I read online - translated ones.
My only note is that if a comic is Chinese origin, the story telling is usually full of holes, like they skipped 5-6 panels that other type of mangas would had. So it could be annoying for the readers who are not used to it. (I honestly dislike it, so I avoid them.)
Manhua seem to be very crowded with competitors leading to some only focusing on niches and abandoning everything else
A manhua I’ve been reading is 48 hours a day. Title intrigued me, so I gave it a try.
Spoiler alert: He was given an extra 24 hours a day, but nothing comes from it. the story was where I was drawn in, because there was a manwha that I used to read (before it got canned) that used the same premise
This shows that the Chinese manhua market is extremely condensed, and it’s no wonder why it would have bad content as a result when everyone attempts to compete…
Honestly I thought it was because of cultural differences in the way stories are told.
I would think if they are spending time to create something they would actually want to capture the audience instead of making subpar stuff. Especially if they decide to translate them to other languages…
I read online - translated ones.
My only note is that if a comic is Chinese origin, the story telling is usually full of holes, like they skipped 5-6 panels that other type of mangas would had. So it could be annoying for the readers who are not used to it. (I honestly dislike it, so I avoid them.)
Manhua seem to be very crowded with competitors leading to some only focusing on niches and abandoning everything else
A manhua I’ve been reading is 48 hours a day. Title intrigued me, so I gave it a try.
Spoiler alert: He was given an extra 24 hours a day, but nothing comes from it. the story was where I was drawn in, because there was a manwha that I used to read (before it got canned) that used the same premise
This shows that the Chinese manhua market is extremely condensed, and it’s no wonder why it would have bad content as a result when everyone attempts to compete…
Honestly I thought it was because of cultural differences in the way stories are told.
I would think if they are spending time to create something they would actually want to capture the audience instead of making subpar stuff. Especially if they decide to translate them to other languages…