The cover reads as fantasy — but not specifically as fae court romantasy — and the title nearly disappears at thumbnail size. The illustration itself is competent; it’s the packaging signals that are off-target.
The five things a cover has to do — rated against what works in your genre.
What your cover says at a glance — versus what it needs to say.
Covers are bought at the size of a postage stamp. Here’s how yours holds up.
The figure survives shrinking — it still reads as a person with presence. The title does not: at search-result size it dissolves into the artwork. Set against a row of competitor covers, this one recedes rather than stops the scroll. A cover that can’t be read at thumbnail size is doing almost none of its job, because that is the only size most readers ever see before they click.
A read on each piece of the cover.
Specific problems, ranked by how much they cost you.
Designer-ready direction — not a redesign. Cover Signal Check diagnoses; it doesn’t generate art.