There is a loud recurring consensus in online fandom spaces that Wattpad is the bottom tier of internet literature. If you mention the app on TikTok or Reddit, you will likely trigger a wave of replies about cringe tropes, horrific grammar and unreadable Y/N fics.
Haters talk about the platform as if it is an intellectual wasteland, holding up Archive of Our Own or FanFiction.net as the elite superior alternatives. But let’s be honest this intense hate directed at Wattpad is incredibly immature.
To treat Wattpad like an irrelevant joke is to ignore its impacts within the fanfiction community.
The platform boasts over 665 million total story uploads and a staggering global audience of over 90 million monthly active users, who collectively spend 23 billion minutes per month reading its stories.
So if you dismiss a literature platform of that size simply because you stumbled across a poorly written chapter of a Harry Styles or Mafia romance, you probably haven’t looked hard enough.
No one downloads Spotify and clicks on a random, poorly produced garage band track and declares that the entire music industry is dead. Finding great literature anywhere requires curation, on an app with nearly a billion uploads, you just have to dig for the fanfic gold.
The primary weapon used against Wattpad is the “poor quality” of its writing, usually weaponised by fierce AO3 defenders. But this narrative relies on a serious case of selective memory. Why are we acting like we have never opened a fanfic on AO3 that completely threw the rules of grammar out the window?
This snobbery ignores how internet culture actually works.
There is an ongoing myth that AO3 is exclusively populated by seasoned academic writers, while Wattpad is entirely populated by pre-teens. In reality, a huge portion of today’s top AO3 writers were the exact same kids writing on AO3 ten years ago. Young writers exist on every single platform and honestly some young writers are far better at world building and character development than adults give them credit for.
If you need proof of Wattpad’s power, just look at how it acts as a launchpad for the entertainment industry. Anna Todd’s After series, which started as a One Direction fanfic on the app, was transformed into a multi million dollar publishing and film franchise. Wattpad stories are constantly being adapted into published books, Netflix films and television shows because the platform allows writers to test material in real time with an active audience. It gives adult writers and teens alike a direct line to commercial success that traditional publishing gatekeepers heavily guard.
Yes, the platform has changed and the current state of ads is admittedly very frustrating. Having to constantly close and reopen the app just to bypass a pop-up completely goes against the open, free media spirit that fanfiction was built on. Yet, millions of readers persevere through this commercialisation because of the platform’s unique charm.
Wattpad hits different because it’s a whole multimedia experience. If you were a teen in the 2010s, you probably remember the pure comfort of having a massive fic downloaded for a long car trip, all contained in one seamless app. But what really sets it apart is the vibe. The aesthetic chapter headers, the picture fancasts that instantly set the scene and those inline comments where everyone is throwing out the exact same emoji reactions to the most insane line. For me and many others the app is pure nostalgia.
As one Reddit user perfectly summarised on the r/Wattpad forum: “Wattpad feels like home in a weird way. I’m not even considering going anywhere else for now. Maybe that’s naive, but I can’t lie, the emotional attachment is strong.”
And honestly… same.
Wattpad shouldn’t be dismissed as just a stepping stone or a lesser version of other sites. It is a thriving, creative community where writers can test out wild ideas, connect directly with readers, and build their confidence.
Hating on Wattpad means hating on the very place where a whole generation of storytellers fell in love with writing. It’s where so many of us learned to love the fanfic world and that is something to celebrate, not look down on.