Where is the fun in that?
I'm not saying you should write something you don't want to; I'm saying you should understand the audience. Try writing LitRPG in literary fiction market and you'll see what I mean.
Based on my observation, Scribble Hub readers love fantasy, gender-bender, GL, and power progression (LitRPG, cultivation, etc.). Look at the most popular series on the site and you'll see what I mean.
You don't have to exactly imitate popular stories, but you should study them. Know why people like them, what do they like about them, and how can you pull out what works and use them in your own story.
Look at big manga in Shonen Jump, for example. One Piece follows the traditional Shonen tropes and sentiment, and yet it's a very unique story. The pirate setting itself brings something new to the market, and Oda subverts a lot of the common tropes as well, like making Nami's hair short because most female characters with long hair were in trend at the time. Oda couldn't have done that without knowing the common trope beforehand.
Another big one is Hunter x Hunter. Togashi subverted a lot of the tropes to the point that it becomes a genre deconstruction. Instead of another power fantasy where the protagonist keeps on rising, he gave Gon a descending arc. He's gifted, yes, but not the strongest in the group, which goes against the traditional Shonen power fantasy. More than that, Gon is usually put in the sideline most of the time, shining the spotlights on the side characters instead. He couldn't have done that without knowing the tropes and the genre beforehand.
See what I mean? You have to know the market before you can play around with it. Know the audience and what they expect. If you want people to love what you write, you have to find out what they're looking for in the first place, then give them exactly that and surprise them with your unique flavor.
It's not just the content, either. The cover, the title, the synopsis, genres, and tags all matter. The format and structure of each chapter also matter.
Most stories here are serialized and updated by chapters, not volumes. That means you can't write a chapter like a normal published novel. When you read a novel, you read chapters after chapters in one go, but here, your initial readers have to wait for the next chapter to come out (not counting the late arrivals who can binge it in one go).
You have to consider their experience and learn how to appeal to them.