Mother of God · 11:48pm Jan 20th, 2013
Holy crap, I have over one-thousand views to my story. I was aiming for a couple hundred, and hoped for at least 600, but reaching the thousand mark......sweeeet. And over 20 favorites, I wasn't even expecting favorites when I started. One thing I find odd though is that there are more favs than likes. You'd think they'd be either the same, or the likes would be higher, seeing that favoriting means you will continue to read any new chapters that come out, while liking simply means it was a good read. Is that what you're saying? You plan to continue on reading but don't think it's a good story? I like the logic in that. Because what if you like the beginning of the story so far, but don't know if you'll like the ending. What if I fuck up the ending you wanted or were expecting? What if the story is just down hill from here? Hopefully not. Then again, what if you're expecting an ending you won't expect? A twist. A LOOPHOLE. Or maybe a big ball of wibbly wobbly timey wimey......stuff. Aaaaaanyway, I just want to say thank you for how this has gone so far (which isn't that far at all) and hope you will continue to view the chapters to come. I also plan on releasing multiple chapters at once instead of one at a time, or maybe just making the chapters longer.
Azure Steel
One thing I find odd though is that there are more favs than likes. - This is actually very simple. Some people use the golden star (favorite) as "this has potential - will read later" so a fav does not really mean anything more than that. The Like, on the other hand, is much more special. It means that someone finds the story really interesting.
778077 You do realize that there is a button you can push right next to the name of a story that is the 'read later' button, right? You fav a story if it's one of your favorite stories read so far. You don't fav if you just plan on reading it later, you fav if you may read it again.
Hehe... Yes and no. Yes, there is such a thing, no - it's not useful :). If you have more than, say 50 items on the "to read" list, it becomes cumbersome to use. The Fav, on the other hand, has its own screen that is automatically sorted by last update. This is very, very useful if you have >500 stories to track (I won't tell you how many I have ).
778117 I have no trouble with it, and I have over 100 in it. There are a few problems, but same with using the fav button that way. I used to use the fav button as the read later button, but then my read stories were getting mixed with my unread stories.