That's like going to a cinema admist the marvel craze and asking them to screen more obscure French films. Remember that SH, as a site, doesn't cater to writers. It caters to readers wanting to read stuff made by people who have the same interest as them. The writers aren't traffic, we're just people in charge of bringing in the traffic. The site is the moderator that gives what the traffic wants.
If we were to suddenly strip the Trending tab of LitRPGs there'll just be complaints on how hard it is to find LitRPGs to read on the site. You might give a rebuttal and say it's as easy as going to the series finder but accessibility is the name of the game. There's a reason non-LitRPGs don't get much traffic and that's because it's not as accessible as LitRPGs. You could literally just walk into the site and find 6 LitRPGs sitting in the Trending tab just waiting to be read. Even readers who don't particularly read LitRPGs would still read 'em anyway due to how easy it is to find them.
LitRPGs get on the Trending tab because people WANT to read LitRPGs. If we cripple the popular genre it'll just cripple the site because it's because of that popular genre that people keep coming back to the site for. If anything, we should be pushing for personalized recommendations based on the readers' preferred genres, not light a site-wide thermite just because your genre story wasn't put on a pedestal as much as System Isekai #47.
I don’t think the problem is the LitRPG’s. I think it’s (and correct me if I’m wrong here) the lack of variety on the trending tab. I don’t think we should ‘cripple the popular genre’ we should just have more accessibility for the (nearly as popular) different genres. If we leave the front page clustered with LitRPG’s then the readers who are
most likely to find, and
stay on the site are the ones who like LitRPG’s.
Now, this isn’t too much of a problem, but(considering ScribbleHub does grow a substantial amount) should the litRPG readers swamp out the rest of them, the LitRPG books will grow increasingly popular which leads to, bear with me now,
Either:
Authors who don’t write LitRPG’s will start to leave ScribbleHub. Now I’m not implying that everyone else is just going to jump ship and leave the site with its LitRPG infection, sinking in the depths of the internet, but, new writers (like me), who don’t have much attachment to the site as is, will want to leave. Nobody wants to stay on a site where nobody reads your shit. Certainly not me. “Sure, you want to stay loyal to the site oh well here’s your congratulations, now we’re going to go party over with the popular writers, you know, the ones that aren’t you.”
It‘s like a participation award.
Nobody likes participation awards.
Not to mention, authors who already post chapters on several different websites are much more likely to leave. Even if it’s not just cold hearted abandonment, it could be seen as a way of getting back at ScribbleHub and the readers.
”Ha. You don’t want to read my stuff? You don’t want to put my stuff on trending? Well, now you can’t do it even if you wanted to. Me and my few
loyal readers leaving are leaving your dumb site for
new, better things. You can find us on royal road or something.”
Or, perhaps after a bunch of the other writers who are seeking actual readers are gone, and we’re left with the original LitRPG writers, and a bunch of writers who jumped on the bandwagon because it’s whats popular. I’m not trying to say that LitRPG‘s are only popular because people who are obsessed with them will read anything of the like. I’m sure that the LitRPG writers are really good at what they do or else they wouldn’t be so popular. But eventually the good, original books will end, as readers who like chapters posted at the speed of light and are used to binge reading the good LitRPG’s will start herding towards the people who jumped on the trend.
Personally, if I had to shift genres to LitRPG I would suck at it. If all that was left was people like me writing LitRPG’s then the readers are likely to get bored or sick of the bad quality ones and might just end up leaving too.
It both of these occur, ScribbleHub will be left a husk only inhabited by the trend jumpers, readers who didn’t get the message, and the good LitRPG writers( who might leave too so they can seek better platforms).
And of course, there’s the matter of LitRPG‘s running out of fashion. So, if I was on a forum and someone told me that “LitRPG’s aren’t popular anymore”, and I told them, “well they’re still all over the place on ScribbleHub.” They would probably say, “yeah, but there’s always some stragglers every now and then.” Just because LitRPG’s aren’t popular anymore doesn’t mean they’re gone. It probably just means that LitRPG’s have lost publicity. People who don’t read them stop hearing about them. They don’t just disappear.
While this is a bit exaggerated, It’s not entirely impossible. If the most easily accessible thing on ScribbleHub is LitRPG’s then the readers who start migrating to ScribbleHub are probably going to come here for the thing ScribbleHub advertises the most, LitRPG’s. While the other authors might not necessarily lose readers, they might even gain some from new readers who happen to find them, they definitely won’t be able to keep up with the LitRPG’s.
In conclusion, by having more variety on the trending tab, one can attract readers who will flock to the website because they see things they might like, hopefully, not
only LitRPG’s.
Perhaps It would work if we had one or two of the most popular for a few different genres. Should a book in a genre not on the trending tab, get more popular than something else in the trending, then you can add that one and another of that genre onto the trending
tab section. This way, if one person writes a popular book, they don’t just get on the trending tab, they increase the popularity of their genre by giving it a spot in the trending section.
If people are unhappy that another author gets to ride their coattail, Then maybe the trending tab can scroll through different genres with one or two of the most popular of each.