What is Pixiv?
Pixiv is a primarily Japanese-language site that is best known for its illustrations, but
also has a large amount of fanfiction ("novels"). It hosts even more works than Ao3 - over
21 million!
If you've run out of fanfiction to read in English and don't mind using a translator, Pixiv
is a great place to find it. I've found some works I truly love there, though it took time
to figure out how to properly use the site.
I've compiled everything I learned here, to help you jump right in if you're interested!
Translating
The number of English-language novels is small - for many fandoms, it is zero - so a
translator is essential to using Pixiv.
If you're looking to use a built-in translation tool, Google Chrome's is the best for ease
of use. Firefox's translator tool is still being developed, so it won't translate pages
automatically, which can be a pain. For automatic page translation in Firefox, I recommend
the
Translate Web Pages
extension.
As someone who has read both machine and fan translations of the same Pixiv work, the
machine translations are far from perfect. The writing can come off as a bit stiff and
unnatural, and names can get particularly jumbled up1.
Still, the quality and emotions in the writing can shine through, and even through that
extra language barrier layer, Pixiv novels have made me cry. (That’s indicative of success
to me!)
Accessing Pixiv
You will have the best Pixiv browsing experience if you create an account. You can read
novels without an account, but there are a lot of limitations. When searching works, you are
limited to 300 results, the filtering options are disabled, and you cannot see any R-18
works. If you want to interact with novels, you cannot bookmark or comment on them.
Go to pixiv.net to create an account. Pixiv has an
English-language site, so this is easy to do and requires no translation.
After creating an account, there are a few settings you might want to change. If you want to
see R-18 works, you'll have to enable that. There is also a setting that lets you
automatically filter out AI-generated works, though it does rely on them being marked
correctly.
To make the translating work much more smoothly, you'll want to change your Language to
Japanese. Otherwise, Pixiv will display some English text, which will prevent automatic page
translations.
Searching
To find a fandom, go to the search bar. For most fandoms, you can just search the English
fandom name and it will auto-suggest the correct fandom for you. If the fandom is based on
an originally Japanese work, search for the Japanese title instead. For example, type
"Kimetsu no Yaiba" instead of "Demon Slayer". The correct Japanese fandom tag will
auto-populate in the search dropdown.
Many fandoms will in fact have multiple tags: one for the fandom in general, one for BL
(Boys' Love) works for that fandom, and one for novels featuring self-inserts or OCs. Each
should pop up with the English context when searching for a fandom:
- 鬼滅の刃: Kimetsu no Yaiba
- 腐滅の刃: Kimetsu no Yaiba BL
- 鬼滅の夢: Kimetsu no Yaiba dream
If you want results for only a single pairing, not a whole fandom, it's best to search only
for that pairing. Not every pairing novel will have a fandom tag as well.
To search for multiple tags, put a space between them. To exclude a tag, put a minus (-) in
front of it. As always, make sure you use the established Japanese tags here!
In the search results, each novel will be identified by a title, author, and summary. Each
novel will also have the following information: the tags, the character count, the estimated
reading time, and the number of hearts (bookmarks) it has. Some works will also have grayed
out text above the title - this is the novel series it belongs to. If you only want to read
the individual work, make sure to click on the bolded text, which is the title.
Search options
If you click Search options, you will find several ways to optimize your search:
Targets: Where the search term is looked for. The default is tags (perfect matching),
meaning you will only get novels with tags that exactly match your search. Tags are limited
on Pixiv, so choose the "Tags, Titles, and Captions" option for a wider reach.
Age restriction: What age ratings are included in your search.
Period: What period of time you want to search in. The default shows works over all
time. If you choose a period, you can set a time period up to a year long.
Bookmarks: Sorting by number of bookmarks is locked unless you have a premium
account2.
Work language: The default searches for all languages, though the vast majority will
be Japanese. Yes, you can set the filter for only English works; however, this rarely
returns any novels at all, even in large fandoms.
Text length: You can choose a range of reading time, character count, or word count
for your search results. To create your own range instead of choosing one from the dropdown,
a premium account is required. I suggest sticking to only character count for this one, as
the others seem to have issues.
Tagging
Pixiv novels are limited to 10 tags, so they aren't used as liberally as they are on Ao3 -
it can be pretty difficult to get an idea of what a novel is about without reading the
summary.
If you are ever confused about what a tag means, the best resource is the
Pixiv dictionary. When clicking or hovering over
popular tags, you will see a link to the dictionary entry that explains what it means and
how it's used. The dictionary also has an
English version, which does not need to be translated
but has fewer entries and less detail.
If you're looking for tags used by a specific fandom, the best source is its Pixiv
dictionary page, which will have organized lists of tags for the fandom. For example,
Demon Slayer's page
has lists of tags for pairings, friendship/family relationships, and common AUs, as well as
popularity and commentary tags.
Tags may be locked or unlocked by the writer. Unlocked tags can be removed or altered by any
user. Also, anyone can add additional tags to a work. So sometimes you’ll see works tagged
as “this is a good work” or “waiting for the update”3, which definitely confused
me at first!
You can find a list of the most popular tags for novels, including work counts,
here.
Finding Popular Works
There is no way search by novel popularity without paying for a premium subscription. But if
you want to find some highly bookmarked works, there are workarounds.
Many novels will be tagged with an indicator of how many bookmarks it has. It will be
something in the format of "[fandom][number]users入り". So, if you wanted to find novels in
the Kimetsu no Yaiba (鬼滅の刃) fandom with over 100 bookmarks, you
could search 鬼滅の刃100users入り.
If you're looking for the most bookmarked works for a gay pairing, make sure you use the
BL/yaoi fandom tag: 腐滅の刃100users入り and then a space, and the
pairing tag you want to include.
The most common bookmark benchmarks are 100, 300, 500, and their multiples (1000, 3000,
etc.). If you want to find all the benchmark tags for a fandom, they will also be listed on
the fandom's page in the Pixiv dictionary.
If you just want to find the most popular novels across Pixiv and don't care about a
particular fandom or pairing, you can go to the
novels ranking page. You can see the
most popular novels for several categories, like across time periods (daily, weekly,
monthly), content (original works, AI-generated) or demographic (popular with male or female
users).
Interacting
Pixiv has different features and a different site culture from primarily English-language
sites, and so the way users interact with novels and authors is not the same.
Comments are much less common on Pixiv, even for very popular works. Most comments are not
text, but stickers that act as a reaction image to the novel. The text comments are short,
as there is a 140 character limit. You can message the author instead, which has a 10,000
character limit. If writing a comment, try to stick to very polite Japanese.
Bookmarks are the main indicator of the popularity of a work. Bookmarks are represented by
the heart symbol on the novel. You can make a private or public bookmark.
Liking a work was actually introduced some time after bookmarking, which is probably why
bookmarks are seen as more important and most works will have more bookmarks than likes.
Likes are represented by the smiley symbol. They are completely anonymous, so the author
will not know who liked their work.
Common terminology
Machine translators don't help much with understanding the meaning behind acronyms or
phrases specific to Japanese fandom! (How would someone translating from English interpret
"Dead dove do not eat"?) Here is some of the common lingo and what it means in my
experience:
Channel-style |
A novel in the format of an online message board. Seems to have taken the place of
chatfics, though the messages are frequently between anonymous outsiders, not the
characters themselves
|
Character collapse |
Indicates OOCness (out of character) |
CP4 |
Coupling, a ship/pairing |
Dream/Dream novel |
A romance work focused on an original self-insert character; "self-shipping" |
If |
A what-if scenario |
For those who can forgive/accept anything |
A sort of blanket disclaimer about the content of the novel. Does not always
indicate that anything particularly controversial or explicit will be present
|
Mob |
A nameless, faceless background character that interacts with the novel's main
characters - often used as a plot device; an "NPC"
|
Namamono/nmmn |
Works featuring real people (RPF) |
Paro/Parody |
Alternate Universe (Modern Parody → Modern AU) |
Differences from other sites
These are some of the differences you might notice between Pixiv and primarily
English-language fan fiction sites:
-
There are ads. As someone who normally uses an adblocker but doesn't for Pixiv, they're
not very noticeable or too obstructive
-
Writers frequently and freely promote the sale of their novels, which is taboo on most
English sites due to potential legal issues
-
In fact, some novels will only have samples posted, with the rest only available
for sale - this isn't super common, it's always clearly stated, and I've only
seen it on R-18 novels5
-
On some works, a pairing tag might be used to indicate a very close relationship, but
not a romantic one. These works will have the ship tag, but clarify in the summary that
it is a "bromance" or that there is no relationship
-
The summaries can be very long, and might be edited to include thank-yous to the readers
or even short bonus snippets. There is no other dedicated section for author notes
-
It is common to see very long, descriptive work titles on Pixiv - much more so than in
English fandom
-
A series may be incomplete, but I've never seen an incomplete individual novel. It seems
that novels are posted in their entirety, not updated with chapters later on
-
Pixiv will recommend you novels based on ones you've read and the one you're currently
reading - scroll below the end of a novel to see them. These "algorithmic"
recommendations are more frowned upon in English fandom
-
On a personal note, I will say that the recommendations tend to be quite good
and well-tailored
Sources and other guides
These are some of the sources I consulted and other Pixiv guides I found. Most of them are
quite old, and all of the other guides focus on illustrations, not novels, but they can
still be useful.
Pixiv help center: official source
The Basics of Pixiv
by ORT451 (2020)
The beginner’s guide to finding fanart on pixiv
by rallamajoop (2016)
Pixiv etiquette
discussion on Fail Fandom Anon (2013)
Pixiv Tutorial Part 2 - Searching
by fyeahhondakiku-blog (2011)
Final Thoughts
I was first introduced to Pixiv in early 2025 by someone who graciously (and with
permission) translated an excellent Pixiv work to English. They strongly recommended that we
go show our support to the original work, and that's when I first started using the site.
At first, Pixiv was very difficult to navigate. Some of it was the language barrier and
trying to find the right translation tool, but a lot of it was just the site being
unfamiliar. I tried to find some guides, but I couldn't find any that focused on novels -
though there are more novels on Pixiv than works on AO3, there are five times as many
illustrations as novels!
I was able to use some old illustration finding guides as a starting point, but almost all
of the information in this guide I got from my personal usage of the site. Since all of the
online guides seemed to be outdated or not focused on finding fanfiction, I decided to write
up everything I discovered in case anyone found it useful.
I'll probably keep adding to this guide as I learn more, especially in the "Common
terminology" section, but this has been in development long enough and I feel it's pretty
exhaustive (maybe too exhaustive...?)
If you have any tips to share, personal experiences with Pixiv, or want to know more,
please message me! I would love to hear
from you.