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    Korean Fantasy/Romance Novels - Why don’t they ever get licensed?

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    • C
      Claire Lilly last edited by Claire Lilly

      There are many nice korean novels out there, like A Capable Maid, Dr. Elise: The Royal Lady with the Lamp, The Monster Duchess and Contract Princess, The Villain’s Savior and Suddenly Became A Princess One Day to name just a few. But until now, there hasn’t been an english publishing company, who licensed such korean novels. The only way we can read them is waiting for fan translations to appear.
      I honestly think it is quite sad, that we probably never get a chance to read them officially...
      It would be awesome, if for example J-Novel Club would decide to license korean novels too (provided they can hire korean translators and make connections with korean publishers first).
      Anyway, I just think it’s really sad, that we miss many great stories like this. I hope someday a publisher will license korean fantasy/romance novels.

      kpossibles 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • Shiny
        Shiny Premium Member last edited by Shiny

        I agree that there are Korean novels worthy of translation , but my understanding was that one of the reasons JNC focuses on Japanese novels is that Sam is fluent in Japanese-English translation so can assess the work of current and potential employees, read books in the original Japanese and negotiate with Japanese companies. He also has contacts within Japan which he has built up over the years. Moving into a different language and country would therefore be a huge undertaking rather than a natural extension

        Stay shiny, y'all.

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        • C
          CaramelWithoutTheSalt last edited by CaramelWithoutTheSalt

          This post is deleted!
          Rahul Balaggan 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Rahul Balaggan
            Rahul Balaggan Staff @CaramelWithoutTheSalt last edited by

            @caramelwithoutthesalt said in Korean Fantasy/Romance Novels - Why don’t they ever get licensed?:

            How long before we ask JNC about licensing our own light novels?

            I can’t remember where but somewhere on these forums that topic already exists...

            Sorry but J-Novel Club does not publicly comment on any potential licensing decision or acquisitions.
            J-Novel Club, Future Volume Release Schedule
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            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Jon Mitchell
              Jon Mitchell Premium Member last edited by

              I don't get the impression that @Claire-Lilly necessarily thinks JNC should do the work (but that it would be nice) more of a lament that no one seems to be doing what JNC is doing for Korean/Chinese light novels.

              once some company enters into a license agreement, and can translate one of/several of these Korean novels, I see no reason why they wouldn't compete favorably in the English speaking marketplace (as @Shiny said the expertise isn't likely to be at JNC currently)

              I could envision a joint marketing partnership or something

              I read banned books

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • LegitPancake
                LegitPancake Premium Member last edited by

                The thing is most Chinese or Korean "light novels" that I know of aren't even published in their home countries. They are just basically web novels. I'm sure there are legit published LNs there, but I personally don't know about any. Like I know there are some Chinese novels available officially in English, but none of them are available in volume form on Amazon or other stores.

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                • saskir
                  saskir Premium Member last edited by

                  Hmmm, first of all I always imagined J-Novel club stand for Japanese Novel Club. But not matter what there are various reasons.

                  First of all the licensing procedure is surely vastly different. It is easie for Sam to get licenses in Japan due to him working already with companies there. Also I get the feeling that the Korean market for novels is relatively closed. I don't see much works from Korean authors internationally (except some well known authors).

                  Same with chinese books. There is particularly one problem as one big company owns the rights to many translations of LN and offers those on their website for members. So the licenses are already taken. And as they always aquire more novels it is hard to get a foot in there.

                  Also why should a company who specialices in translating from japanese to english make a new sub company for translating from korean/chinese/whatever to english? How many translators do you think work for JNC which are fluent in more than one asian language?

                  And then we have solely from the japanese market suh a diversity of books and stories that we have here only a promille of them. So no need to look at other countries.

                  I get you as I would also like an official translation of Dungeon Defense etc. But to be realistic it would be like asking Ferrari to change from sports cars to station wagons. Those are not their normal field.

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                  • H
                    HamsterExAstris @saskir last edited by

                    @saskir said in Korean Fantasy/Romance Novels - Why don’t they ever get licensed?:

                    Also why should a company who specialices in translating from japanese to english make a new sub company for translating from korean/chinese/whatever to english?

                    Because they think that Korean and Chinese works would appeal to the same audience as the Japanese works they're currently bringing over.

                    How many translators do you think work for JNC which are fluent in more than one asian language?

                    Few or none. But once business deals are in place, the rest of the publishing pipeline should be the same regardless of language; it's just a matter of staffing up the appropriate translators.

                    Jon Mitchell saskir 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Jon Mitchell
                      Jon Mitchell Premium Member @HamsterExAstris last edited by

                      @hamsterexastris
                      Except that contract and copywriting laws may not be the same. That being said, I look forward to KNC, a division of NC Global Inc.

                      (The model of JNC is solid, I hope it translates to Korean and Chinese and Swahili and whatever else)

                      I read banned books

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                      • saskir
                        saskir Premium Member @HamsterExAstris last edited by

                        @hamsterexastris Japanese LN and chinese works are mostly different. Atleast you don't have so many Wuxia Novels. Although the most chinese Novels I read always reminds me of DBZ. Get stronger, strongest, new Enemy, get even stronger, new even stronger enemy, etc.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • H
                          haywater last edited by haywater

                          I'm piggybacking off this thread to throw another voice of support being licensing Korean properties. Yes, it's an entirely separate language and legal system, but for the most part it's the same consumer base. The Crunchyroll-backed Tower of God anime is the top liked or "hearted" animated series on anichart.net for the Spring 2020 season that isn't a sequel, so it not being Japanese sure doesn't seem to be putting consumers off much.

                          With Yen Press being owned by Kadokawa now, and Vertical being bought by Kodansha, (Viz of course is Shueisha/Shogakukan), there's really very few "otaku" publishers left that are probably even willing to risk increasing the market share of Korean IP at all. Dark Horse gave manhwa a small, limited trial maybe ten or fifteen years ago, back when publishers were still wary of publishing Japanese light novels, back when Haruhi Suzumiya and Spice & Wolf had not yet proved that light novels could succeed in an English-language market. Even Seven Seas' monthly survey specifically states that they're looking for Japanese titles.

                          I know Dungeon Defense is one of the more oft-requested isekai titles out there. The other series on that particular title's fan-translator's site are also quite good (I'm in mid-volume 4 of "Handholding", a.k.a. We Should Have Slept While Only Holding Hands, And Yet?!, and let me tell you, those smiles on the covers of that rom-com are lies; everyone's miserable right now and it's...they're...they're just great, excellent writing). I know there's other good Korean series out there. Anecdotally, it seems like the writing styles are somewhat more comparable to English than Japanese or Chinese? Maybe that's just me? Or maybe it's that I'm comparing the currently-unlicensed cream of the Korean crop to the dregs of the plethora of Japanese light novels.

                          Someone is eventually going to manage to "open" this trade route, and whoever it is will have the lead on bringing pop culture entertainment over from a nation with roughly 2/3rds the number of 15-25 year olds as Japan. Sure, it won't be easy. But it is doable, the supply and demand are both there. All it takes is the willingness and publishing know-how to make it happen.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Lotteliese
                            Lotteliese last edited by

                            There a some korean web novels licensed in English on platforms like Webnovel and Tapas but compared to their other titles they only make up a small part of their lineup. What one of the issues might be is the format.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • kpossibles
                              kpossibles @Claire Lilly last edited by

                              @Claire-Lilly I could see MDZS / The Untamed getting licensed by a big publisher (it's available on WebNovels iirc but not 100% quality) - it has the big brand awareness, manhua, anime, live action drama, audio drama, etc that comes with it. I'm assuming they're waiting on someone to pay the huge licensing fee that they're probably having for it.

                              Of course, this is a Chinese webnovel which has a different sphere & fandom.

                              For Korean stuff, they barely even have stuff transitioned from webtoon to print. The only one that I can think of is Tappytoon's kickstarters for a webtoon with a creator who has work published in English previously. Yen Press & Netcomics also has manhwa, but I'm not sure if they have a huge following, which affects the possibility of novels getting brought over. There isn't a push for Korean stuff, because everyone interested in that type of media from them is into kpop, kdrama, etc which makes more money and less translation overall if you think about it (subs are super low paid or unpaid in some cases like with Viki).

                              I'm sure there's an audience, but would it be a big enough paying audience to make it worth it like Japanese LNs?

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                              • J
                                jampodevral Premium Member last edited by

                                There is also the fact that there are no publishers in S Korea picking up these WN's and putting them to paper. There aren't a lot of people who are willing to put the businesses they own/run at risk by opening up a whole new market with NO proven viability anywhere else.
                                Even JP light novels were mostly ignored in the EN sphere, with a few exeptions, until recently.

                                If you want them that much talk with the FT who is doing it and see if you can get a company started with them.

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                                • Lotteliese
                                  Lotteliese last edited by Lotteliese

                                  Update 30.12.21 on the status of the availability of official Manhwa, Webtoon and Korean Novels

                                  The major US publisher Yen Press has announced a few months ago multiple big Manhwa licenses. Currently is Solo Leveling their first Korean novel license. There will be definitely more in the near future.

                                  Seven Seas always do their monthly surveys in which you can suggest licenses. Due to demand they even made a sublabel for chinese danmei novels starting with three MXTX works. Manhwa and Korean novel are definitely possible.

                                  Tappytoon, a hugely popular platform for Korean Webtoons platform, recently started to translate Korean webnovels and can be read only in the App for now.

                                  Tapas is releasing even more Korean Webtoons since the start of their partnership with Kakaopage.

                                  Manta is a newer Webtoon platform run by Ridibooks. They offer a monthly subscription service and some of the Webtoons are also free to read.

                                  Line Webtoon platform does Korean Webtoons for free to read and pay-per-chapter. Wattpad WEBTOON Studios recently announced WEBTOON Unscrolled, a new Graphic Novel Imprint for Original and Korean IPs.

                                  Wordexcerpt started their own webnovel platform and are already releasing their works as ebook, audiobook and printed books (paperback and hardcover).

                                  Wuxiaworld has been releasing some of their from chinese ans korean translated works as ebooks. By December 2021 Wuxiaworld was acquired by KakaoEntertainment which means more Korean webnovels. Also they look into licensing Japanese light novels and webnovels.

                                  KakaoEntertainment had aquired the serial-fiction platform Radish this year as well. Their first title is What's Wrong with Secretary Kim?

                                  Meteor Strike Media released one Korean novel in digital and print format after reaching the Kickstarter goal and announced some new licenses this year but there hasn't been news yet.

                                  There is the Webnovel App but the quality of the translations and editing varies widely.

                                  Some of the above mentioned publishers have their made their webnovel translations available on Tapas and Tappytoon.

                                  H 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • H
                                    haywater @Lotteliese last edited by

                                    @lotteliese Hey that's really encouraging, especially if Japanese publishing subsidiaries (Yen Press) are willing to license works. And thanks for the roundup on the current state of Korean-English licenses, it's helpful.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • Lotteliese
                                      Lotteliese last edited by

                                      Wattpad WEBTOON Studios Announces WEBTOON Unscrolled, a new Graphic Novel Imprint for Leading Digital Comics from WEBTOON

                                      https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211118005543/en/

                                      Among the announcement are Korean and Original IPs are Tower of God and True Beauty.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • Lotteliese
                                        Lotteliese last edited by Lotteliese

                                        https://www.wuxiaworld.com/announcement/read-wuxiaworld-merger-acquisiti
                                        Wuxiaworld was acquired by Kakaoentertainment , which there will expand their scope of Korean webnovels and they have plans for Q3 2022 to look into licensing Japanese webnovels and Light Novels.

                                        https://radishfiction.com/stories/12219
                                        KakaoEntertainment did acquire the serial-fiction platform Radish and of the first Korean romance webnovel is What's Wrong with Secretary Kim

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                                        • Geezer Weasalopes
                                          Geezer Weasalopes Premium Member last edited by

                                          I'm kinda surprised no one has mentioned Solo Leveling, published under the Yen On imprint by Yen Press; it's a Korean work, after all.

                                          Volume 1 eBook released on February 16, 2021, per Rakuten Kobo.
                                          First three volumes already released, volume 4 available for pre-order.

                                          I'd call that "licensed", myself.

                                          However, it may not count as "Fantasy" or "Romance"... I'd argue the fantasy bit.

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                                          Lotteliese 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                          • Lotteliese
                                            Lotteliese @Geezer Weasalopes last edited by

                                            @weasalopes Solo leveling might fall under Urban Fantasy

                                            Geezer Weasalopes 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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