Itchio, but they seem interesting.

Anyway, I have a decently long list of online serialized/web fiction sites but I just posted about these since they aren't really talked about.

I would consider it web fiction/publisher/digital store hybrid. The site seems to have a function to buy comics and other things directly as well as allowing users to post serialized books (and audio and videos). I did a bit more browsing and it seems that maybe only the content that Noir Caesar produces is completely paywalled and the user-generated content isn't necessarily (I seem to be able to access everything in the Explore tab without a subscription.). There are definitely improvements they should do to make it more accessible/clearer.

Anyway, I'm pretty interested in this platform since it promotes content featuring black/POC character more than other platforms do, so I'm hoping to see more improvements and growth. Interestingly, I think the owner is a former NBA player.

Probably due to social media in part. They have decent followings and engagement on TikTok and Instagram. On IG they seem to get hundreds or thousands of likes per post, and on TIkTok they seem to always have thousands of views, and a few viral posts, most likely.

This is not necessarily true? For Comixology, yes, someone does review your work (trust me though, it's a low bar) but where did you hear that it was hard to get on to Google Play Books? You can upload your PDF and be on the app THAT day. I do it all the time.

Also, I think even serialized work benefits from being put into collections and then shared via PDF on sites when it can be. It's an amazing way to get folks in the door for your comic (larger archives can be intimidating, so something easier to sit down and read all at once is helpful) and a nice way to preserve your comic in case any of these sites go down (RIP Smackjeeves and RIP any horny comic that was on Tumblr) and generally just have a ton of benefits-- including translations being easier to distribute through these sites.

And yeah, I'm just not sure they can be written off that easily just because webcomics are serialized or update slowly. All you need is a little bit of a patience and eventually you can have a chapter or volume of your story to put up and share. ^u^

Which is utterly foolish of them, as those terms and conditions, if dodgy, can restrict what your control over your own IP. If you're posting your IP on a site, you should always go over the terms and conditions of that site. Again, there was a massive controversy on Tapas regarding the 'Right of First Refusal' which I'd encourage you to look into. If Tapas thought they could get away with that, given the size of this site and the fact that there are plenty of experienced creators here, I can only imagine what kind of bull a smaller site full of less experienced creators might try to pull.

As for proof of Voyce artificially inflating their view counts, @thedude3445 summed it up perfectly. There are some completely unbelievable numbers. And no, that's not from social media. Click-through rates to webcomics from social media users is abysmal, something most of us with any experience can confirm. I mean, if you want to believe Voyce is legit so badly, go off, I guess... but I'd steer anyone who asked me the hell away from that site. If they're that dishonest with one metric, there's no way I'd trust them with my IP.

I can vouch for ComicFury, at least. Good little community over there, and the platform itself would have been killer like, a decade ago (haha). It's pretty old-skool webcomics in terms of building a site, but I actually do like it a lot. It works very well as a traditional desktop webcomics website.

I see pretty regular traffic over there, too. More than I get on Tapas, even; though I hope to change that, soon.

My comic on ComicFury: http://berrybones.thecomicseries.com/1
My comic on Tapas: https://tapas.io/series/berrybones/info1

Yeah, ComicFury is a bit of a blast from the past, definitely more akin to the old-school webcomic platforms. I stopped posting there after I started working in a vertical format, but it's a nice community.

AH! I'm old so I didn't even consider tiktok as a possibility, and I forgot to check their Instagram. The author of the God Game comic does have a lot of followers on Instagram, though not 400k views' worth. I'm not so convinced they are inflating their viewcounts now, but it is clear that they are masking what 99% of the stories do, because everything but their originals is like significantly lower.