Are single word series titles at a disadvantage?

LoneQuack

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that's the thing, there's no audience in the web novel scene that would read something with a single word title though. you'll have to publish it as a book proper or something, and not even in amazon it would work well. also think about other books that must have already used your one word title before, words are limited after all. at least use a subtitle, like "Water: The Adventure of the Fish" instead of "Water". It's not even a japanese thing, they do this all the time in western literature too. don't try to act like you're outside of the sphere and that "you say that only because you write for le cringe weebs!!!1" or something, they have nothing to do with this.
There's a difference between "A song of Ice and Fire" and "The adventures of the last son of X family goes and does Y with his worse skill that actually is op but only realized it after he got married to the worst woman on the entire whole world. [litRPG]." Yes its not something inherently founded by Japanese/Asian authors, but let's also not be nitpicking ones answer to make a weak point. New authors, especially web-authors came from web-novels in which most of them found them through anime and other Asian media, so they will be influenced much more by them, and as they so, so do the long winded titles, so yes, they do in fact play a major role into this culture. I'm not saying this is a bad thing necessarily though, I want to make this clear.

With all that being said, I agree with you in regards to op's question.
 

PancakesWitch

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There's a difference between "A song of Ice and Fire" and "The adventures of the last son of X family goes and does Y with his worse skill that actually is op but only realized it after he got married to the worst woman on the entire whole world. [litRPG]." Yes its not something inherently founded by Japanese/Asian authors, but let's also not be nitpicking ones answer to make a weak point. New authors, especially web-authors came from web-novels in which most of them found them through anime and other Asian media, so they will be influenced much more by them, and as they so, so do the long winded titles, so yes, they do in fact play a major role into this culture. I'm not saying this is a bad thing necessarily though, I want to make this clear.

With all that being said, I agree with you in regards to op's question.
most of your audience are going to be young adults and zoomers with little attention span, if they aren't given a clear explanation of what they're about to read in the cover, they're not even going to give it a second glance. boomers dont read web novels, they go straight to published shit, most dont even have amazon kindle.
Twilight was quite successful with only one word.
If you don't count things like "The" or "A" there are quite a lot of one word horror novels (The Ceremonies, The Ritual, The Stand), not to mention Stephen King has a lot of one-word titles: Carrie, It, Cujo. And there was even a horror/sci-fi/mystery series where each book had only one word titles, the Necroscope series. These are exceptions, but you can find examples back as far as Shakespeare (Hamlet) or even back to the classic Greek authors and philosophers.
not working with web novels
 
D

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Worm did it, so it's possible. There are probably more that I can't remember, but I do think there will be some disadvantage.
Worm did it, so it's possible. There are probably more that I can't remember, but I do think there will be some disadvantage.
I found Rupegia and there are also ones with only a "the" before them. If you can still count those: The Runesmith , The Harvester
 
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JayMark

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I'm writing my next web novel. The title is: I Became A Bunny Girl Vampire Werewolf With A Billionare Husbando While I Was Sitting At My Desk Doing My Homework Because The Vortex Between Space And Time Opened Releasing A Horde Of Vicious Grandmothers With Rabies Who Turned Everyone They Touched Into Bunny Girls Or Sometimes Just Bunnies But Sometimes They Turned People Into Zombies So We All Had To Run And Hide Amogus In The Sewers Where We Conducted The Resistance Against The Evil Armada Of Alien Grandmothers Who Also Possessed A Thousand Space Cruisers Armed With Death Rays That Could Bake Your Potato In Under Three Seconds.

Short, succinct, to the point.
 

LoneQuack

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I'm writing my next web novel. The title is: I Became A Bunny Girl Vampire Werewolf With A Billionare Husbando While I Was Sitting At My Desk Doing My Homework Because The Vortex Between Space And Time Opened Releasing A Horde Of Vicious Grandmothers With Rabies Who Turned Everyone They Touched Into Bunny Girls Or Sometimes Just Bunnies But Sometimes They Turned People Into Zombies So We All Had To Run And Hide Amogus In The Sewers Where We Conducted The Resistance Against The Evil Armada Of Alien Grandmothers Who Also Possessed A Thousand Space Cruisers Armed With Death Rays That Could Bake Your Potato In Under Three Seconds.

Short, succinct, to the point.
Nah, still too short. Go big or go home as they say. If it's below a chapter's length don't even bother posting.
 

tiaf

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Short title only works with a good cover that works as additional bait (and indicator for what the genre/premise is). With how small thumbnails for covers are you will be at a disadvantage.

I like one word titles, If you really found one and it's THE ONE, then go for it.
 

Mugong

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So after finally starting a series that I'm proud of for my skill level, I hit the inevitable wall of having to name it...
Right off the bat I could think of a single word to describe the series, and I'm wondering if less people read the description if it's a one word title than if it were two words or a whole sentence?

If I add anything more it feels like adding useless info to the title, which already captures the entire premise with a single word.
Follow the logic of Light Novels
 

Alski

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I'm writing my next web novel. The title is: I Became A Bunny Girl Vampire Werewolf With A Billionare Husbando While I Was Sitting At My Desk Doing My Homework Because The Vortex Between Space And Time Opened Releasing A Horde Of Vicious Grandmothers With Rabies Who Turned Everyone They Touched Into Bunny Girls Or Sometimes Just Bunnies But Sometimes They Turned People Into Zombies So We All Had To Run And Hide Amogus In The Sewers Where We Conducted The Resistance Against The Evil Armada Of Alien Grandmothers Who Also Possessed A Thousand Space Cruisers Armed With Death Rays That Could Bake Your Potato In Under Three Seconds.

Short, succinct, to the point.
Remind me to give you a 1 star rating later, and also kick you out of the bingo association :blob_thor:
 

TheBestofSome

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I feel the title should change depending on what readerbase you want to attract. Going the My Grandmother was Isekaied as a Llama with an Attitude While I Became Her Crow Best Friend route will catch the attention of a reader looking for that sort of webnovel, but if you're writing a Jane Austen inspired romance you should likely go with something more like Lord Darcy's Footsteps. (Working title. :blob_wink:)

One word titles can absolutely grab attention, but as mentioned by others, the word has to be something special. You're not going to catch many fish with a title like Book. (Well, you actually might, just because it's so basic it provokes curiosity. But imagine trying to search for it. :sweating_profusely:)

As a reader I do generally like the look of shorter titles, and to me at least, they indicate a more serious work, or put another way, a story I'll actually need my brain turned on for. The ones with the synopsis in the titles I'm disposed to view more as the junk food of stories. Fun, maybe even good, but probably not anything particularly thought-provoking.
 
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