
Revenue
Meaning
What revenue means. Revenue is money earned from a project. For Webtoon style projects, revenue comes after chapters publish. No publish means no revenue.
Where revenue comes from
- Ad views on episodes.
- Fast Pass unlocks.
- Platform bonuses or programs.
- Future licensing or print deals if approved.
What revenue is not
- It is not upfront pay.
- It is not guaranteed income.
- It depends on reader activity.
How revenue is collected
- Readers view or unlock chapters.
- Webtoon records activity per chapter.
- Payment arrives after platform processing.
Costs come first
- Platform fees.
- Hosting or service costs.
- Promotion or ad spend if used. Only remaining money counts as revenue to split.
How chapter based revenue works.
- Each chapter stands alone.
- Views and income track per chapter.
- Revenue locks when a chapter releases.
- Older chapters keep earning over time.
Why chapters matter
- You only earn from chapters you worked on.
- Performance varies by chapter.
- Clear records prevent disputes.
Revenue splits explained
- A percentage decides who gets what.
- Percentages reflect workload.
- Splits apply after costs.
Team project example
A chapter earns $100 after costs. Character artist gets $40. Background artist gets $30. Writer gets $25. Project lead gets $5.
Solo project example
A chapter earns $100 after costs. Artist gets $50. Writer gets $50.
What happens over time
- More chapters means more earning sources.
- Older chapters keep earning.
- Income grows slowly, not instantly.
What happens if someone leaves
- Released chapters still earn.
- The person keeps their share from those chapters.
- No earnings from future chapters.
Important limits
- Early stages earn little or nothing.
- Most income grows after many chapters.
- Consistency matters more than speed.
Key points to remember
- Revenue equals published work.
- Payment follows performance.
- You earn based on contribution.
- Clear splits protect everyone.
Overview of Vault
What the Vault is
- The Vault is a shared publishing space.
- It hosts original stories and art.
- It focuses on comics and story projects.
- It prioritizes consistency and creator credit.
Who the Vault is for
- Artists. Writers.
- Solo creators.
- Small teams.
- New creators with no audience.
- Creators rebuilding after stalled projects.
What the Vault is for
- Exposure.
- Audience growth.
- Proof of work.
- Long term visibility.
- A place to publish without needing an existing following.
- Stories stay accessible.
- New readers browse chapters.
- Creators build history, not one off posts.
Why the Vault exists
- Many creators struggle with reach.
- Good work gets buried by algorithms.
- Hidden talent stays unseen.
- The Vault removes follower count as a gate.
The goal
- Help artists and writers get seen.
- Help projects reach readers faster.
- Help creators build momentum.
- Help teams form through visible work.
How it helps you
- Your work sits in a public archive.
- Readers find stories by genre and updates.
- Consistency builds trust with readers.
- Finished chapters become proof for future pitches.
- Gain future commissions
What the Vault is not
- Not an upfront payment system.
- Not instant income.
Core idea
- Publish.
- Be seen.
- Build an audience.
- Grow over time.
If you create and want eyes on your work. The Vault is built for you.
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