week 14: the future of comics

I think with the digital medium now comics are bigger culture than ever, spreading across all kinds of platforms both traditional and digital. I am most familiar with the South Korean web comics that Naver runs, with hundreds of comics being already completed and new comics bring new content every week or even twice to five times a week. The style vary vastly aiming for all age groups and gender, creating a pool of works where anyone could find a piece they could enjoy. It is really easy to follow as content is brought to you weekly, and it is personally something I look forward to with its accessibility through a mobile device. It is also really easy to communicate with the authors. The necessity to keep up with the weekly deadline tend to exhaust a lot of artists who then take a temporary break to recharge and prepare before returning. Provided as a free service that runs ads, this platform allows millions of comic readers to have access to amazing content easily and for free(completed ones and previewing of episodes cost money), but I think sometimes it creates disrespect for the authors as well as they take the art for granted and gets toxic rather than creating am environment for respectful constructive criticism. While there are many artists on this platform who excel at keeping deadlines and providing consistent quality content, there are artists who also noticeably suffer being consistent and management due to strict deadlines.

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