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A 2015 study by David Harper concluded that webcomics were vastly more popular format to female, transgender, and non-binary comic artists than for men. More than 40% of the women, transgender, and non-binary comic artists reported to work primarily in webcomics in this study, while only 15% of men did.
Manta is a subscription-based service that allows all members to read unlimited amounts of content on its app at a fixed price. The app is available for Android and iOS devices, [4] and all content can be viewed from its official website. Manta is known to be the first subscription-based webcomic platform in the market. [5]
Webtoons (Korean: 웹툰) are a type of episodic digital comics that originated in South Korea usually meant to be read on smartphones.While webtoons were mostly unknown outside of South Korea during their inception, there has been a surge in popularity internationally thanks to the easy online accessibility and variety of free digital comics. [1]
Webtoon The Antique Gift Shop Korean: 분녀네 선물가게: Lee Eun: Yen Press: True Beauty: Yaongyi: WEBTOON: Transmigrating to the Otherworld: Lim Kyung-bae (novel), Jiya The Boxer: story and art by H [2] WEBTOON: The Return of the Disaster-Class Hero: SAN.G (novel), BGman, HEATS: KAKAO WEBTOON The Forgotten Princess Just Wants Peace: Lemon ...
The Girl Downstairs, known in South Korea as Lee Doo-na! (Korean: 이두나!; RR: Iduna!) (Chinese: 爱上她的理由; pinyin: Ài shàng tā de lǐyóu) is a South Korean manhwa released as a webtoon written and illustrated by Min Songa.
Her Tale of Shim Chong (Korean: 그녀의 심청, romanized: Geunyeoui Simcheong) is a Korean girls' love manhwa series written by Seri and illustrated by Biwan. The manhwa was serialized online via Comico from September, 2017 to March, 2019.
Let’s Play is created by Leeanne M. Krecic, who writes and illustrates the comic under the pen name Mongie. [6] [7] [10] [11] Krecic has said that she created the comic "because I was looking for characters like me – die-hard gamers, heartfelt romantics, and young women with dreams of success on their own terms – but couldn't find them represented anywhere in the pop culture of the moment."
Line first launched its manga service in 2013 offering licensed manga titles to purchase. [2] One of the biggest features of the service was its integration with the Line messaging app, users could recommend and share manga titles with friends in the app, collect special stickers that were exclusive to titles bought on the service, and use Line's digital currency to buy titles. [3]