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Aug 2017

At the start I didn't put too much thought into my target audience, especially since it was a first attempt at comic making and extremely rough. But if I had to say at that time it would've been a teen audience. Now that I'm trying to flesh out my existing comic more I would say it's between a teen and young adult audience though it's only a slice of life kind of comic.

For the other comics that I'm currently planning out however I would say their audiences would be teens and young adults interested in the fantasy, adventure or drama genres. I don't think there would be an specific demographics although I suppose one of the two stories I'm working on would be aimed at those who are interested in or familiar with urban culture.

It's definitely worth putting thought into your target audience and I think this thread has made me think more about the importance of it in developing a story/comic or otherwise.

Absolutely, I think knowing who it's for can give you an idea if it's going to resonate with them or not

@WinterRobinhood @Catspacesailor
I totally applaud the LGBT community here for knowing exactly who their target audience are, I think that really helps to know how to connect with your specific audience :grin:

my work is geared to mature audiances,male or female , and its a sci-fi fantasy

Well I'll put it this way. At first I assumed I was writing for college age boys, then suddenly when I put some of my books on Wattpad it was actually mostly teen girls that read my work.

Genre wise, I write a subset of science fiction called Bleeding Edge. I allow some elements of magic realism.

LOL :smile:
is wattpad audience mostly teenage girls? or just happen to be the one reading your work?

I'm just wondering cos I feel like with the statistic is always higher with girls reading than guys, then all these online platform for readings are dominated by female audiences,

so free platform would be dominated by teenage girls, because teenagers in generals don't have too much money to pay for things,
and maybe the paid content is better geared toward more mature female audience who has money to pay for specific content they want to read, cos adult usually does not have that much free time compared to teenagers.:confused:

I'm honestly not sure, it could just me it's more girls on that platform. I write some pretty dark material at times, and yet even then my audience seems to skew more toward the Josie/Yuri demographic.

Yes cryptocurrency is a good example.

Another would be something like the Luna Network, or Thumb Drive frisbees. Or perhaps something like Drones that carry Dead Drops for world wide offline file sharing networks.

The Luna Network aims to give sneaker net browsing it's own artificial intellegence to make finding things like Dead Drops and other drones an easier process.

interesting, few weeks ago I've been marathoning youtube videos about AI, that's where I got my education lol,
I don't think I came across Luna Network yet... although I felt like I have heard about it, or Thumb drive frisbees, but I can look that up in youtube and maybe someone can explain it to me via video audio without me reading texts about it lol :sweat_smile:

It's not up there yet as I use more Goblinrefuge than anything else. That and:

Diaspora
GNU Social
Mastodon
Stuff like that.

It's more something I'm beta testing before wide release. But often such early technology features in my works of fiction. I guess you could say I'm a bit of a method actor.

Now there are Dead Drops on youtube. But I'm taking the concept of the Dead Drop, and moving it into a more secure format. Like DroneNet.

Or even IPvRV. Although I've had enough of internet debunkers lately.

LOL that definitely very new, I'm very impressed that you are looking into something that is that so new and incorporating it into fiction :grin:

I like finding things like that, and imagining how this would extend into the next decades or so. Some of it I imagine lasting beyond any one Orange Peel president.

I have noticed it does seem to be the politically conservative demographic that seems most resistant to some of my ideas about technology. I'm not absolutely sure why that is.

I guess Liberty really doesn't matter to them after all.

I think it's because most of my target audience seems to be those who are afraid of to much surveillance, and not those who like it.

Baring in mind I used to do dystopian, before I got tired of it.

THE WORLD!!!
No one is to be spared! Man, woman, or child, they will all fall under my word!

...unless they are under fourteen. The comic I'm working on probably isn't fit for that young an audience.

BUT OTHER THAN THAT...
'Look upon my works ye mighty and despair!'

I'd probably say it's young adults-older adults. Most of my subject is social commentary/referencing most younger people wouldn't really understand (Like paying for bills, financial aid, and stupid trends).

Currently working on something that will focus more for teen-young adults though.

My target audience is mostly towards teens and adults. It's more on the mature and is inspired by superhero comics and shows alike. My superhero series has a bit of gore and is crude. If you like rude and mean heroes with weird powers, then I guess you'd like it.

(Semi) Super is for like teens to early twenties and sci-fi fans :sunglasses:

Honestly that's something I hope to find out. Haven't started my comic long enough to have an audience with a strong demographic and from my friend's experiences, you tend to get surprised a lot. My friend wrote a graphic novel about dudes in the military and it ended up being mostly female readers. I'm just making the kind of story my boyfriend and I want to read, and then hope there's other people who want to read it too. ¯_(ツ)_/¯

Me.

When I was in college, I once wrote an extremely self-indulgent story for my screenplay class that I didn't know we were going to read aloud. I was kind of embarrassed, it was a weird story, but another student actually found me after class to tell me how much he loved it. I think that's the first time I realised that if I was really, really into an idea, someone else would be into it too. They might like it for the same reasons as me! And that realisation is honestly the only way Runewriters could have happened.

I'm not really sure how wide Runewriters' appeal could be? I know that when I'm at cons and get to see folks face-to-face at least, the readership seems to trend towards teenagers and some young adults (which, given where the main characters are in life, makes sense to me). But honestly, almost every decisions is made based on what I would really get excited about, if I were reading it.

I think someone told me before that if you can at least get yourself really excited about it, chances are there are others out there who are similar to you that would feel the same :blush: