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Independent authors live (and die) by Kindle Unlimited these days.I'm assuming you haven't written these somewhere else like Royal Road, so you might want to see if you can get into Kindle Unlimited. From what I understand (although I have no direct experience, just anecdotal evidence from an author friend) it can be more lucrative than selling digital copies, much less physical ones. I know that sounds counterintuitive, but that's how I had it explained to me at least. Worth checking out anyway.
Also, while I have no idea what it takes to get into KU, people that pay a fixed amount per month for any book they want are FAR more likely to take a chance on random books than if they have to spend the admittedly small sum you have them listed at, so it is easier to get views I would imagine.
Good luck, and perhaps I will pick the first one up soon. I always try to support upcoming authors out of the misguided hope that someday I might be one too.
There was a big discussion recently (actually two, one starting with arguments "for" and one with arguments "against") on reddit's progression fantasy subreddit about that. When it comes to litrpg/progfan, the majority of the readers are young, with a relatively small amount of disposable income, and KU is their priority source for reading, since usually all it takes is read 2 books a month to get ahead. Everyone hates it for the authors, but they all use it, since the 'zon has a near monopoly on this.
(and everyone dreads the day they're going to flex those monopoly muscles to extract "more value" from KU)
Almost everyone reports that they get close to half their revenue from the KU way. Some authors have tried both. Selkie Myth started with the books on Amazon but not KU, then switched to KU for 90 days (minimum period), then back, before going again to KU. He noted that the difference was not that big, but when he was on KU, the number of people who followed the series on Royal Road increased a bit faster, and he also got a visible increase in Patreons. So KU is definitively a way to get people to discover and try your books and hook them to the series.
KU can be a good thing if you have chonkers of book. Phil Tucker (of Bastion fame, and more recently Dawn of the Void) noted in those threads that he actually gets more money when someone reads Bastion in Kindle Unlimited than if someone purchases his book outright (with the cut from Amazon on standard ebooks, he's below the cumulative amount from all 800 pages read on KU). Of course that's not the case with the books there, but just something to keep in mind.