Good Friday Morning Dear MMS Reader, In my early days as a teenager, I visited internet cafes a lot. It’s not as shady as it sounds, I promise. I had a voracious reading appetite and my parents’ wallets couldn’t keep up—my library fees came with a monthly cap. Around the same time, I also discovered the vast and wonderful world of The Internet, and the many interesting nooks and crannies it offered.
And in one of these nooks, I discovered amateur fiction. Fanfiction or original fiction, it didn’t matter. I haunted sister writing sites FictionPress dot com and Fanfiction dot net, along with a variety of other (in hindsight) less-than-savoury websites, like there was no tomorrow. When some of my favourite authors from those sites went on to publish their work in print, our little writing community was amazed. Going mainstream was something most writers on these platforms could only dream of.
Nearly three decades later, writing and publishing fanfiction and amateur fiction online has become a mainstream, even meaningful, form of art for aspiring writers. And they’re no longer relegated to an obscure corner of the internet.
Canada-based Wattpad, for instance, has a global community of 90 million users on its platform. It hosts both fanfiction and original content. Closer home in India, there are multiple writing platforms, but the biggest of all is the six-year-old Pratilipi, which sees over 30 million monthly active users writing and reading fiction across a whole bunch of regional languages.
And if getting published was the dream of amateur writers in the 2000s, writers these days can do that and more—adapt their content for television, web series, graphic novels, video games, you name it.
If your eyebrows went up at the mention of video games, wait till we tell you who led Pratilipi’s most recent $48 million investment round—South Korea’s Krafton Games. Krafton—the maker of the wildly popular (and controversial) PUBG—wants user-generated content (UGC), and Pratilipi not only hosts a boatload of said UGC, but is also actively buying the intellectual property (IP) off the authors to develop and build a billion-dollar transmedia empire.
It’s not an impossible dream. Remember Wattpad? Just over six months ago, South Korea’s answer to Google—Naver Corporation—bought the writing platform for over half a billion dollars. Not bad for amateur writing, eh? In today's story, Mumbai Multimedia Studio, TheMMS had chart out how Krafton and Pratilipi intend to build an IP-fuelled media empire .. Yusuf Bhandarkar 7977231537 Mumbai 400008
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