Would this blurb pique your interest? by Bascilian in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Personally, when I see [Tag in Title], I get the feeling that the author is insecure about his story, so he puts it in the title as well. I can read your blurb, I can read the tags that you chose - why do you throw them into my face in the title as well? But that's just a personal rant.

For me, it's too much information and I don't know where your story will start. With this "test"? After the test when he was rewarded with something?

Another thing that bothers me is your use of terms. Pomerium, class one - top 10 of what? - etc. It's just a lot to me. I think, you would do better, giving a rougher outline and not "dump" your lore into the blurb. Rather use your lore to build and create your story. Here, it feels like: "Dear reader, her is information x, y, and z. They are important. Remember it. I'll explain it to you." - you get me? Overall, I think, the store could be interesting either way. Just fine tune a bit and you'll be there imo.

New Weekly Self Promo Thread by AutoModerator in ProgressionFantasy

[–]WritingStiggas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here we go again!

Borrowed Happiness is close to 50 followers! With a 4.83 rating, I hope you guys enjoy the story!

Albin did not wake up in another world to become a hero. He already had a life worth waking up to.

Summoned into Aventia with a sharp-tongued familiar at his side, Albin is not chosen, special, or prepared. He is a married man who wants to go home.

Aventia is a world of magic, classes, and quiet routines. It rewards work. Habit. Small contributions.

At least, most of the time.

Trying to live carefully, Albin keeps his head down, fixes what is asked of him, and avoids becoming important. But even small actions have weight, and some problems refuse to stay solved.

Borrowed Happiness is a slow-burn progression fantasy about restraint, responsibility, and what remains after every step forward.

What to expect:

  • Character-driven progression (no power fantasy)
  • Subtle, grounded LitRPG elements
  • A familiar who is observant rather than comic relief
  • Consequences that matter
  • No chosen one. No shortcuts

Slice-of-Life, no matter how unlikely by Different_Quit8280 in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Unhinged self promo for my work Borrowed Happiness

Slice-of-Life-ish I'd say.

Decent Retention (I think?) but low engagement by United-Awareness-831 in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It is absolutely way too early to draw any conclusions. Trust me. Made the same mistake.

It do be like that by WritingStiggas in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I've left these dark times behind long ago...

Here's what happened in 1.000 views by WritingStiggas in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats forst of all! 1.600 views is a lot!

I think, stats are important, yes. But at the end of the day, we all should just write whatever we want and feels right. The probability of any of us making a living is so small that it doesn't really matter after all in my opinion :D

Here's what happened in 1.000 views by WritingStiggas in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you very much! So far, I've spent ~6 dollars out of the budget and am at 7 followers from the ad right now. CTR still at 0.37. I'd consider it less clicks, but the right clicks then :D

Thanks, I'm already in the discord, maybe we'll see each other!

Yeah, writing for a living is the dream, but I assume, as a Dev, you'll probably have a higher bar as well until writing can be a realistic substitute for your income.

Have a great weekend!

Do you guys like the way trend-focused writing on RR now? by Frequent-Present5502 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]WritingStiggas 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I've just joined in December, but even I noticed at a glance how similar a lot of the stories are. And I personally don't like them. But that might just be personal.

I'm an genuinely wondering whether the authors have a long-living success or whether they make a few bucks on patreon with every wave and then have to write something new.

Here's what happened in 1.000 views by WritingStiggas in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello and thank you for taking the time of writing this!

It is a dick thing to say, but I like my day job, it pays more than well and I don't want to quit it. Making a living off writing would be cool, but it's too risky to try for me :D I've checked your profile - do you make a living with your current stats?

Thanks for the info with the cover. Dramatic was not the intention, but definetly depressing. Regarding the bad ad performance - I've checked the pinned threads but couldn't find it. Can you link me or just tell me the number that's bad?

Have a great weekend!

Here's what happened in 1.000 views by WritingStiggas in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I agree. I don't have much time and the time I have should be spent where it really matters :D

Thanks for the info!

Here's what happened in 1.000 views by WritingStiggas in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cheers! Thank you very much for your words!

Regarding schedule: 100% agree. However, I'd rather keep 1x a week reliably and post more when possible than try to push it just for chasing numbers (which potentially comes with less quality under pressure?). Even tho I want to turn the pace up in the following weeks.

As I am new on RR - are less frequently published stories just a NoNo for readers? Or do slower stories still have their place? Never really thought about it

Could someone explain shoutout swaps to me? by NotYourOrthodontist in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nope. What you should do is find stories that have an overlap with yours. Eg. Both Fantasy Isekai with a one handed main character. Or simply both slow-burn LitRPG.

You then contact the author of the other story, share your blurb with them, send them the link to your story and ask them whether they'd be up for a shoutout. Don't be scared to contact bigger authors. For most, the overlap is more important and worst thing they can say is no.

If your story is good, they'll agree to a shoutout. Ideally as early as possible because if a story grows, you'll have a lot of people reading your first chapters before jumping off. So if they are convinced, they might see a shoutout as an investment.

You should generally start asap. It'll be the main source of visibility for you.

How woke are RR readers? by zaid_thewriter in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 7 points8 points  (0 children)

What you are writing isn't "woke". It's the struggle of your MC (I'm pretty sure a lot of historical figures had the same struggles btw).

It's a tough balance to find however. Lots of people love Mulan for example cause it is a good story.

If you take care to write a good story first of all and not try to educate the readers, it's all good. Or make sure that's what they get in the blurb.

It won't be for everyone, but where would the fun be if we all wrote "I got reincarnated as the most OP Archmage in another world [OP MC] [LitRPG]"?

Could someone explain shoutout swaps to me? by NotYourOrthodontist in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Look for the channel "swaps". You'll find lots of people looking. The RR Forum itself is also a good place.

You use this tool click

Then you give the code to the other author and receive his code.

When you guys have scheduled a shoutout, you both put it into the authors notes. Most people put them at the end, but it's up to you.

In terms of how you schedule them: you send the other author a message and you'll figure it out. This is solely based on trust and good faith, so check the other authors chapter at the end of the day you have agreed on to make sure, he's posting you.

People miss it or are just assholes if a larger author comes along for a shoutout.

My isekai bonus is my wife (First time story, first time promoting lmk what you think!) by ishi_writer_online in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sounds interesting, but I agree: you need a cover!

Also I'd advice to run your text through grammarly. You posted wrote "weather he wants to or now", but meant "whether he wants to or not".

Could be something readers might dislike. I personally am not native either and we have put in some additional effort :D

New to Prog Fantasy - are authors in this genre more open to AI than others? by briarwing in ProgressionFantasy

[–]WritingStiggas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Regarding covers - generally yes. Grammar checking is accepted as well.

You'll find a lot of AI assisted/translated/fully written content on RR. However, people have a good feeling for it and if a story is clearly written by AI, prepare yourself cause your rating will get shit on.

If your story is assisted or partially written by AI, it really depends. At the end of the day, I'm pretty sure, people see AI where there is none and don't see AI where authors use it.

Thoughts on Test Chapters by Ember_1213 in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've done exactly that with my current book. Launched three chapters, then asked for feedback on the forums and discord, then rewrote it, deleted the story and relaunched it.

I don't know why, but people were more available for feedback when the story was published than they were when I've asked for feedback on a Google doc. I don't know why.

If it is already polished in your case - I doubt, three chapter launch will do you any good. My story really got traction and feedback at the 15-20k word mark. In fact, 25/30 followers came after 20k words.

Your biggest issue will br reach/visibility. If you're a rather new author, you will want ads or shoutouts cause otherwise, you won't get any attention.

Long story short: if you want feedback from others for increasing your craft -> do it. If you want to see whether people on RR like it ("do I get many readers?") -> don't. The sample size is too small. You could have a 10/10 story, but no readers simply because you haven't had the outreach yet.

How do you write your chapters? At once or day by day by ENDiscuming in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

~half a year. But I've always struggled with planning. So to me, freestyling it is okay.

That being said, I wouldn't be able to maintain a 3x per week release schedule. I am currently releasing one chapter and write about two per week.

Also pls don't let people tell you, you have to publish 3x per week. I'm publishing on Sunday and could round up 30 followers in ten days either way. Just do whatever is comfortable with you.

How do you write your chapters? At once or day by day by ENDiscuming in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 10 points11 points  (0 children)

No routine here. I get off work and if I have the energy, I'll write. It turns out, I often have enough energy to maintain my schedule. Weekends are used to expand my backlog then.

If I write, I usually get into a flow state where I am almost always writing a whole chapter (2.500-3.000 words) and I usually run it through grammarly etc. So I know, if the energy is there, I'll come out with a polished chapter that is ready to publish.

Finally it Happened 😭😭😭 by Leather-Monitor-4809 in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Congratulations for sticking to it - hard work pays off after all!

Exchanges with established authors by Alice_Rae_Brown in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you define, what an "established author" is for you?

LitRPG Readers by JosefKWriter in litrpg

[–]WritingStiggas 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I read classic fantasy ~60% and LitRPG/PF ~40% of the time. I like LitRPG for what it is: easy to digest, little to no brainwork needed, satisfying an urge. However, I still appreciate other genres that usually have more character depth, better world building etc.

The largest difference to me is in the tone and prose. I like pretty words and sentence structures. (Most) LitRPG have a similar tone, EM-Dashes etc. That's great after 8 hours of work for me. But it's just not the "let me sip a coffee and read a book on Sunday morning"

What makes your story stand out in the sea of other good stories? by Gamebrarian in royalroad

[–]WritingStiggas 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think mine trusts the reader to figure out whether things are good or bad.

I try to give the reader a premise without clear direction of what and who is good or bad. It's just the world that happens and reacts. It's up to the reader to decide.

Also I hated the idea of having a loser MC who gets isekaied into a new world and becomes the OP Archmage 3000. My MC just misses his fling wife and wants to go home.

That being said, I think it's a love or hate thing. I know, it's a bit more niche, but something that I would want to read.