Hm.

Oct 15, 2015 22:49

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How interesting.

I just popped over to AO3 to look at my stats, and found something interesting: among all the chapters of High Contrast that I've posted, the last one I put up - Erik - has gotten the highest number of page views...by at least double. It's up to 74, but the highest any of the others has gotten has been around 30 ( Read more... )

writing, high contrast, fics, ao3

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Comments 14

addie71 October 16 2015, 12:01:01 UTC
That's a good question. I've never figured it out either. I do know that some of the fic I find are because they've been rec'd by others. The new F/S fic I find is because someone told me about an RSS feed that shows all new F/S fic posted there. Other than that, unless you are following a particular author, I don't know how people find the fics there. 'Tis a puzzlement.

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serai1 October 17 2015, 03:25:22 UTC
I'd be interested in that feed. Haven't read much new stuff in LOTR lately. Where is it?

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addie71 October 17 2015, 09:13:12 UTC
To be honest, it doesn't update much anymore, and the links drop off after a while, but here it is: http://ao3-frodosam-fics-feed.dreamwidth.org/

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serai1 October 17 2015, 16:35:05 UTC
Thanks! I will check it out. I have an account opened at Dreamwidth, but I've never done anything with it. Just didn't like the options over there.

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lbilover October 16 2015, 13:12:23 UTC
In my experience, it's fandom and amount of sex that determine the most hits. People like smut, and if it's in a popular fandom, they like it even more. :-) There are writers who used to write LOTR RPF brilliantly, but those fics have relatively few hits compared to more recent stuff they've written in newer fandoms. Abundantlyqueer comes to mind. It's not that the newer stuff is better, imo, just that LOTR RPF is no longer very popular.

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serai1 October 16 2015, 16:13:55 UTC
See, that's directly contradicted by what I'm seeing in my list - of the three getting the (relatively, LOL) massive counts, only one has sex in it. And the first fic I mentioned hasn't got much of anything in it. It's just fucking weird.

I'm not trying to figure out how to write for hits, or anything like that. This stuff is just gonna go as it goes. It's just frustratingly fascinating for me, since there's no way to figure it out really without asking everybody who reads my stuff. The fact that feedback at AO3 consists almost entirely of "kudos" makes it really impossible. (Does anybody like that "kudos" thing? I know I don't. It's FB invasion, in my opinion - just another version of those lazy FUCKING "like" buttons.)

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lbilover October 16 2015, 17:31:32 UTC
Well, nothing is 100%, but in my own experience and from reading a number of discussions about AO3, stories with sex and/or kinks do the best in terms of hits within a given fandom.

I'm with you on kudos. Definitely not a fan. I try, if I like a fic, always to leave a comment.

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serai1 October 16 2015, 17:51:30 UTC
Maybe they were trying to eliminate the problem of abusive feedback. No, then the only real remedy would've been to eliminate commenting at all, and they haven't done that. I honestly think it's either lazy thinking or jumping on the FB bandwagon without actually linking to FB. (THANK THE GODS they didn't go for that. I'd never have posted a word there if they had.)

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claudia603 October 17 2015, 16:57:14 UTC
What creates hits on Archive is always funny to me! Of course, I do find that in general, the most crazy, AU, mpreg, smutty fics iwth kinks galore will naturally get the most hits. But after that, it's very odd. My fic with the highest hits right now is a Bilbo/Thorin very mild rather vanilla slash piece. Makes sense with lbilover's theory because The Hobbit is way hotter a fandom than LOTR is right now and that's a popular pairing. However after that, my LOTR fics with kinks or non-con with traditionally unpopular pairings come a close second! Like my second highest hits thing was a kink fest thing I started for a friend that involves non-con, mpreg, butt plugs, an unpopular pairing, etc. One of my most popular fics on Archive is a gentle, non-graphic mpreg. So mpreg is very popular on Archive, it seems. Probably if a person wrote a steamy, smutty mpreg with non-con and slavery and butt plugs in a very hot fandom with the most popular pairing, it would probably have an enormous amount of hits ( ... )

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serai1 October 17 2015, 17:13:01 UTC
But the archive has unique hit counts, so we already know how many people are reading. The kudos serve no purpose other than to take away the impetus to actually say something. For me, I'd rather they didn't exist. I can see how many people are reading; getting lazy kudos is less helpful than getting only comments, because those kudos are of no use to me as a writer. All they tell me is "I can't be bothered to leave a few words". I don't think it's helpful to writers to encourage that kind of attitude, frankly.

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