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Aug 2018

I've just barely made 25 total subs, but I've jumped this month thanks to being more active on the forums.

I think it was a daily snack (never got to actually see it), but I had a 600 sub jump overnight last year :slight_smile:

Biggest jump was when I first got active in the forums a while back. That seems to be my biggest help...Dunno why.

As for me ummm i think it was when i transitioned into BL comics. I've always worked on Heterosexual comics where the love interest is man& woman. but as soon as i started Strings and Time, i got a good head starts then i was featured several times in the trending so it went up a bit. as of right now i think it slowed down tho. but i have a bigger fan base on webtoon. either way, the key is "CONSISTENCY", if you can post religiously you should see an improvement.

Speaking of the english version of my comic, my biggest jump was in April; I got 5 subs in that month!

Happened in January.
I don't know how it happened, but a story I put out got a spike in views and subscribers.
Unfortunately, the episodes that followed failed to reach even half of what the first one did.

I'm one of those with slow but steady growing. Since my art got better, more people got interested and I have 57 readers now. And I think that's totaly fine, as my art is still improving and my first chapters looking bad.
A while ago I stoped carring too much about the numbers and just enjoy making comics

Also a nice icon realy helps, because it's the first thing, people see.

when I went on the tapas forums and linked my comic

like this

while consistency is definitely important, it seems to me the key is clearly to transition into BL haha XD;;
there is not much you can do if the audience is not interested in a m/f love story, but there is something to be said when you got featured multiple times only after starting a BL story (and i'm pretty sure your other stories where just as good to begin with)

Mine was on the third or fourth day after publishing my story. I got 40 subs. It was 2 years ago. Then sub just raise gradually I guess.

I had the biggest jump in subs when I was featured in the Noteworthy Novels section. Right now I'm seeing some big growth in subs for my current work ELINA because it's being featured there

My comics subs is so slow it's bringing flashbacks to 90's internet connection, that you waited a few minuets just to see a picture on a musty text site. and it was even a GIF format.

When i showed the first page of my comic in a topic about sharing the first 3 pages of your comic, and when i showed that same page in a topic about showing a funny scene of your comic.

I usually get more subs when I start a new chapter because the comic I'm working on is a learning exercise - every time I finish a chapter I gather a bunch of feedback and I make the required changes in the new chapter.
Since I have a big jump in quality I find more new readers subscribe than before, as they're seeing the newest and most improved version of my work.

At least, for the current project that's when I've found my sub count moving the most.

Definitely when I first started out my comic - I got at least 400 of my subscribers in that first week. Still trying to figure out how to maintain/increase my sub count! :slight_smile:

According to my experience: never.
It takes a long time to get new subscribers, but I never noticed a real jump.
I don't have much subscribers, by the way :grin:

18 days later

In my experience, for novels on Tapas, the only way to get subs is to either get featured or write BL.