I have been doing some comparisons recently, and realized that on some level, I think that web and light novels play by different rules from "conventional" manga. I'm talking specifically about Japanese wn/lns to be clear because Korean and Chinese adaptations tend to behave differently. For example, many web or light novels don't share the same tropes as say, an original (original meaning the story was originally made for the purpose of being a manga) shonen manga even though it might be lumped in with shonen (I understand that "shonen" just means "boy's" essentially but you get the point). I don't think I've ever seen the "ok let's buy some slaves" trope anywhere other than wn/ln-type isekai, nor have I really seen the "cheat ability" thing. Story arcs generally feel shorter, sometimes to the point of being more like self-contained episodes. Villains and antagonists are also often more one-off and not linked in any significant sense; it's very unlikely to have reoccuring antagonists unless that is itself a large part of the plot. A lot of these feel like the product of needing to draw in as many eyeballs as possible when you are one person in a huge crowd of competitors. To make one jump, I would even say to some degree that if you looked at manga and anime (maybe anime especially) and you removed all the wn/ln adaptations, that many of the negative things outsiders and some people within the space have to say about the mediums would be less prominent
(specifically if we're talking about the modern era, like the past 5 years).
The reason why I bring this up in the first place is because I was trying to figure out "why does manga/anime not feel the way it used to" for years, and I want to confirm if my conclusion is correct. I'm not saying that all light novels are slop; some of them are quite good and have been recognized as quite good; Konosuba, Overlord, Goblin Slayer, Re:Zero, you know the ones. That said, I still feel like they are somewhat bound to those tropes all the same.
So, I want to hear what other people feel are light novel/web novel adaptation tropes that they usually only see within those adaptations. It doesn't have to be shonen-type isekai, it's a vast space targeting all sorts of audiences. For my part I'll just throw in a few:
-Harem but one girl is the "legal wife"
-Goblins and/or orcs need to rape human women (and sometimes elves) to reproduce (by the way it's always specifically humans and elves; couldn't they do beastmen or something to spice it up?)
-Adventurer's Guilds, but the guild basically feels copy-pasted
(specifically if we're talking about the modern era, like the past 5 years).
The reason why I bring this up in the first place is because I was trying to figure out "why does manga/anime not feel the way it used to" for years, and I want to confirm if my conclusion is correct. I'm not saying that all light novels are slop; some of them are quite good and have been recognized as quite good; Konosuba, Overlord, Goblin Slayer, Re:Zero, you know the ones. That said, I still feel like they are somewhat bound to those tropes all the same.
So, I want to hear what other people feel are light novel/web novel adaptation tropes that they usually only see within those adaptations. It doesn't have to be shonen-type isekai, it's a vast space targeting all sorts of audiences. For my part I'll just throw in a few:
-Harem but one girl is the "legal wife"
-Goblins and/or orcs need to rape human women (and sometimes elves) to reproduce (by the way it's always specifically humans and elves; couldn't they do beastmen or something to spice it up?)
-Adventurer's Guilds, but the guild basically feels copy-pasted