19 / 20
May 2019

Hello Tapas people,

I am a comic strips11 creator and until about a year ago I was making content without caring at all about the 'relatability' factor.
I was just focusing on the comical effects and in telling the story I wanted to tell.
But my comics didn't work on social media. But like... AT ALL.
Then I saw many stripcomics artists making the same type of content... The relatable one!
And no matter how done and overdone certain tropes and jokes were, people went crazy about them.

So I decided to change my strategy: I started making people-pleasing content :neutral_face: not that making good quality AND people-pleasing content it's easy. At the beginning it didn't work. It took me several months to adjust and to find a new voice, more suitable for this public's tastes.
And the results finally arrived: today I have more than 60k followers on Insta!

Relatable content brought me a lot of satisfaction and the possibility to use Instagram as a platform to promote other types of content (that I keep on making anyway).

Finally, my point: where do you stand on relatable content? Do you like it? Do you recommend other artists to do it? What is your personal experience with it?

I'm very curious :slight_smile:

PS: if you make relatable comics please link them up. If you don't, feel free to link and recommend other creators that you like!

Koto

  • created

    May '19
  • last reply

    May '19
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Deep sigh...
I don't make relatable content. I make something edgy, weird, clumsy and without any target audience.
My personal experience about it: ... ... ...well, at least I do what I like myself.

Yes AND No.

I used to make relatable comics back in 2015. It was acceptably popular back then. I made it because it was easy to get invested into ( as a creator) and it's a good starting point for practice because I wanted to pursue long form stories in the future. Back then, fellow artists hated relatable comics because it was waaaay more popular than long form ones ( similar to the "BL comics are trash" war going on right now)

As a creator, relatable comics were easy to do labor-wise. But it takes genuine talent to be funny and creative. You also have to compete with other creators who make similar content as you. you must have a right frame of mind to create relatable comics. I wasn't the most positive and optimistic person, so making people laugh and thinking of good punch lines was too difficult to do. Long form comics seem to suit me better.

As a reader, I enjoy them occasionally but it's hard to find one I actually like because a lot of them are similar. Relatable comics do not always mean "unoriginal" imo. Sometimes it's just the same joke over and over again, sometimes there isn't even a punchline! (which btw, is a sin I admit to have done before). I don't enjoy a lot of popular short form comics because they rely too much on relatability that other aspects are ignored, a lot of them aren't even funny. However, there popular short form comics I enjoy; Randowis, pet foolery, thumb paint. Personally, I don't think a short form comic's appeal is dependent on its relatability.

If it's relatable to me, it is unrelatable to 99% of the population.

If it's relatable to most, it would be unrelatable to me and a nightmare to write/draw.

Even if I was a great artist, I know that would not be a possible career because of that. So I don't care too much about it.

Not a big fan of relatable comics, at least not the generic ones. It would have to be very specific for me to like it, like PhD comics6 or Year of the Dog5. Can't think of any others right now :S

To be completely honest (I apologize if this offends you), I actually followed your Millenials comic for a while, and about last year I unfollowed it :neutral_face:
I liked the older jokes better, felt more genuine, like you were talking about actual stuff that either happened or was relevant to you. Then, and I think it was around the time you made the Disney movie strips, I just didn't find the jokes funny anymore. For some reason they felt staged and the cynicism too exagerated, compared to the tone I perceived during earlier stages.

PhD comics! I stopped reading because I could not take anymore grad studies related stuff after I got my PhD, but during grad studies.. yes, very relatable! I remember a long series of strips related to comp exam exactly as I was going through the comp exam.. the good (?) ol' times...

Those are damn relatable, some even too close to reality. Like that series when the advisor of one of the students leaves the university; fast forward in time, my own advisor left during my last year :sweat_smile:
The author went throug a lot and/or he's a good listener

That made me laugh and cry internally at the same time :no_mouth:

I’m gonna do a proper comment later. Just using this so I don’t lose track for now. Short answer, relatable can be cool. Don’t know if hue are youbis though.

And then... There is something between it all.
I call it Blue Life

OK I am back home with my computer. Let's go!

So relatable comics are nice because we can put ourselves in that situation. It allows us to self insert and follow the story in a way we normally can't. This allows us to feel emotions towards the comic in a stronger way. Because we feel like the comic gives a voice to OUR concerns. Our Cares. Our Fears. And it allows us to have a moment of catharsis as we release those emotions due to that comic. And things we feel strongly about we make a deeper bond with.

Now... I have no clue if my comic is relatable because it has robots. But I apparently can tear at people's hearts. So... I'll let you decide?

I'm not sure I write in the "relatable comics" subgenre... yet, anyway. I've got one in its earliest stages, and I'm not spoiling anything. However, I like using relatability in the comics I already have out as a tool to simultaneously engage readers and make them care about the characters. In Tiger on the Storm, I intentionally left in all of Sawyer's reflections on his marriage and family life and his slight self consciousness about his weight. Most people, especially civilians, can't relate to someone who's only shown commanding wartime operations or flying sorties, having no experience in that area. But most of us are part of a family of some sort or another, and we've all had medical weigh ins.

I kind of like the relatable comics genre, I do something similar with my work.I noticed this shift in animation also, when on youtube suddenly those relatable story animatics took off. I started watching those and it inspired me to tell my own stories again after a 5 year hiatus from comics.

Some people say my comics are relatable... that would explain the time one of them got viral on Facebook, which was this episode2.

I haven't really intended it to be, I write what I feel like writing. I guess for some people they could relate, which is nice to hear from readers :smiley:

I don't like relatable content. There is only so much material out there that could be be considered in the slice of life, relatable category. At a certain point I keep seeing the same joke, or different versions of a similar premise over and over again. Yes they are popular that crowd out other comics on Instagram, but to me they seem unoriginal (some, not all) and uninspiring.

Of course there are exceptions to the rule but that is my quick take on the matter.

EDIT: after reading the other comments, I am going to define "Relatable Comics" (Or as I perceive them, as I may be wrong). RC are two-panel comics that say: "Everyone else vs Me" or "Expectations vs. Reality" I think they are overdone.

Yeah, it's a choice I made knowing that some people won't like it.
The problem is that making webcomics is my full time job.
I have a long form comic published by a french pubilisher and the deadlines are tought.

I need social media to promote it.

With the few time that I have left from drawing my main comic, I had to make a choice: keeping on doing the old Millennials where I focused more on political issue or more intellectualized concepts, or simplify my life and make more accessible content and grow my social media while doing it.

I have chosen the latter.

But, as I said, at the beginning I failed.

My first attempts at making relatable content were awful. I didn't care for it, and people felt it.

It really took me a while to find a voice, to be unique and to find that part of me that I really wanted to share. And people responded well.
I thought that making good relatable content was easy, but it's not. AT ALL.

You have to be open about yourself, you have to give something of you, you have to be ready to accept critiques about yourself (because yeah, you're not talking about an abstract person, you're talking about yourself) and not everyone is ready or willing to do that. Or good at it if I'm allowed to say so.

So in the end I've learned something new and I'm glad :slight_smile:
I have a newly found respect for people who make high quality relatable content and everything that was there before didn't change. It just added up.

Finally, I don't blame you for not liking the new content. It's not Millennials, it's more 'me'. That's why it also got more cynic. I am a cynical person.

Thank you for liking my old comics, I think it's great :slight_smile: sometimes I felt I was the only one having that type of humor and the fact that people like you could connect with that as well was SO important for me to build the confidence to do a long form comics afterwards :+1:

Maybe one day have a look at the latest things I've done: sometimes I still find a way to slip some old Millennials frenzy into my new comics :wink:

As a reader I use stories as a form of escapism, so relatable anything is not high on my list. When I read a comic or a book I want to see someone else struggle and grow, not be reminded of my own struggles.