- Joined
- Nov 4, 2017
Despite having been very invested and involved, I nearly completely checked out around the mid-teens.Is there any hope for webcomics? I took a peek at the webcomic world recently after having walked away five years or more ago, and it looks like it's all vertical scrolling bullshit today. No room for panel art or layout, and the only composition to speak of is just spacing in a vertical format. Obviously, some people are able to make that work, but I don't think I'd care for it. It just goes along with the dumbing down of society from social media and the like. Phones, phones, phones. I guess doomscrolling a comic is better than doomscrolling Facebook or Twitter, but seriously, what the hell? So much for the "endless canvas" they used to talk about.
Part of this was a lot of the comics I'd followed ending or "ending" (artist stops updating). Or sometimes it should have but zombied on becoming more and more bloated. (I'm looking at you, SSDD.)
The other part was all the new comics were all about gays and catching the first swells of the Tranny Menace, and the like two that weren't were basically "Adulting is hard!" no-medies that were at best amusing.
This was also a few years post the 2009 advertising collapse, so a lot of people who were making side-hustle money quit and did other things.
Add to this the Crosby's also had stopped recruting new talent around this time. I have some opinions about the Crosby's and their invite-only Kool Kids Klub, but it was a curated list of curated comics and when it stopped becoming the 'spot for webomics' that did damage. I recall there was some mini-scandals that really ammounted to nothing but fractured the webcomic artists (i.e. Hiveworks and Project Wonderful).
The webcomic community was extremely incestuous so all the "big names" were singing from the same hymn book or you were ostracized and no one would publicly acknowledge someone with problematic opinions lest they have to get stuggle-sessioned. (
And we hadn't even hit TDS infecting all of "comedy" yet.)
And you have a further issue of....the internet isn't dial up anymore. Bandwidth and storage are cheap. You can't just make another corny gag comic because all those corny gags have been done and your audience can find them easily with a google.
Sort of. You have coomer bs like above Pizza Cake, but thanks to patreon you don't need to have wide reach, you just need to have a business model to get retards (or coomers) to send you $5 a month.Is it even viable to draw webcomics anymore, if you're planning to do it as a career? The competition is fierce, not only from other webcomic artists, but also everything else that demands readers' attention on the web. Have there been any new webcomics that have become household names like XKCD or Cyanide & Happiness?
The other option is going the Webtoon "long strip" route, but this is for people with tiktok attention spans and you are competing with literal bugmen to get noticed.
Comics are also more often posted to Instragram or Xitter. Owning a website and forum are super boomer things now. This means these comics don't really have the dedicated fandoms around them anymore. Its discord now, but its not the same.
there is also.... So more Americans own horses now than owned horses in the 1880s. More people have rolexes after the commericalized availability of digital watches than before.
But they are no longer the dominant forces with the sway on daily lives that they used to.
So we'll never have another XKCD/Penny Arcade where a creator becomes a force in their own right. But webcomics will likely continue, and drawing silly pictures will still be a viable career. But its harder to get noticed now, and the business has changed. Its a bit like Mobile games where the name of the game isn't getting a bunch of eyeballs and selling, its about attracting a small number of whales and get them spam you with cash.


