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Tapastic

Tapastic
Tapastic icon.png
Icon of the Tapastic app
Type of site
Webcomic platform
Available in English
Owner Tapas Media
Created by Chang Kim
Website tapastic.com
Alexa rank Increase4,115/11,689 (10/2016)
Commercial Yes
Registration Optional
Launched October 2012
Current status Active

Tapastic is a webcomic syndicate set up by South Korean entrepreneur Chang Kim in October 2012. Operated from both Seoul and San Francisco by Tapas Media, Tapastic features a large collection of short-form, English-language webcomics and webtoons from over 5,000 artists. The website aims to create a platform where comic creators can publish their works without cost, describing itself as the "YouTube of Comics." Since 2016, the Tapas Media's mobile app also publishes books through a freemium business model.

"We discovered a lot of people still use print publishing, and paid their own money to print comics ... Or people start their own website, in which case you have to build your audience, think about mobile, pay for hosting. It just doesn't really work out."

Chang Kim came up with the idea of starting an open-publishing platform after wondering if there was a singular online location to read all the webcomics he was a fan of. While YouTube users were making money through uploading independent video content, there existed no equivalent for comic creators. Kim also noted that this business model was already successful in South Korea. With $3.4 million in backing from both American and Korean investors, including Daum Kakao and former Facebook Chief Technology Officer Adam D’Angelo, Kim started up Tapastic in 2012.

In 2014, Tapastic reached a partnership with Daum Communications, which operates the largest webtoon portal in South Korea. Through this partnership, Tapastic hopes to bring over successful Korean titles to see if they can find success in the United States market. The partnership deal also resulted in $2 million USD of Series A funding for Tapastic.

In April 2016, Tapas Media released a new mobile app, simply titled "Tapas". Using a freemium business model by offering content to readers for free as an incentive to pay more, the app added books to its line-up of offered media. According to Tapas Media, around 10–20% of the books are offered for free, creating a form of sample preview. Books are split up into "bite-sized micro chapters" in order to allow people to read portions within a few minutes. The model was inspired by free-to-play video games, such as Candy Crush.


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