DireBadger
Fanatical Writer
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2022
- Messages
- 525
- Points
- 133
Okay, let me ask people what I am going to state for myself.
It's 3 o'clock on your day off's afternoon (hypothetically). You are a little bored, don't feel like watching ANOTHER crappy series on Netflix or Amazon, and sex is not on the menu for the moment, and you want to take a break from writing. So you decide to pick up a new book right here on Scribble Hub.
What, assuming you have had a decent day and don't feel like sticking an ice pick in your coworker's brain pans, do you usually automatically put in your series finder genre listing?
I will usually put in action/adventure, and depending on my mood, I will add comedy, mecha, litrpg, or mystery... sometimes, as positive tags, you can get interesting results. For negative tags, I take out the four gay porn tags, including the ones in Japanese, and usually exclude gender bender because... well... people here like to use those tags to justify some stuff that gives me nightmares if I subject my imagination to it. Not complaining, just explaining my reasoning.
I am usually fine with including the rated tags after that, because they are usually just hints that the books can go, rather than guaranteed.
If I want to be pickier, I start negative tagging stuff I don't want to see, and that takes a bit, but usually, my preferred genre listing keeps certain tags minimal.
Anyone want to explain their tagging?
It's 3 o'clock on your day off's afternoon (hypothetically). You are a little bored, don't feel like watching ANOTHER crappy series on Netflix or Amazon, and sex is not on the menu for the moment, and you want to take a break from writing. So you decide to pick up a new book right here on Scribble Hub.
What, assuming you have had a decent day and don't feel like sticking an ice pick in your coworker's brain pans, do you usually automatically put in your series finder genre listing?
I will usually put in action/adventure, and depending on my mood, I will add comedy, mecha, litrpg, or mystery... sometimes, as positive tags, you can get interesting results. For negative tags, I take out the four gay porn tags, including the ones in Japanese, and usually exclude gender bender because... well... people here like to use those tags to justify some stuff that gives me nightmares if I subject my imagination to it. Not complaining, just explaining my reasoning.
I am usually fine with including the rated tags after that, because they are usually just hints that the books can go, rather than guaranteed.
If I want to be pickier, I start negative tagging stuff I don't want to see, and that takes a bit, but usually, my preferred genre listing keeps certain tags minimal.
Anyone want to explain their tagging?