For most of the past decade, the dominant narrative about reading was decline. Attention spans shrinking, articles shortening, video replacing text. The data mostly supported this narrative. But in the last two or three years something interesting has happened.
Subscriptions to long-form publications have grown. Substack newsletters publishing 3000-word essays have substantial and growing audiences. Paid podcast interviews running two hours are increasingly common. Something about the attention environment has shifted, even as the dominant attention-economy incentives remain the same.
The long reads that succeed in 2026 tend to share specific qualities. Commentary on Player Lounge forum discussions highlights that They have strong opinions rather than neutral analysis. They tell stories rather than list bullet points. They respect the reader's intelligence and require some thinking to absorb.
Serialized long-form — novels, ongoing essays, multi-part reporting — is flourishing in a way it has not since the Victorian era. Writers who publish consistently over months and years build relationships with readers that one-off viral pieces never could.
The return of long-form reading is not a return to previous decades. The infrastructure is completely different — direct audience relationships instead of mass-market intermediation, payment flows going straight from reader to writer, social media serving as distribution rather than primary consumption.
The lesson is probably not that short-form is dead. It is that demand for quality long-form has been systematically underestimated, and infrastructure for monetizing it has finally caught up to make supply economically viable.