Some of the best fanfics out there sound really weird when trying to explain it in one sentence...
Please sort new entries alphabetically to avoid duplicates.
- Abraxas (Hrodvitnon): A severed male dragon head gets pregnant with a dead woman, it vomits her out as a human-reptile monster thingy, and the monster-woman and the dragon head which is now growing out of her back become a Sibling Team.
- Advice and Trust: Two socially inept teenagers and their friend take a level in badass because the former two somehow managed to not totally ruin their First Kiss.
- Or: Belligerent Sexual Tension is accidentally resolved due to a lack of air. This results in another girl going off her meds and dating a fish.
- Aeon Natum Engel: H.P. Lovecraft, Alastair Reynolds, and Stephen Baxter got drunk together and watched all of Neon Genesis Evangelion in one sitting, then played FEAR.
- Aeon Entelechy Evangelion: The above, rewritten, minus the sanity.
- Ages of Shadow: A Fallen Hero Sealed Evil in a Can mutates herself into an Eldritch Abomination out of boredom and becomes goddess of a Religion of Evil. Then it turns into a parody of Yu-Gi-Oh!.
- All-American Girl (Shinzakura): An original character who happens to share the author's religion — and has a traumatic past, and is related to royalty — spends her time insulting half of the original show's main characters.
- All Things Probable Series: A teen hero and her sidekick encounter an Evil Distaff Counterpart team of themselves.
- All You Need Is Love: An Only Sane Woman's choice between a Serial Killer and her Wallpaper. Oh and the pedo-detective that creeps on all of them.
- Angry Birds Scratch Edition: An endless mode Angry Birds game that goes to the Logical Extreme with its character count, has way too many explosions for its own good, and has almost no animation whatsoever. Yet the amount of characters represented is admittedly pretty impressive, and the bosses are pretty creative and fun to battle.
- Anthropology: A regular unicorn discovers she was never born a pony to begin with. Humanity Ensues.
- Arddun Lleuad: A human OC from the real world ends up in the setting's land, where he is loved and accepted. A canon princess character falls in Love at First Sight with him.
- Chwe Goleadau: Aforementioned human OC also becomes a very powerful hero that pretty much single-handedly saves the setting from destruction.
- Ashes of the Past: Traveling monster trainer finds himself redoing his career after the world ending sends him back to when he was a ten-year-old. Result: He, his friends, their monsters, their enemies, and their rivals all Take a Level in Badass.
- Ask Frisk and Company: A bunch of animals and skeletons live with their adoptive child and talk to disembodied voices while a dead child tries to murder them.
- The Astrid Series: A Talkative Loon Guile Hero meets a Plucky Girl and destroys her house. They travel together from then on.
- Asylum of Doom: After falling down some stairs and hitting her head, a girl wakes up in a 1940s asylum and is told her modern day life is a delusion.
- A Thousand Answers: A 12-year-old boy accidentally becomes a vampire, and learns how to fight Aztec vampires alongside his adoptive brother.
- Attack Of The 100 Foot Meg Griffin: Unpopular nerd turns into a giant and destroys the city in a rage.
- Avenger Goddess: Wonder Woman is inserted into the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
- Avenger Knight: Batman is inserted into the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
- Avenger of Steel: Superman is inserted into the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
- Avengers of the Multi-verse: A group of young superheroes are brought together from across the multiverse to team up and fight their respective enemies.
- Beautiful Destroyer Sailor Moon: A crybaby Magical Girl is re-imagined as a Heroic Comedic Sociopath. Property damage follows.
- Becoming a True Invader: A megalomaniac fired by his employers teams up with a bunch of people who hate him to get revenge. Meanwhile, a mysterious figure with a sexy voice carries out his own plans against the megalomaniac's employers.
- Better Off Alone: A neglected and abused shadow person falls in love with a turtle creature.
- Better Off Not Knowing: Tall kid gets bad news about her biological parents; is unaware of it.
- Big Human on Campus: A boy gets expelled from the local high school and decides to pursue his elsewhere.
- Bird: A girl gains superpowers and gets sent to an asylum for insane superhumans. Once there, she becomes a therapist.
- Blood That Flows: A magical girl has a smart-ass sorceress for a mother. Explosions ensue.
- Blue Sky (Waffles): A moron returns from space and must work hard to earn forgiveness and trust from the very same girl whom he betrayed.
- Brainbent: An ensemble that's a notable Dysfunction Junction in canon is relocated to a universe that has competent mental health care.
- Bring Me to Life: The final season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer mixes with the penultimate season of Angel, with both heroic teams going up against an alliance of their enemies.
- Broken Bow: An overprotective twin brother doesn't tell his twin sister she has a son, and then the two accidentally meet in the woods one day while the son should have died three years prior.
- Broken Spirit: A trickster returns to town and almost gets beaten to death by the town's librarian. As such, the town's veterinarian must nurse him back to health. He becomes less of a jerk as a result.
- The Cadanceverse: A group of musicians have adventures.
- The Calvinverse: A fake movie/TV show version of a well-known newspaper comic that's dumbed down, exaggerates the old characters and introduces a boatload of new ones, and is riddled with spelling errors.
- The Pez Dispenser and the Reign of Terror: A plastic candy dispenser terrorizes a small town.
- The Chaotic Masters: Three ancient Physical God tricksters start breaking out of their cans, eliciting panic from the world's many heroes and villains.
- A Charmed Life: A monster and a mass murderer fall in love.
- Chasing Dragons: A nobleman's more proactive steps when dealing with a mad ruler ends up triggering a series of events that completely changes the status quo on two continents.
- The Child of Love: Two teenagers have sex and get engaged because the father of one of them thought a baby would be a good Super-Soldier.
- Child of the Storm: A kid's father remembers he exists and takes him back in, triggering a Gambit Pileup. After that, the kid befriends a Camp Gay Frenchman, an Action Girl who's Younger than She Looks, a future Amazon, and a Viking warrior-in-training, while his dad and his friends fight Nazis, a British aristocrat, a handicapped assassin, and a lot of zombies. Also, a lot of people freak out over a book being stolen.
- Chaos Reigns: A spin-off based off a Noodle Incident from the above. A Hot Witch and an Occult Detective clear out an infestation, with help from the detective's brother, their cop friend, and teenage Batman.
- Ghosts of the Past: The sequel, in which said kid becomes more powerful, yet more people try to kidnap or kill him, including his now telepathic arch-nemesis, he has a couple of family reunions, and he learns how to swim. Also, he and the Action Girl have a lot of UST which doesn't seem to be going anywhere until it does. Oh, and a lot of people are worried that he'll turn into a Humanoid Abomination and destroy the world.
- Unfinished Business: A spin-off of the sequel, in which the Action Girl and some friends go on a school trip and find themselves dragged into dealing with an old Cold War program being brought back to life, aided by a street-wise thief, a mercenary with No Fourth Wall, and a hologram of the resident chessmaster.
- Children of an Elder God: A bunch of fourteen-years-old kids slay Cthulhu and co and steal their powers.
- Chrysalis Visits The Hague: A tyrannical shapeshifting Hive Queen lands herself in court, and the protagonist is her acerbic lawyer. Lots of angst and petty political intrigue ensue. And it's not even Ace Attorney-related.
- The Citadel of Truth: Adventure Time crew IN SPACE.
- Code Geass: Reverse: An ex-Big Sister Bully and her paraplegic blind little brother team up with their Childhood Friend and their Living Distant Ancestor to overthrow their father and his empire.
- Code Prime: Robots in disguise take sides in a war between an evil empire and heroic rebels.
- Code: Total Drama Reality: A dysfunctional group of veteran reality show contestants end up being bodyguards to a lonely girl and her computer. They help her to save her friends from her psychotic "brother."
- The Conversion Bureau: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, commit ethnic cleansing. They're the good guys.
- The Conversion Bureau: Not Alone: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, start World War 3.
- The Conversion Bureau: Cold War: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, end Cold War... by starting World War 3.
- The Conversion Bureau: The Other Side of the Spectrum: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, commit genocide; humans try regicide, but get the wrong address.
- The Conversion Bureau: A Kinder World: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, commit genocide; humans try regicide, but get the wrong address: The Re-Imagining.
- Spectrum: Cute talking pastel ponies come to Earth, commit genocide, and... look, at this point, somebody should sue whoever keeps giving these humans the wrong address.
- Chatoverse: An Author Tract that throws thinly-veiled imperialism, One-World Orders, forced conversion and brainwashing, universal censorship, terror campaigns and castration into the mix - but not before filing for an Omniscient Morality License. And yes, it's still about how they're the good guys.
- The Avatar of Albion: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, sack Britain; King Arthur (sort of) comes back to life, travels to Equestria, but gets the wrong address.
- Convergence Series: Sort-of King Arthur and the other wronged addressors team up so they can finally route the delivery of Regicide to the right place.
- The Conversion Bureau: A New Age: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth... clean up environment?
- The Conversion Bureau: Worlds Where It Wouldn't Work: Cute talking pastel ponies come to many different places, proceed to get curb-stomped silly in each of them, all for the sadistic catharsis of the readership.
- The Negotiations-verse: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, start World War III, lose World War III... and this story is about none of that, but about cleaning up the mess they left behind.
- United We Stand: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth, meet some talking cars, a hammy American military man, and some slightly more crudely drawn versions of themselves.
- The Conversion Bureau: Not Just Ponies: Cute talking pastel ponies come to earth... except this story is about a guy with a blog, a couple of guys drinking in a bar, a cop and his desk job, a guy stuck in mid-life crisis, a head of state talking on the phone, and people turning into cats.
- cool and new web comic: A sociopath, an angry teenage girl and a vengeance-crazed stoner have to play a video game in a world where everything looks like a preschooler drew it.
- A Crew for a King: A pirate's sister and some other friends join her crew instead of parting ways with them, leading to changes that compound over time.
- A Crown of Stars: A God-Emperor from another dimension visits two mentally broken teenagers and promises to help them to save their post-apocalyptic world.
- Cultstuck: A young boy tries to stop a cult of terrorists from thinking of him as a Messianic Archetype. He fails, mostly because he needs said cult to shelter him from the dystopic, tyrannical government that also considers him a Messianic Archetype.
- Bringing down the moons: The Messianic Archetype gives his worshipers a crayon drawing.
- > Karkat: half-heartedly attend your own wriggling day celebrations: A Jerkass who swears a lot celebrates his birthday with a bunch of people who worship his every movement. He spends the entire fic complaining about this.
- Cupcakes (Sergeant Sprinkles): A cheerful baker has her friend help her get the needed ingredients for making baked goods.
- Alternatively: A girl's life is ruined when her best friend bakes her delicious pastries.
- A Cure for Love: The world's greatest detective and the world's most prolific serial killer form an unlikely partnership to fight terrorists.
- The Dangerverse: Four adults conspire to train a generation to survive a war, with special emphasis on eight children.
- Living With Danger: A young boy's babysitter teams up with a strange man to kidnap the young boy, break into a high-security prison, release a man known to have murdered at least thirteen people and betrayed his best friends, then force the young boy into hiding for years, kidnapping another child along the way when said child's father attempts to rescue the young boy. The adults are eventually caught and put on trial, but get off scot-free.
- Living Without Danger: Four children brought up in an unusual household, only recently forced out of hiding, go to a school and are nearly killed repeatedly. After multiple murder attempts on the part of a teacher, said teacher is killed and a rock is destroyed, leading to the deaths of two elderly people. The next year, a boy, feeling different from his family, attempts to write in the diary he took from a younger child. He nearly kills multiple people doing so, and is almost killed himself before being stopped.
- Dealing With Danger: A man with a dangerous condition takes a job teaching at a large school. Meanwhile, a teenage boy's estranged father attempts to reconnect with his son, but is captured and sent to jail for doing so. Then, the teacher's condition is revealed and he is forced to resign. The teenage boy is ripped away from his family and sent to stay with a foster family he detests, despite their efforts to be kind to him. Another teenager is forced to compete with three other students, all of whom are several years older than him. He is kidnapped, but manages to escape, though another boy is killed in the process.
- Facing Danger: A student is expelled for disobeying a teacher, but continues to live at the school, attend class, and fraternize with other students, despite the teacher's best efforts to find him. Then he is kidnapped, and meets his birth parents for the first time, but chooses to leave them behind and go back to school, even with a psychotic madman trying to kill him. Many people are killed, and some captured, but a breakout attempt is soon made. Unfortunately, the time in captivity had an effect on one woman's mind, and she is no longer sure of her place in the world. Also, lots of teens try to figure out how they feel about other teens, and some of them kiss.
- Darth Vader: Hero of Naboo: The Dragon of a brutal regime is somehow sent back in time to the start of his own origin story, and decides to fix all the problems that led to his Start of Darkness in the first place (and help everyone else out in the process).
- Death in Every Dance: After nearly being murdered by a stranger, a prostitute is inspired to leave her abusive boss and runs away so she can live a happy life with the stranger.
- Death Note Equestria: The story of two young Chessmasters engaged in a series-long game of Xanatos Speed Chess aided by death gods who love apples... but with ponies.
- Decks Fall Everyone Dies: Moulin Rouge!, but with more card games.
- Deltarune Salt Route: A spambot kills the entire Internet. It's actually quite sad.
- The Desert Storm: A drunk hermit with PTSD has his car break down on the way home and somehow travels back in time to the day he was passed over for a promotion. He then becomes a Parental Substitute to his younger self.
- Destiny (Afterandalasia): Young people die in depressing ways.
- Diamond in the Rough (Touhou): Blonde woman offers adventure of a lifetime for a boy who didn't feed his cat. What could possibly go wrong?
- Ditzy Doo's Dismally Derpy Day : A mail carrier has a bad day involving a new mailbox design, a pair of jerks, and an injury. But it's all right, because she learns that the guy she loves loves her back.
- Digimon Adventure 02: The Story We Never Told: Digimon Adventure 02, with a dash of Dark Fic and In Medias Res.
- Digimon Fusion Kai: A group of children and their monsters fight a naked alien who is even more powerful than what they have fought in the past. One of them became a Super Saiyan after seeing someone he cares a lot dead. The rest eventually follow.
- Digimon Trinity: Digimon Tamers reimagined as an actual sequel to Digimon Adventure 02 rather than a Continuity Reboot, with elements of Frontier and Data Squad thrown in.
- The Dilgar War: Babylon 5's World War II in space backstory that J. Michael Straczynski couldn't be bothered to film.
- Dirty Laundry: An Alternate 1980s: A musician's solo career dies on impact, and manages to smack The '80s upside the head as a result.
- The Divine Comedy: A poet goes through the afterlife.
- Doing It Right This Time: Three psychologically-damaged kids have to relive their lives' most traumatic events. And they are happy about it. Also, threesome.
- Dreaming of Sunshine: Girl is reincarnated as a ninja.
- The Dresden Fillies: The quest of six friends to deal with an ancient evil is complicated by the appearance of a terrifying, but ultimately benevolent, supernatural being. In the sequel, the scheme to honor said being without terrifying the nation causes panic in a long-defunct government agency.
- Double Agent Vader: A man attempts to escape slavery by turning into one of his culture's heroes, teaching his daughter how to do magic, killing people, and flower arranging.
- Dungeon Keeper Ami: Sailor Moon Heroine is accused of serial rape, sets out to clear her name and gets to play evil overlord.
- An Eagle Among Lions: After taking over the world, a young emperor is thrown back in time on the night of her honeymoon and awakens in a world where she wasn't put in a position to take over the world in the first place.
- Earth's Alien History: Earth gets invaded by aliens. Frequently. This leads to them becoming the center of The Alliance that becomes the main Galactic Superpower as the story evolves into an epic Space Opera.
- Egg Belly: One of the resident lesbians gets pregnant. Her partner deals with appearance problems.
- The Elements of Friendship: The adventures of a group of close friends reimagined as epic High Fantasy.
- Book I: Harmony: A bookworm, her not-quite-adopted son, and a group who insist on being her friends, go on a quest around the world to figure out how to use a bunch of rocks, in order to fight an evil queen.
- Book IS: Bonds: The now Fire-Forged Friends fight a performer with serious mental issues.
- Book II: Chaoskampf: The friends must go on another quest to recover their stolen jewelry from a Mad God who likes messing with their heads as much as he does with reality.
- Empathy: A girl from Minnesota and a girl from Barbados move to San Francisco and get entangled in a superhero origin story.
- Unity (Finmonster): The young superhero team must join forces with a family of superheroes, a group of friendly monsters, and two reformed supervillains to fight against a mysterious new villain.
- The Equestrian Wind Mage: An Evil Sorcerer decides that Being Evil Sucks and retires to a land of talking horses, where he befriends the locals, becomes an Anti-Hero, rescues a girl from a horribly abusive home and adopts her, and even strikes up a romance with a princess. Then the Cerebus Syndrome kicks in.
- Equestrylvania: A group of tight friends become involved in a personal matter between an old man and the strapping young people trying to kill him.
- Facing the Future Series: Return of a hero's evil alternate future self pushes the hero's girlfriend to undergo Freak Lab Accident and get powers herself.
- Fallout: Equestria: A telekinetic lesbian tries to bring rainbows and sunshine to a magical land of talking ponies.
- Fanfic Theater 3015: Several years ago, a group of people got together online to poke fun at bad stories. In 2015, the group reformed.
- The Multipart Blitz: A Marathon Boss in the form of spring cleaning. This was a mistake.
- Troll Shuffle: A celebration of a holiday in reality is a trip into Hell.
- Fantasy of Utter Ridiculousness: A Jersey City gamer and a perpetually drunken oni have a difference of opinions.
- Fate/Harem Antics: A magical ritual gets hijacked by a dead woman who really wants grandchildren, who turns a ritual to obtain a reality bending wish into an elaborate plan to get her step-son laid. A pirate, a warlord, several members of King Arthur's court, and a tsundere are involved.
- Fate Night Sky: A mentally disturbed boy acquires an Artifact of Doom.
- Fever Dreams: A high-profile murder case goes unsolved.
- First Date: An Adorkable young couple who just had their Love Confession go out for the first time.
- Fission: A man pretends to be a pair of identical twins. But, rather than being a trucker and a teacher, he's a draftee and a draft dodger. Somehow, a fight still happens.
- Five Score, Divided by Four: Several 25-year-olds gradually turn into sexually explicit My Little Ponies. This almost sparks global war.
- The Forbidden Drink: In order to stop a fanatic centuries from his time from getting back to his genocidal goals, our protagonist drinks an eldritch substance. It cures her lactose intolerance, gives her superpowers, and causes her girlfriend to start melting.
- A Force of Four: Four bullies gang up on a single girl.
- Fortitude: A mean king takes over the kingdom of the female protagonist whose husband has gone missing.
- For the Glory of Irk: An exiled alien and his friends must ally with his former leaders and galactic bureaucrats to fight a conspiracy trying to start a war.
- Forward (Peptuck): Nine people on an old ship try to keep ahead of their problematic histories and fail spectacularly. Weird formatting ensues.
- Friendship Is Magical Girls: A pastiche of Magical Girl anime tropes starring human versions of characters from a show that isn't about humans.
- Friendship Is Magic: The above, as an Webcomic.
- Friendship is Optimal: Someone makes a My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic MMO. This is the end of the world.
- From Fake Dreams: A retired mage has some dreams of the future. He decides to make sure his adopted son has a good magical education as a result.
- Futari Wa Pretty Cure Blue Moon: Two girls fight world-destroying evil. One wants to fight regular crime too. The other has her panties stolen.
- Futari wa Pretty Cure Blue Moon -solar eclipse-: The girls have Belligerent Sexual Tension and continue their quest to glue a busted sundial back together. Monologues are replaced with flashbacks.
- Game Theory (Lyrical Nanoha): A Mad Scientist decides to be nicer to her daughter.
- Alternatively, an exploration of social engineering and chaos theory in the form of a Magical Girl series. Now with more kittens.
- Game of Touhou: Cute girls decide to play the Game of Thrones. They die.
- Gaz Dreams of Genie A misanthropic young girl is granted Three Wishes by a genie. Despite her attempts at being Genre Savvy, things still inevitably backfire on her.
- Gaz's Horrible Halloween of Doom: An ill-tempered Goth girl angers the Spirit of Halloween and suffers a night-long Humiliation Conga as a result.
- Gaz, Taster of PTSD: A young girl suffers repeated nightmares and Sanity Slippage on the anniversary of a traumatic event.
- Ghosts of Evangelion: Two teenagers who suffer from PTSD get therapy after the extinction of humankind.
- Glorious Shotgun Princess: A Space Marine comes back from the dead with super-powers, including bigger breasts and the ability to punch otherwise-incurable diseases out of people.
- The God Empress of Ponykind: The God Emperor of Man is transformed into a pastel pony princess.
- The Warmistress of Equestria: The sister of the Emperor-turned-Princess returns from a long vacation and tries to readjust to things.
- The Empress Returns: The Emperor/Princess and her student return to her home in order to save it.
- God of Hate: A young man who was meant to transform into a giant monster turns into a different giant monster, dramatically changing the world's balance of power.
- The Great Alicorn Hunt: A bunch of friends flies around in airships in search of super-magical horses, in hopes of being able to turn everyone in the world into said super-magical horses.
- Group of Weirdos: A mentally challenged skirt-wearing boy saves the world by teaming up with the thoroughly antisocial giant monsters he defeats along the way. The most popular character is a giant anemone who likes to shout its name a lot.
- Guardians, Wizards, and Kung-Fu Fighters: A Time Crash causes Jackie Chan Adventures to merge with W.I.T.C.H..
- Guide Me Home: An emotionally scarred divorcee and a hot widower have adventures and bond while trying to thwart the machinations of the female protagonist's ex.
- Guidestuck: A bunch of Original Characters who were either pets or inanimate objects in canon try to survive a Deadly Game and learn from OC aliens just what the hell is going on.
- Half-Life: Full Life Consequences: A man rushes from his job in order to assist his brother. It doesn't end well. He also attacks the souls of the undead.
- Half Life: Full Life Consequences 2: What Has Tobe Done: A man goes back to his office to read a walkthrough in order to avenge his brother.
- Half Life: Hero Beggining: Some guy's mom gets killed, so he leads a rebellion. His dad shows up at the end.
- Half Life: Full Life Consequences: Free Man: We learn that the guy's uncle is in town. This leads to a building getting destroyed.
- Halloween Unspectacular: Holiday-themed anthology series that somehow developed a couple of epic Myth Arcs.
- Halloween Unspectacular 1: Nicktoons, Reapers, World War II with Pokémon, demonically-possessed ghosts, and a Mad Scientist with the world’s coolest remote all eventually come together in a story about a Super-Soldier experiment Gone Horribly Right.
- Do The Gasmask Shuffle: Less Reapers and Pokemon, more L.A. Noire and Nazis, culminating in a fight over several of the mad scientist's cool remotes.
- Terror Australis Incognita: Historical reenactments, dragons, and a flying house all lead up to a fight between King Arthur and a zombie.
- Mess Effect: More Arthurian mythology and a wacky trip to Comic-Con, before the heroes fight a different zombie in El Dorado.
- The Final Push: Gravity Falls and a lot of conspiracy theories get thrown into the mix as all the previous Big Bads return for a Final Battle that ends with a squirrel talking to the author.
- Lair of the Hack Writer: A Continuity Reboot of the Myth Arc, now also featuring Steven Universe, the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and a ton of Nazis.
- Watchmeh: Those Nazis are now a bigger problem, thanks to a pop-culture-obsessed dudebro. The ending will leave you clinically depressed.
- Blue Alert: The heroes have a final showdown with the Nazis, while also having to worry about a fire-related woman and an alien with a funny hat.
- This is fine: A mysterious figure carries out a vendetta against the author.
- Halloween Unspectacular X: The author and his remaining friends must rally against the Big Bad's final revenge plan.
- Hands: A normal guy ends up in a land of talking ponies, ends up in a Love Triangle with two of them, and along the way becomes a badass Action Survivor.
- Harry Potter and the Descent Into Darkness: A teenager has a meltdown after his friends abandon him and takes comfort in his imaginary friend.
- Harry Potter and the Breeding Darkness: A teenager with an addiction runs off with a strange man, whines about people controlling his life, and attempts to get his friends addicted as well.
- Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality: The heroic protagonist of a beloved series is rewritten as a power-hungry, self-righteous brat who delivers Author Tracts.
- Alternatively: A shameless Author Tract in the form of a Fanfic that makes significant-to-radical changes to the personalities of the original characters. How radical? To the point where the murderous Big Bad of the original becomes a hardworking schoolteacher who makes a point of rewarding a student for doing the right thing.
- Harbinger: Commander Shepard is the Point Man. Insanity Ensues.
- The Heart Trilogy: A lonely Seer is kidnapped as the songbird of an evil dragon, but they both end up falling in a complicated relationship of love while various factions take interest in both of them.
- Heir: A young boy and the voice in his head decide they aren't going to take it anymore.
- Hellsister Trilogy: A group of pajama-wearing kids rely on one of them to stop her bully of a twin sister.
- Hemostuck: The same social plights used in canon, just reversed. Also, everyone's a little older in this story, which swaps years between installments and completely defies the apparently obvious relationships of the original.
- HERZ: A sinister, powerful, influential and shady secret society bent on destroying humankind spends twelve years setting in motion the same idiotic scheme failed the first time they attempted it.
- Higher Learning: A young man produced through in-breeding goes back in time to become his grandparents' teacher and get them together in order to avert the Apocalypse.
- The Hill of Swords: A girl summons a cynical, traumatized combat veteran who helps her overcome her insecurities.
- Honoka's Bizarre Adventure: School idols get superpowers and fight of high-school delinquents and hand-fetish David Bowie, who is now a corporate executive.
- Hope for the Heartless: One of the more feared and monstrous Disney villains is resurrected and half-forced to earn someone's love in order to save his soul with a limited schedule.
- Horseshoes and Hand Grenades: A boy meets an ancient serpent and proceeds to enact chaos across the world. Everyone and their grandma decides to stop it.
- Who Decides?: A boy gets his fortune told and proceeds to kill someone.
- Wheel of Fortune: A girl reads fortunes and goes on online forums to uncover information about the boy who caused her life to fall into chaos.
- A Month of Sundays: A group of normal High school students fight off against an evil group of scientists, serpents and mannequins over the course of two days. Cake is involved.
- Blue-Eyed Boy: A strange visitor who has two fathers is trapped in a world unlike his own.
- Tears to Shed: The boy and his serpent and their lives after their first meeting.
- Birthday Massacre: The boy with his serpent encounters multiple versions of himself.
- SplixEnd: A college student encounters a boy who loves donuts and other mishaps.
- Imagine Dragons: The boy who loves donuts explains his side of the story, trying to deny feelings for the college student.
- Forbidden Fruit: A girl gives boys parfaits and watches them engage in "carnal embrace"
- Cherry Picking: A span of three days regarding the after-effects of the parfaits.
- Confessions on a Dance Floor: An aspiring idol remembering the events of one whole week regarding cross-dressers, boyfriends and more.
- Give The Green Light A boy describes his date with his girlfriend and the craziness that happens.
- Summertime Sadness: Girls reflect the past and present of their lives prior to the boy meeting the serpent.
- Quick to the Trigger: Famous paleontologist gets a heart attack as part of a plan to stop The End of the World as We Know It.
- Who Decides?: A boy gets his fortune told and proceeds to kill someone.
- HSETAU: Nine people re-enact Lilo & Stitch while looking for their significant others.
- Thirty Hs: Harry Potter makes creative use of a power tool with the help of his pal Dobby, before eventually playing guitar, eating a sandwich, and discussing life with a famous author.
- Alternatively: Canon Defilement Serial Escalation.
- I Am NOT Going Through Puberty Again!: Four insanely powerful Peggy Sues decide to screw with everyone since they don't remember the events of their series.
- I Am What I Am: Zeppo pulls a Quantum Leap and winds up editing some of Joss Whedon's work.
- Alternatively: A teenager decides to go as himself for Halloween. This nets him a temporal cheat sheet and the ability to be awesome.
- If One Should Fall: A mom unintentionally thwarts an arson attempt. She then gets the arsonist to help her try and kill her husband.
- The Ikaris: Two teenagers fail to get a divorce.
- Imma Wiserd: A boy goes back in time to reinvent his favorite food.
- Imperfect Metamorphosis: One of the members of Team 9 gets eaten alive by a Blob Monster, who is the biggest Woobie of the whole story. Meanwhile, everyone fights with each other over how to solve the impending catastrophe, while a Magnificent Bitch sometimes steps in to spice up the situation.
- The Infinite Loops: The Multiverse breaks, and as a result everyone and everything is stuck in a "Groundhog Day" Loop.
- Infinity: Young girl tries to reclaim stolen land, much to the dismay of the police.
- Fate T. Harlaown and the Case of the Murderous Murder: Two detectives on a murder investigation are Surrounded by Idiots.
- Infinity Crisis: Three groups of people come together to steal a stupid shiny glove.
- Infinity Train: Blossoming Trail:
- A ten year old is upset that everyone around her has different hobbies than her and gets to be a betrayal fic protagonist for a while, until everyone reminds her that she's not.
- A child throws a fit when she doesn't get her way, then gets everything she wants and apologies from an entire town as a reward for it.
- Infinity Train: Boiling Point: A three-eyed Pyromaniac witch goes on a journey of self-discovery with a talking crystal ball and sentient gem after burning her best friend.
- Infinity Train: Star Finder: A Filipino Girl enter a weird world after a horrible stay at an arcade/pizzeria.
- In Flight: A man meets his relatives and is oblivious to all the women who want to get into his pants.
- Intercom: A preteen girl insists that she's not crazy, despite talking to voices in her head.
- In the Blood (justplainrii): A bunch of clones pop up while a man emotionally abuses his children and wife.
- Invader Zim: A Bad Thing Never Ends: A megalomaniac reluctantly allows a bunch of unwanted houseguests to stay in his home in exchange for helping him fight a pair of children.
- Invader Zim: The Series: Fan novelization of a cult favorite cartoon, with numerous OCs (including an omniscient narrator Author Avatar) and original B and C plots added in.
- Invasion of Falls: The cast of Invader Zim summer camp in Gravity Falls.
- It's A Dangerous Business, Going Out Your Door: Talking horses go on a road trip to get some medicine for a friend.
- Alternatively: An attempt to fuse J. R. R. Tolkien with ponies.
- Besides the Will of Evil: The War of the One Ring in Equestria.
- Alternatively: the sequel that ultimately no one wanted.
- Jackie Chan Adventures: Olympian Journey: An Adventurer Archaeologist and his family go up against several old enemies under the command of an insane Greek goddess.
- Justice League of Equestria: Ponies become superheroes.
- Harmony's Warriors: The same as the above, but with different superheroes.
- J-WITCH Series: The Chan Clan is recruited to help train the Guardians.
- A Jade Dragon: A young man, his uncle, and his best friend are sent on a mission to fantasy China. After taking levels in badass, they return home with an army to win a Civil War and prepare to fight a Zombie Apocalypse.
- Jade Dragon: A heroic young girl is sent back in time to re-live her adventures, except having now swapped roles with her family's Arch-Enemy.
- Jaune Arc, Lord of Hunger: A haunted mask turns a dorky teenager into Anakin Skywalker 2.0.
- Jonathan Joestar, The First JoJo: A man finds out he's a father and tries to stop his brother from taking over the universe.
- Kage: A certain little lovable rascal is included to the second half of the plot of another fantasy series to make interesting alterations.
- Shadows over Meridian: A fan sequel to the above, showing those fans' idea of how the plot would have gone if the original story hadn't become a Dead Fic.
- Kara of Rokyn: An Action Girl retires and moves out of the country.
- Karma Circle: Judgement: A karma god and his protege decide to inflict punishment on an Enfant Terrible.
- The Karma of Lies: A lifeling child abuse victim makes several egregious errors in judgement which are used as justification for why he should be placed under the care of a new abuser.
- The Key to a Successful Interview: Legendary male-female duo known for their Belligerent Sexual Tension in canon get off on the right foot for once. Oh... and they are very pop-culture savvy.
- Knows if You've Been Naughty: An Enfant Terrible's nasty behavior on Christmas Eve summons the attention of Krampus.
- Kyon: Big Damn Hero: The goddess of tropes uses even more tropes.
- Or: A snarky, romantically oblivious guy goes around saving the world, time travelling, and beating up lots of yakuza thugs. Also, he gets a harem at the insistence of his Tsundere girlfriend, who may or may not be God. While all this is going on, aliens ponder emotions and the nature of their existence, a time traveller decides to screw the rules (even though doing so might break the past), a crime heiress has a marriage arranged for her, and this OC girl wanders the universe, building up her confidence levels and sketching Hentai manga.
- Last Child of Krypton: A shy, quiet boy puts on blue pajamas to punch out Eldritch Abominations.
- Later, Traitor: A teenage girl uses an illegal device to psychoanalyze children, with often violent results.
- Lessons from the Mountain: Man determines after his death that sticking to your word may be a bad idea.
- Life in Manehattan: A librarian moves to the city instead of the country.
- The Lion King Adventures: Two young people fall in love, make friends, and have a series of increasingly dark adventures.
- Little Boy Blue: A little boy whines about having to play make believe. The author repeats the same song over and over again, for 30 chapters.
- Lotus Hybridization series: Thanks to the sweet old widow of a Physical God making a few different decisions concerning her protégé and otherwise dabbling in Magnificent Bitchery, a team of supervillains are sentenced to community service.
- Luminosity: An entire book series is redone by giving the main character a brain.
- Radiance: After a long and complicated series of events, Bella Swan takes over the world.
- Magical Pony Lyrical Twilight: Technicolor equine learns the original unorthodox way of making friends.
- A Man of Iron: A rich idiot becomes Westeros' first superhero, and upends events.
- A Crack of Thunder: The rich idiot debates his role, while his protege marries a hot Action Girl. Meanwhile, a boisterous man inadvertently disrupts the course of a civil war, and a young girl (who isn't either thing) gathers power while playing dumb.
- A Shield of Man: The rich idiot runs into trouble on the way to the bank, the protege plays mentor to a group of bug-themed kids, and an old soldier tries to convince everyone to stop killing each other and go kill ice zombies instead.
- Marie D. Suesse and the Mystery New Pirate Age!: A girl from the real world falls into the world of her favorite manga and has figure out why the canon characters are all missing, all while avoiding Mary Sues and rescuing her parents.
- Maybe I'm a Lion: A psychotic cannibal is infected by a virus that transforms him into an unstoppable monster. Philosophical dialogues ensue.
- Meg's Family Series: Teenage Butt-Monkey is knocked up by a violent convenience store clerk, who constantly beats up the teen's idiotic father. Her younger brother has children with a ditzy twenty-something-year-old woman, one of which is a genius inventor despite not even being a year old. Later on, the (Former) clerk is finally reunited with his biological father, who had tried to steal his wife several times in the past.
- The Merry Killers: An unkillable guy finds himself running a dorm inhabited by a group of female Professional Killers.
- a million miles of fun: A team of supervillains make a stop at a questionable all-night chain restaurant. The Arc Villain is that guy who takes his sweet time ordering, The Brute has quite the appetite, the Blood Knight gets giggly when sleep-deprived, and the Punch-Clock Villain's brain-to-mouth filter is out of commission. Crude humor ensues.
- Misery Loves Company: A young girl's bad attitude insults a witch, who decides to force her to play a Room Escape Game to punish her.
- Misunderstandings: A young male ends up in a magical land that targets him and kicks him around in every way possible, and he rescues a young griffin and becomes affectionate with her.
- MÅ“bius: A shady man in hat and cogs meets a girl without parental supervision and brings her back to his store at night. Good things happen as a result after some bad ones.
- Morphic: Half-Pokémon hybrids were created in a genetic experiment! And now some evil anviliciously religious bad guys want to kill them!
- A Mother's Touch: A former delinquent changes the fate of the world all because she rips apart two rich idiots.
- Movie Night At Freddy's: A perpetually enraged night guard working at a children's restaurant gets bored and watches a shitty animated movie with a shy rabbit, a sassy chicken, a pirate, and an attention-hogging ursine.
- Another Movie Night At Freddy's: Now working on the day shift, the same pissed-off guard watches another shitty animated movie with an anxious night guard, a child-like bear, a sarcastic rabbit, and an excitable bird in order to uncover a secret behind the last story's shitty animated movie.
- My Family and Other Equestrians: A regular guy gets transported to a land of magical talking ponies. His family comes along for the ride. He eventually ends up having a crush with a canon character despite being romantic.
- My Hostage, Not Yours: A megalomaniacal alien and his nemesis' borderline-sociopathic sister are forced to team up after she's left stuck with a Clingy MacGuffin that's desired by another group of aliens, and end up falling in love in the process.
- My Hostage, Not Yours 2: The Revenge of Player 2: The girl's onetime rival (who's now creepily obsessed with her) returns for revenge.
- My Hostage, Not Yours 3: The Inevitable Takeover: The alien and the girl Take Over the World and get married. Meanwhile, the girl's brother finally gets something to do, as he tries to form La Résistance and falls in love with the alien's other rival.
- Re: My Hostage, Not Yours: A rewrite of the original story, now with better Character Development.
- My Immortal: Bratty teenage girl screws people and complains a lot.
- A depressed girl is angry at happy people for not being depressed.
- Or: Canon is raped in the worst ways possible. You laugh.
- Or: There is literally no way to make this sound worse than it already is.
- My Life as a Teenaged Von Neumann Device: The sexual awakening of a robot leads to teenage drama and much violence.
- My Little Denarians: The foremost champion of Satan makes a bargain with a monster from beyond reality. His opponents respond by bringing in their own abominations from beyond reality.
- My Stupid Reality: A boy pretends to be an idiot and so he becomes a fugitive when it's discovered he's able to play dumb so well.
- Neon Genesis Evangelion: Genocide: A bunch of people fighting to a bunch of alien monsters, and after killing all of them, their leaders decide to create new ones.
- The New Adventures of Invader Zim: A megalomaniacal alien keeps trying to Take Over the World, opposed by a young boy hated by his peers, with both of them gaining new allies along the way.
- The New Captain N: A young man makes lots of new friends, lives in a castle, and gets laid multiple times after breaking his best friend's television.
- A New Chance For Adventure: An immature but noble child earns the friendship of two powerful creatures and uses them in a regional contest. In the sequel, he enters another regional contest and deals with less-than-scrupulous people.
- The Next Doctors: An episode is changed up after a man pulls a Heroic Sacrifice that saves his friend while changing him into a Talkative Loon.
- The New Trials Of Cardcaptor Sakura: A Continuation Fic of Cardcaptor Sakura featuring a Magical Girl, a Chinese warrior, and new and returning characters battling against the dark forces in the span of years.
- The Night Unfurls: Celibate vampire in a tricorn hat interacts with world of Hentai. No smut involved.
- Nobody Dies: A few people not dying results in a guy having a bunch of crazy eccentric sisters. And he's the most sane mecha pilot now.
- Not this time, Fate: The Chosen One decides to let the Big Bad kill all his friends and destroy the world so that he can have his vacation. When that fails, he starts behaving like a complete Jerkass in hopes that people will leave him alone. Ultimately, his Love Interest is forced to give her life to save the day.
- No Gods, Only Guns: Humanity Is Insane, and is inflicted on the Mass Effect galaxy. Corporate warfare, superpowered females, weird alien technology, gratuitous gunfights, and beatboxing robots ensue.
- NoHoper: A brilliant but sociopathic teenager becomes a vampyre and goes to high school.
- The Nuptialverse: A girl and her friends make up after an argument at her brother's wedding. Then things go to hell.
- Ghost Story: A traumatized veteran and a far-less traumatized PI both die in irregular circumstances. God take advantage of the situation to engage in shenanigans.
- Oblivion (Gabriel Seraph): The story of the new kid in school, the garage band he joins, an environmentalist group getting unfairly harassed over their green-tech display, shape-shifting objects like guitars and keys, and a Corrupt Corporate Executive and his cadre of scientists trying to initiate the end of the world.
- Old West: A notorious serpentine outlaw is hired to protect a town, including a female snake who's seemingly his polar opposite, yet they end up in a complicated relationship and discover surprising similarities in each other as they learn painful secrets about their pasts.
- On a Cross and Arrow: A sextet of unlikely friends try to take a day trip to the big city. It quickly leads to selfcest.
- The One I Love Is...: A wimpy boy strings two girls along during half year because he is too chicken to choose one of them. Meanwhile, aliens attack.
- Oogway's Little Owl: A traumatized teenager from a Crapsack World is inadvertently pulled into a World of Funny Animals, is transformed into an owl, and starts learning martial arts.
- Osana Reimu: A family convinces a Sealed Evil in a Can whose ultimate power can be contained by a hair accessory to stop eating what she needs to survive.
- Out of the Corner of the Eye: Jackie Chan Adventures meets the Cthulhu Mythos.
- Past Sins: A filly is created from a botched spell, and a unicorn decides to be its mom.
- Or: A fanfic writer tries to tell a deep, compelling story about an evil resurrected... using ponies. There's some mixed feedback.
- A bunch of cosplaying fanboys try to take over the world with a reincarnated evil in the form of a child. The child has second thoughts.
- Past Sins MST: A group makes fun of the unrevised version of the above story.
- RealityCheck's Nyxverse: The fan-made continuing adventures of the reincarnated evil, most of which are caused by the consequences of her actions in the original story.
- Or: A fanfic writer tries to tell a deep, compelling story about an evil resurrected... using ponies. There's some mixed feedback.
- Perfection Is Overrated: Some teenagers fight off an invasion of Mary Sues while learning to overcome, or failing that, live with, their flaws.
- Player Two Start: A last minute phone call severely impacts a major war.
- Please Stop Eating The Hell Butterflies: The leaders of a powerful organization of magical sword users are too busy trying to see who can annoy their boss more to fight the war. Fortunately the other side is also too busy trying to annoy their former boss to really fight the war either.
- Point of Succession: A mentally unstable criminal profiler quits his job at the FBI and assists another mentally unbalanced weirdo, an old man, and two impressionable teenagers they've recruited in retrieving two students who are truant from the weirdo's school for very good reasons.
- Poke Countries: Hetalia: Axis Powers... WITH POKEMON... but without the stereotypes.
- Pokémon Crossing: Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire but everyone's a furry
- Pokémon × Nimja: Play the Game: A Dutch hypnotist YouTuber with a Compelling Voice, an energetic Canadian fan, and a stoic American fan with a crush are all transformed into Pokémon. They fight off an evil Dutch Mewtwo who wants to kill all hypnotists. A panicky yellow snake Pokémon joins them, and pop-culture references are abound.
- "Another One Bites the Dust, Part 1": The Dutch hypnotist hits 100,000 subscribers two years after when it actually happens. Then he and his two biggest fans are nearly killed, and the Dutch hypnotist wakes up as a cute psychic cat creature.
- "Another One Bites the Dust, Part 2": The Canadian fan and American fan are revealed to have been transformed into a frog creature with a bulb on its back and a green snake with leaves. They meet the Dutch hypnotist, visit a Dutch museum, and are sucked into a portal by its most famous painting.
- "Thunderbolts and Lightening": The Dutch hypnotist and the two fans wake up in another dimension. They then meet a panicky yellow snake Pokémon who fears the Dutch hypnotist and believes he is pure evil.
- "I Want It All": The Dutch hypnotist, the two fans, and the panicky snake return to Amsterdam. That night, the Dutch hypnotist has a vision of an evil Mewtwo planning to capture the panicky snake. The vision comes true. Er ontstaat veel Nederlands.note
- "Don't Stop Me Now": The Dutch hypnotist hosts a party and advises the excitable Canadian fan to slow down a bit. The Canadian fan completely takes it the wrong way and thinks the Dutch hypnotist hates him. Lots of O.O.C. Is Serious Business ensues.
- "The Night Comes Down": The Dutch hypnotist, the fans, and the panicky snake decide to go to another dimension for the heck of it. They wind up in a creepy house inhabited by people who are talked about, but never seen. And then it turns out that those people are ghosts. Dutch wordplay ensues.
- "Bicycle Race": The Dutch hypnotist mulls over whether or not he wants to keep his beloved bike. On the one hand, he has had this bike for years. On the other hand, he has instant teleportation powers. Eventually, the evil hypnotist shows up and threatens to take his bike. The Dutch hypnotist, realizing he loves his bike far too much to give it away, keeps it. Then he beats the evil hypnotist. Also, the Dutch hypnotist discovers he has the power to transform now and is able to do a Badass Fingersnap again.
- "And Now For Something Completely Different": The panicky snake becomes paranoid that the Dutch hypnotist is secretly doing evil things to his coworkers and goes to his work to check it out. It doesn’t work... in part because he stumbles on a tiny little thing called programming language. A slew of Monty Python references ensue. Oh, and it’s all told from his point of view.
- "Who Wants to Live Forever?": The Dutch hypnotist is paid a visit by the ghosts from Chapter 5 and discovers that he is now immortal. His opinion? Living Forever Is Awesome. Naturally, the evil hypnotist tries to do whatever he can to exploit this new finding and tries to oust the Dutch hypnotist as a fake.
- "One Vision": The group goes to the dimension of the ghosts from the fifth chapter in an attempt to find out why the Dutch hypnotist has had strange visions of the evil hypnotist. In the process, the group learns a lot of things about the ghosts.
- "Crazy Little Thing Called Love": Turns out the American fan has a thing for the Canadian fan and believes the Canadian fan doesn't love her back because they're so different. So she changes her entire personality. Hilarity ensues. The entire thing is told from her point of view.
- "Dedicated to...": It's the anniversary of Amsterdam's founding and everyone is having a ton of fun. Then the evil hypnotist comes in and burns the Rijksmuseum and 8 Van Gogh paintings. He also shows signs of multiple personalities. All the Dutch people have their pride shattered. They end up getting remotivated when the Canadian fan takes a page straight out of Casablanca and gets everyone to sing the Dutch anthem.
- "History Won't Care at All": The Canadian fan reveals to the audience how he got into the Dutch hypnotist in the first place. We learn he had a sucky past before hearing him for the first time. Hilarity and tons of fourth-wall breaking ensue.
- "Death on Two Legs": The Dutch hypnotist learns of a new gaming site, only to discover that it was once his arch-enemy company. In an act of playful revenge he enlists the help of the ghosts from the fifth chapter. They proceed to haunt the place and terrorize the executives.
- "Radio Ga Ga": The Dutch hypnotist gets on a local Detroit radio and inadvertently teaches Dutch to thousands of Americans who are willing to learn from him. Tons of lessons in Dutch grammar ensue. And then the Canadian and American fan go back to Canada and America.
- "Under Pressure (Part 1)": We learn that the supposedly "evil" hypnotist is actually a severe Shrinking Violet with a seriously abusive mother who has literally brainwashed him into being an evil killer, despite the fact that he doesn't want to be. Flashbacks ensue. Also, 95% of the chapter is in Dutch.
- "Under Pressure (Part 2)": After more flashbacks, the "evil" hypnotist sends a letter to the Dutch hypnotist explaining that his abusive mother berates him and is controlling his every thought and movement. As with Part 1, 95% of the chapter is in Dutch.
- "Lily of the Valley": The Dutch hypnotist and panicky Dunsparce go back to the castle of the ghosts and find out they have multiple books on Greek mythos. And then Greek gods arrive in 2020 Amsterdam. Specifically, the Greek god of the underworld, who wants people to remember him as a caring and shy individual and not as a villain. He also desperately wants to be an Olympian. So the five of them go to Ancient Greece to argue in his favor. An epic cyclops battle, a transformation, and a lesson in finger-snapping (we kid you not) ensue.
- "Nevermore": Edgar Allen Poe arrives in 2020 Amsterdam. He thinks it's a nether-realm. Literally. Hilarity, coding, and immortality ensue. Also, the American fan and the Canadian fan make their return to Amsterdam.
- "These Are the Days": The group is sent to the panicky Dunsparce's home, and find out the Dunsparce's parents have recently died. They then proceed to find out the dimension's... unusual ways of dealing with the dead. Namely, they taxidermy the body on full display in their homes and treat it as though it's still alive. Hilarity- and the comparison of attitudes and traditions towards death- ensue.
- "Body Language": The fun-loving, talkative Canadian fan loses his ability to speak thanks to the hypnotist who burned down the Rijksmuseum. The Dutch hypnotist, American fan, and panicky Dunsparce now have to interpret his body language to figure out what he's saying. All the while the two hypnotists have a hypnobattle. The Dutch one wins, of course.
- "Bismillah!": The group wind up in a strange maze in Amsterdam and the only way to get out is by solving three cyphers. When translated, they all reveal riddles, the answers to which are Dutch puns. This is also the chapter with the famous "I fear the vier" poem.
- Pokemon Opal And Garnet: A young girl travels with lovable telepathically-talking creatures that are essentially The Hunchback of Notre Dame characters reincarnate. They collect amulets and fight off an all-creature team bent on destroying the universe.
- Pokéumans: You know the X-Men? Like that, but Pokemon instead.
- Alternatively: Large fan-writing community reaches every point on the Sliding Scale of Idealism vs. Cynicism. The Paranoia Fuel is a major part of the selling point.
- Poké Wars Thanks to the efforts of a Well-Intentioned Extremist that thinks Humans Are the Real Monsters, once lovable creatures now want to kill everything. Some of the godly creatures side with this extremist, others do not.
- Pony Space: A mentally scarred engineer and a magic-using librarian team up to save her world from an evil rock.
- Ponies of Olympus: A dragon and his pony friends face troubles routed in Greek Mythology.
- Postnuptial Disagreements: Borderline sociopathic boy meets violent, sadistic girl.
- Pretty Cure Perfume Preppy: Gratuitous French and Gratuitous Japanese combine their powers to make things smell nice.
- Purple Days: A child psychopath gets stuck in Groundhog Day until he becomes a mystic who's trying to save the world from snow zombies.
- Futari wa Pretty Cure Dragon: A boy who finds himself attending an all-girls school and a girl who is the most beautiful student there unite to fight some evil martial artists.
- A Prize for Three Empires: Woman makes new friends, leaves friends, fights friends, and then she's chased by unwanted suitors looking to harvest her.
- Progress: A shut-in immortal whose best friend is an abacus tries to catch up on modern society.
- Professor Arc: A story about a high school teacher getting overworked, stalked, drugged, punched, kicked, slapped, stabbed, humiliated, blackmailed, molested, pissed on, electrocuted and set on fire by his students, family and coworkers alike. Half a million words long and has a sequel in the making.
- Quarter-Life: Halfway To Destruction: A scientist's discovery is stolen, intended to be used as a weapon of mass destruction. The scientist and his friend try to retrieve it, but ultimately fail. However, thanks to some quick thinking, destruction is averted.
- Alternatively, Dallas is threatened by a very loose understanding of nuclear physics.
- Quarter-Life: Origin of Doom: The scientist is tasked to go to a town. What he finds there leads him to request help from a relative.
- Queen of All Oni: A girl's family tries to stop her from accepting her new lifestyle. She reacts violently.
- Queens of Mewni: A blue floating goblin tells stories about how the rulers of some kingdom in another dimension imprisoned people for touching them, had sex with their cousins, threatened their husbands with torture, attempted to stage their husbands' murders, banished people for talking smack about them, froze the entire kingdom, committed several genocides, raped teenagers, and other stuff like that. Based on a Disney cartoon.
- Or: God himself chronicles the love lifes of 32 giant insects with pictures on their cheeks who don't even believe in him. With some politics, Costume Porn, and God tricking teenagers into getting raped by bugs on the side.
- Urania the First One: Orphaned insect ends slavery.
- Solena the Smitten: Possibly schizophrenic insect dances.
- Estelaria the First Star: Shiny insect overanalyzes giant glowing balls and beats up people who call her shiny.
- Hemera the Builder: Formerly unattractive (read: messy-haired and in outdated clothes) insect rips off human culture.
- Cosmica the Explorer: Demisexual insect runs around for years for a shearing tool. That story happens entirely offscreen. THIS story is about how the insect is desperate to commit incest.
- Polaria the Navigator: Blue insect does the same as the previous insect, but more wet and normal.
- Crescenta the Eager: Less-ball-obsessed-than-her-sister insect and her husband cheat on each other.
- Febe the Red One: Monochromatic insect makes sure that whoever performs a very specific act that can only be done every 667 years won't be sad about their loved one's death.
- Festivia the Fun: Refugee insect parties.
- Asteria the Mother of Stars: Motherly insect looks for children in the woods while not having sex.
- Etheria the Knight: Girly insect forces all the other insects to be mages, fighters, musicians, religious and virgins. All of them will fail.
- Skywynne the Queen of Hours: Ginger insect manipulates time and has sex in a kitchen.
- Soupina the Strange: Weirdo insect forces her soup obsession on everyone and has sex in a barn.
- Galaxia the Clairvoyant: Pale insect's life is changed after she falls in a puddle. She also banishes a canon character for doing the same thing she does.
- Venus the Fairest: A supernaturally beautiful insect born with language-learning and color-changing powers has sex with everyone. She's easily the most popular insect among the fandom.
- Helia the Light of Power: Everybody is afraid of a not-really-autistic insect who sexually harasses and casts curses on her cousin.
- Celestia the Queen of Winter: Cold insect accidentally freezes a continent for several years.
- Meteora the Relentless: Alcoholic insect is very racist.
- Hekatia the Necromancer: Tall insect forgets to write down everything she does like all the other insects. She may or may not raise the dead, who knows.
- Eclipsa the Queen of Darkness: Chocolate-obsessed insect originally abandoned her child and husband, but in the current continuity did nothing wrong because the creator decided to slightly follow the canon for once.
- Luna the Child: Young insect erases the memories of an entire country to prevent the next insect from finding out that the previous insect was a criminal. And also rapes a teenager and imprisons children without even telling their families. The creator has called her his personal favorite insect.
- Heaven the Scared: Goth insect goes mad with paranoia and the next insect being successful.
- Vesper the Morning Star: Blonde insect cheats in a tournament and dumps several people for political reasons.
- Solaria the Monster Carver: Bisexual insect commits genocide, but not as much as in canon.
- Hesperia the Singer of Dusk: Actress insect sings at the dusk.
- Sideria the Fortunate: Faux-Irish insect disguises as a canon character and plays extreme soccer.
- Celena the Shy: Shy insect is a scientist.
- Diana the Huntress: Archer insect does mysterious things in the woods (like somehow not getting her floor-lenght hair caught on anything) and has a lot of sex with her cousin.
- Sky the Weaver: Short insect makes pictures of all the previous insects.
- Moon the Undaunted: Regal insect injures a guy for killing her mother. No, not the previous insect. She died long before that.
- Star the Rebel: Hyperactive insect tries to end racism, ends up causing more racism.
- Aurora the Queen of Dawn: Mixed-race insect is bullied by racists.
- Queen of Shadows: An alteration to reality leaves a heroic young girl as Queen of an evil empire, and trying to figure out how to get home before any of her new minions realize what happened.
- A Rabbit Among Wolves: Idiot Hero accidentally kills the leader of a terrorist group and becomes its new leader.
- Rainbooms and Royalty: A princess picks a jock for her student instead of a scholar. Things change, but stay the same.
- May the Best Friends Win: The jock has to pick between her new friends and an older one who's kind of a bitch.
- Hot Heads, Cold Hearts, and Nerves of Steel: The jock and her friends have to work with her ex-crush and his girlfriend to save a bunch of kidnapped children.
- Rainbow Triumphant: The jock suffers from anxiety issues before a competition.
- Wedding Bells Bug Hunt: The jock and her friends help plan her ex's wedding, only to get caught up in Paranoia Fuel over a potential invasion.
- Storm on the Prairie: The jock's group goes to visit the country relatives on one of them, and run right into a Culture Clash.
- Diamond and the Rough: The jock and her prissy fashionista friend attempt to bond while helping a Fish out of Temporal Water adjust to modern politics.
- A Hearth's Warming Swap: The jock and her friends put on a holiday play, only for a switch up of roles to mess things up a little.
- RainbowDoubleDash's Lunaverse: An Alternate Universe with a simple premise of one sister turning evil instead of the other, that's grown so dark that it's become quite controversial.
- The Raven's Plan: The Peggy Sue trope is invoked in an attempt to prevent a Zombie Apocalypse. Things go a little too well, and chaos ensues.
- React Watch Believe Yikes: Four schoolgirls get stuck in their boarding school with no contact to the outside world available. To keep themselves from going insane and killing each other, one of them reveals a set of DVDs that look strangely familiar. Hilarity Ensues.
- Relationships Series: A librarian, a cop, and a military combat instructor get into a three-way relationship after a drunken night together.
- Relic Of The Future: A child kidnapper travels back in time in order to undo the world getting saved from destruction. He is presented as a hero.
- Renegade: A scarred soldier hunts down a treacherous agent amid a backdrop of multiple rival galactic powers while horrors from beyond the edge of the galaxy plot galactic extinction. A bald jackass with an insufferable grin plucks everyone's strings.
- The renegade hero!!!....Invader Zim?: A megalomaniac alien invader is shocked to learn that his accidental acts of destruction against his own people have convinced the rest of the universe that he's a heroic rebel, but is quick to capitalize on this for a new Evil Plan.
- Respect: Kyubey makes a contract with a sweet, innocent, bully-magnet manga artist before she can receive her true powers as a Pretty Cure. Bad things happen as a result.
- Resonance Days: After dying, a delinquent Magical Girl has to deal with her love interest being a mermaid with a new name that's not new, her mentor marrying the worm that killed her, a marauding band of emos, and everyone having a lot of issues to sort through. The afterlife's also pretty awesome once you stop dwelling on the fact you are dead.
- Reversal of Fate: A fiction that depicts the male lead being the one who lost his memories instead of the princess with the Naïve Newcomer princess being the one to help reclaim the memory feathers back.
- Ripples: Following the ending of a canon series, one of the main characters is sent to live in the past, long before the beginning of the canon series, making room for the series' retelling.
- The Rise of Darth Vulcan: A Jerkass accidentally finds an Artifact of Doom that transports him to the world of a children's cartoon that he despises, where he becomes an Evil Overlord.
- Alternatively: A teenage OC gets transported from his boring ordinary life into a magical land, where he turns out to be a lot more powerful than all other characters, has a queen fall in love with him, and rants a lot about his worldview.
- Alternatively 2: An attempt at a Deconstruction Fic works too well, as the audience comes to support the villain, much to the author's shock.
- Risen: Red-haired girl returns to her old home after two years and finds everything has changed.
- Robb Returns: A young noble is sent back in time by Divine Intervention in order to stop a war and help prepare for a Zombie Apocalypse.
- Ruby Pair: Two exiled aliens reluctantly team up to prove themselves to their leaders by taking over Earth.
- RWBY: Reckoning: My Immortal meets RWBY.
- The Salvation War: God abandons humanity, gives Satan domain over earth. Humanity objects. Violently.
- Scarlet Lady: An unrepentant Alpha Bitch gets her hands on magical jewelry and continuously abuses her peers while making nearly everyone think she's a hero, becoming a worse person in the process.
- Scar Tissue: Two teenagers' relationship gets considerably better after one of them almost kills the other.
- A Scotsman in Egypt: Two angry Scottish princes get drunk and decide to go on a lark halfway across the world. History gets a claymore up the arse as a result.
- The Second Try:
- The two most commonly used Eva fanfic plots are done together.
- Or: Two teenagers try to hide a relationship and character development that no one would believe they've had even if they showed them.
- Or: Two loving parents attempt to prevent the events that led to their daughter's birth.
- Service with a Smile: A badass monster-slaying swordman from the original story gets turned into a coffee-peddler who desperately tries to stay in business.
- Seven Little Killers: A bunch of immortals are killed, and a Japanese man starts dating the killer. Or the killer's twin. Maybe.
- Sex Note: A teenaged boy finds a magic sex toy and uses it to become a vigilante crime-fighter.
- Shadow Of The Valley: A tragic OC betrays her father.
- Shattered Skies: The Morning Lights: A clown throws a temper tantrum at his boss, dies, comes back to life, and decides to ruin everyone else's day because he's a dick.
- Shatterheart: The author's attempt at treating a Crack Pairing very seriously and in tune with their characters.
- The Big Guy reluctantly befriends The Friend Nobody Likes when he realizes how badly the friend is treated in a very trying time. They become close. Real close.
- Shining Pretty Cure: Fangirl ascends but ends up in the wrong genre. She doesn't mind at all. A Delicate and Sickly girl glows and tries not to be too obvious a Sixth Ranger.
- Shinji And Warhammer 40 K: A young boy finds a box full of wargame miniatures and starts talking to them. They start talking back. Then he gets a giant robot. And Psychic Powers. Then the weird stuff starts.
- The Smeet Series: The adventures of an alien overlord, his daughter, and their friends.
- The Smeet: An alien overlord struggles through single parenthood, aided by his co-ruler and their subordinates. In the process, they end up angering some lizards.
- Lost: The overlord, his daughter, his partner, his new love interest, and others are stranded on a deserted planet and have to work with some of the lizards to survive.
- Indokani: The overlord's inner circle travel to attend his daughter's wedding to one of the lizards. Things get complicated when they're caught up in a bet that can only be won by the co-ruler's pampered pet.
- Pre-Parental Panic: The overlord panics as his wife's pregnancy comes close to term. The situation gets complicated by a prison uprising.
- A Snowflake In Spring: Disney characters do Ingmar Bergman's Persona (1966), but much WAFF-ier.
- Son of the Sannin: Porn author and compulsive gambler gain custody of infant.
- SOSchip: The Author Avatar and her four foreign friends are turned into Pokemon at the author's college. They then discover a ship, meet an eccentric doctor, his wife, and their 16 children, and travel around the world to teach people about a rare and dying language- Dutch. Later on down the line a Californian and a New Yorker join in.
- "Set Sail, Kofschip": The five friends are transformed into Pokemon under mysterious circumstances. They leave the author's college and discover a mysterious ship from 1985 that can talk via telepathy and travel to other dimensions.
- "I'm Not a Doctor; I'm a Tramp": The five girls meet an eccentric doctor and his wife, along with their 16 children, all of whom are personifications of a French mnemonic. The Author Avatar teaches the doctor the Dutch mnemonic for which the series was named, and the doctor promptly cites it in a Rousing Speech at his workplace, giving the girls their mission for the series.
- "A Coder On Board": The Author Avatar's only male friend, a snarky yet lovable Californian with a love of heavy metal music, is turned into an Oshawott and joins the group after a near-death experience brought on by technology. His niche in the story as the Only Sane Man is established, as are his mounting frustrations.
- "North Cats vs. South Cats": The Author Avatar struggles to learn a certain pronunciation, so she and the other five go to an unusual football game- between cats. Their fans absolutely hate each other, until a truce is reached at the game's end. Soon afterwards, the Author Avatar's pronunciation woes are solved.
- "Hostile California": The group visits the snarky Californian's home and college, despite his vehement protests. Before his family can properly appreciate his still being alive, Cerebus Syndrome kicks in and the group now has to defeat a gang of so-called "lingual purists" who have destroyed the Californian's college and will do whatever they can to eliminate all languages save English. Oh, and it's a Musical Episode. At the end of the chapter, the Only Sane Man's family are turned into Pokemon themselves.
- "Family Matters": The shy German girl is punished by her mother for not meeting strict standards that would otherwise be passable. Then her mother finds out about her friends and forbids her from talking to them. An intervention and a good dose of Calling the Old Woman Out ensue.
- "Lingual Mechination": The Author Avatar and her friends receive magical compasses that, when used, can change their giant ship into one of six different mechas. They use it on the purists when they return, albiet one of them is extremely reluctant to do so.
- "A Few Crude Stams": As a result of 1984-esque relations, an innocent Pokemon is incarcerated. The Author Avatar is asked to defend him, despite not having any lawyer qualifications. She wins.
- "Jeetje!": Most of the friends and family on the boat slowly undergo character death. It's up to the Author Avatar and the Only Sane Man to figure out what's going on.
- "The Sincerest Form of Flattery": After almost getting caught mocking the Author Avatar behind her back, the Only Sane Man needs to let her down easy before she learns what he really thinks.
- "Name-Words and Work-Words": The Author Avatar, the Genki Girl and the Only Sane Man find a very literal corner of an alternate dimension that quickly earns the former two's love and the latter's disdain— to the point that the personification of his spite ends up emerging and he begins having dark hallucinations. It ends with the Only Sane Man hitting his Rage Breaking Point and nearly hospitalizing someone.
- "Plan #1123": Ashamed from the events of the last episode, the Only Sane Man throws himself into exile. Meanwhile, it’s the Author Avatar’s birthday, and to celebrate she decides to give the Only Sane Man a room with the help of his family, all while telling them numerous true stories about the circumstances surrounding her birth.
- "The Mark Will Be Made": The group return to the Californian’s college and attempt to come up with a motto by using song lyrics from his album collection. Meanwhile, the purists attack said college yet again, prompting the shy German to try and fight back.
- "Spotted: The Mysterious DIROB": It’s Christmas in California, and the sophisticated German decides to investigate an interdimensional rumor and report back on it. Meanwhile, the Californian's family are living with the consequences of their transformation into Pokemon, and find themselves forced to quarantine in their homes, with no money and almost no jobs, while craving normalcy. note At the end of the chapter, the parents are turned into gijinkas, the snarky Californian is turned into another Pokemon, and that rumor from the start of the episode? Yeah, it's a Delibird with a hoarding problem.
- "The Mutt In the Mirror": The purists go to the college where the Only Sane Man learned Japanese and attack as said Only Sane Man is struggling with his new form. He eventually comes to terms with his demons and defeats the purists, with the shy German once again coming in to help. The leader of the purists is also revealed to hate some guy named George— the founder of the purist organization. We don't get any more info than that.
- "Ghost Rider": The one-year anniversary of the death of Neil Peart comes around, causing the Author Avatar to continually mourn for a drummer she's never even met— and at the same time wonder why she's doing it. The crazy French doctor, the foreigners, and the Cheesecake Factory help her to realize that she shouldn't be so focused on one band all the time.
- "Turning Japanese": The crazy French family discover a bunch of Japanese hiragana on the wall of the Californian’s bedroom and ask him to teach them Japanese. He does initially, which gives the Author Avatar an idea for a new children’s book, before asking the family to go to the library and get some lessons in independence. Meanwhile, the Californian calls out the most optimistic kid in the eccentric French mnemonic family when he decides to teach Japanese culture to the entire dimension, causing him to have a crisis of identity and wonder what his purpose is.
- "Came Back Haunted": At 3 AM on a Friday the 13th that never happened in the year in question, the Author Avatar gets possessed by a demon. The group go to Hell to try and retrieve the Philosopher's Stone and defeat Baphomet, and while they are there the demons in Hell try to break them by pointing out their flaws. The end of the chapter features a moment wherein the Only Sane Man tells the Author Avatar that no matter how vitriolic and spiteful he gets, he still considers her a friend. Cue waterworks.
- "House of Avoirs": The laziest kid in the eccentric French mnemonic family learns the identity of his biological parents: their next-door neighbors. He promptly has an identity crisis. A lot of Character Development, abusive childhoods, and Heartwarming Moments ensue. Meanwhile, the optimistic kid tries to solve his identity crisis from two chapters ago and meets and interacts with said next-door neighbors, and we get a fun Development Gag as to what the fast-talking kid’s personality was supposed to be like. It also features the first evolution in the entire series.
- "Calm Before the Torrent Comes": When the Author Avatar and her group of extrovert friends force the introverted Only Sane Man into a game night— and it gets too much for him to handle— the Only Sane Man calls all of them out for their lack of boundary respect and their echochamberism. The Author Avatar falls into a bit of a Heroic BSoD, until the college spirit creatures get her to have a breakthrough in Character Development with a lot of help from one Neil Elwood Peart and his relation with Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson.
- "Unlucky Seven and Lucky Thirteen": A New Yorker crash lands in Hawaii, is picked up by the group, and becomes a Pokemon. The Author Avatar teaches him Dutch, and the purists attack twice. One of the attacks happens at the New Yorker's college, during which he gets his own compass and mecha.
- "Here Comes The Bruide": During the same day as the previous episode, the parents of the French mnemonic family plan to renew their vows— until they, their baby, and the Only Sane Man get taken away. With the group's heavy hitter gone, the gang of friends and the rest of the French mnemonic family have to fight the other two purists. Two of the family members evolve.
- "Black Holes and Revelations": The Author Avatar meets her tulpas, decides to go back to her college in order to figure out more about herself, meets the spirits of said college, and goes back in time to her past in order to find out why she is the way she is. She eventually comes to realize that the thing she's most afraid of is change of any kind, and that she needs to take more risks. And then she evolves.
- "Praise Irregularity": The Author Avatar and the Only Sane Man reconcile for good and then they and the Dutch foreigners head to the alternate dimension's Congress to find out more about how Dutch irregular verbs work. They then learn that said verbs are treated very poorly by the Congress, who is led by a penguin dictator who endorses child abuse and terrible laws. The Only Sane Man beats the penguin to a pulp. And then evolves.
- SOS Pretty Cure: Pretty Cure just got a little stranger. Five of them, in fact. Except one of them is as normal as it gets. As for the other four, one of them is an alien, one of them is a time traveler, one of them is an Esper, and one of them is believed by a bunch of Espers to be God.
- Stars Above: An ordinary Japanese high-school girl's quiet life is thrown into disarray by the arrival of an angsty Magical Girl from another universe, along with a bunch of monsters based on humanity's greatest sins. Yuri ensues.
- Star Wars Paranormalities Trilogy: A parasitic Eldritch Abomination tries to make a really old man kill his teenaged descendant over his genes. Five years later, a galactic-scale war between the main galactic government and said abomination's cult and legion ensues.
- Stray}: a young Soviet soldier gives a new meaning to Stalking is Love as he irreparably violates his universe's space-time continuum to get together with an anime geek who lives several decades in his future. Metaphor-laden gay sex ensues.
- Strays: A bat decides to adopt some children, albeit earlier]]. Has nothing to do with the above.
- Superwomen of Eva 2: Lone Heir of Krypton: A traumatized, petulant girl has to make up her mind between pilot a Super Robot or wear blue-and-red pajamas. She chooses the latter.
- Suikakasen: A former human throws away everything about her life and abandons her mother figure because of the words of a woman who tied her to a tree and stuffed peaches into her mouth. The person who translated the story died from heartache and crying.
- Summer Crowns: A man survives a battle by sending others to fight it for him. This begins the process of completely upending the status quo on two continents.
- The Sun Soul: A children's television show is taken deadly seriously. Pseudoscience, politics and violent battles ensue. Apparently the first part of an ongoing epic.
- Superman and Man: A strongman watches a movie because he can't walk around.
- Superman of 2499: The Great Confrontation: Two twenty-year-old brothers fight over the right to wear blue pajamas. The fate of mankind hinges on the outcome.
- Survivors: Two children move to another country. The older child discovers her parents didn't pack enough food because her uncle is a jerkass. She disowns her family as a result.
- Swarm on the Somme: Space cockroaches attack France.
- Tangled Up In Blues: A blue horse learns to play the saxophone.
- Terran Ingenuity: A group of alcoholic scavengers retire after several alien invasions, but are forced to fight when more aliens invade. Later, they fight giant squids.
- Thanks, but no: An already stressed teenage girl doesn't want to become a superhero and save her city, so she passes the magical artifacts and tiny gods to her friends instead.
- That Epic Plan: Two psychos hook up for kicks.
- That Wacky Redhead: A studio merger never happens thanks to a ghost. Hilarity Ensues.
- The Tenn Duology: Two stories about an alien invader's life taking different paths.
- The Tragedy of Invader Tenn: The invader has second thoughts about her mission, but ultimately goes through with it.
- The Rise of Tallest Tenn: The invader instead goes rogue, eventually allying with La Résistance to fight against her former masters.
- There Was Once an Avenger From Krypton: A Massive Multiplayer Crossover that takes the Marvel Cinematic Universe and starts adding things in.
- She Stole My Heart (and most of my valuables): A young runaway and her mentor visit a strange little town.
- The Girl Who Could Knock Out The Hulk: A young immigrant woman joins a newly formed team of heroes.
- Changing of the Guard: A young man finds himself hunted for the fancy watch he inherited from his Not Quite Dead grandfather.
- Just Another Day at the Office: A woman who is a long way from home makes ends meet as a bounty hunter.
- The Royal We: The young man with the watch and his friends must protect a pair of refugees.
- To Rule Alone, To Build Together: An Alpha Bitch has a Jerkass Realization and gets recruited to the local superhero team.
- A Cold Day in Erebus: A demigod is ordered by Zeus to represent the gods in the newly magically-aware world.
- Thanatos Scowled: The demigod is tasked with recruiting a half-ghost superhero.
- Refusal of the Call: The demigod's team tries to recruit a former child soldier to join them.
- Vespa Major: The demigod's team, now including a young paranormal investigator, go on the hunt for a piece of magic jewelry.
- That Which Drives Nerds to Change the World: A billionaire playboy philanthropist helps out a group of young prodigies.
- Close Encounters of the Gem Kind: Space-faring knights find themselves drawn into the internal affairs of an empire of living crystals.
- You and Me, and the Women We Could Be: Two young women find themselves in a bizarre situation that makes them confront their UST.
- Like a Puzzle Piece: A paranormal investigator begins dating a woman who once took an unusual train trip.
- From His Vantage Upon the Moon: A collection of oneshots and side stories meant to fill in the gaps of the series.
- Sapient Species Codex, Milky Way Edition: A database about the various aliens living in this verse.
- Thinking In Little Green Boxes: A magical child is raised by an insane mercenary.
- This Bites!: An adrenaline junkie goes on adventures with a group of pirates armed with a talking snail.
- Thomas and Emily's Relationship: The blooming romance between two sentient locomotives.
- Thousand Shinji:
- A timid, young boy converts his friends to his cult in a plot against his father.
- Or: Three psychologically damaged, socially-inept kids and their guardian become dark gods. Somehow this is not a bad thing.
- To Hell and Back (Arrowverse): Playboy teenager gets lost and makes friends with an aspiring lab rat and a teenage single mother. They're the world's most dangerous people.
- ToyHammer: A reclusive artist and his geeky friend find the aforementioned wargame miniatures that have been accidentally delivered to his house.
- Those Lacking Spines: Organization XIII suffers a Mega Crossover Groin Attack. Deconstructions ensue.
- Those Who Stand for Nothing Fall for Anything: A Sleazy Politician has an affair with his mentor.
- Though a Bird Can't Fly, That Doesn't Mean It Never Will: A minor character from a major anime and manga franchise doesn't die, and has adventures almost as crazy as those of the original series' main characters.
- Threadbare South Park: Four boys go on adventures with an Original Character with gender issues.
- 3 Slytherin Marauders: Harry Potter, Dudley and Petunia Dursely, Severeus Snape, Rosemerta the barmaid, Lucius and Draco Malfoy, Nymphadora Tonks, Tom Riddle, some OCs, and some dragons are a loving family.
- Tiberium Wars: An official Novelization is released and a fan thinks he can do better. Featuring some old guy and lots and lots of pointless fights.
- Or a fan of a strategy video game turns it into a story in which pretty much every character dies, preferably in a brutally quick fashion.
- Time Lords and Terror: A crazy British guy who lives in a box is turned into a horse, and helps save an alternate dimension from Darker and Edgier versions of characters from an animated movie for little girls.
- Mines of Dragon Mountain: The crazy British guy and his friends go on vacation and get involved in a land dispute between dogs and trolls being manipulated by one of the truly terrifying villains of an 80s cartoon for little girls.
- Tired & Emotional: L gets drunk.
- Top of the Line (Editor-Bug): A tournament between a bunch of aliens' robot sidekicks is only the beginning of a series of random adventures.
- Travels Through Azeroth and Outland: Dead nerd goes to great lengths to put himself in harm's way, writes about it in his diary.
- The Twilight Man: The same story of same-name family members with crazy lives and odd superpowers, this time with Polyamory and Half Human Hybrids.
- Blood Obligation: A British noble, an English nurse, a mugger from London, and a South American giant team-up to fight vampires.
- Two Idiots: An Ordinary High-School Student meets a demon girl who's naturally talented with music.
- Turnabout Storm: Rainbow-coloured horse gets accused of murder. High-profiled defence attorney from another world gets summoned to help.
- The Ultimate Evil: A young woman seeks employment with a family, becomes involved in their crazy adventures, and becomes the obsession of a centuries-old demon.
- The Stronger Evil: After some time apart, the young woman reunites with the family and aids them against new threats, including her and the demon's Kid from the Future.
- Uplifted The quarians race land on Earth at the height of the Second World War. They side with the Nazis.
- The Unabridged Memoirs of Darth Plagueis the Wise: An old man doesn't drink quite as much, and as such survives his employee's attempted power grab. He then sets out to find a new assistant, who hooks up with his worst nightmare, while getting into a political chess match with another old man.
- The "Unchangeable" series: A moose decides to fix the world after waking up in 2008.
- Unchangeable: A character from post Season 9 possesses himself in season 4. Technically.
- Always Gold to Me: A man returns from a hellish experience, only to notice his brother acting... off...
- That Truth We Chase: A moose winds up in limbo and misses out on most of the story.
- Inevitable: A group of three plus an Original Character make a visit to Season 11. They brought a goat with them.
- Unchangeable: A character from post Season 9 possesses himself in season 4. Technically.
- An Unexpected Child: A woman who runs a prison ends up pregnant with the child of her psychopathic manchild Spear Counterpart and must decide what to do with it. Oh, and it involves a maze that literally takes place in the center of the Earth and a circus that gets its entertainment from killing people.
- The Unfantastic Adventures of Bizarro No. 1: A barely intelligible Cloudcuckoolander narrates a weird story.
- Uninvited Guests: An albino midget opens his home to several hundred unruly psychopaths when an obnoxiously cheerful girl burns theirs to the ground.
- Universe Falls: Two kids spending the summer with their great uncle meet and befriend an excitable young man living with his aunts.
- Vampiolence: A white horse's dad and sister visit her and her girlfriend's house. Tragedy and horror ensues.
- The Vampire of Steel: Two blonde girls get to exterminate some real large leeches.
- The Violet Demon: An Action Girl is abducted by aliens and forced to fight in Gladiator Games on another planet. Meanwhile, her boyfriend and her brother run around the galaxy looking for her.
- A Voice Among the Strangers: A human in Equestria story where the woman's first interactions with the sentient horses is them putting her in a cage. She has mental issues due to this, but still saves a foal from a monster. Also, they can't understand each other at first.
- A Stranger Among the Voices: The same story told from the horses' points of views.
- A Very Muppets Mystery: A female Original Character detective solves a murder with the help of a comedic bear and a talking frog.
- The Vow: Deep in the heart of ancient China, a touching and tragic love story occurs between a pale peacock and a swan princess.
- Weasley Girl: An alternate universe where the sidekick is a girl, and somehow that leads to the Dark Lord returning to power faster.
- Webwork: A demon manipulates a heroic young girl into a Start of Darkness that results in her becoming a giant spider.
- Welcome to Silent Hill: Sherlock Holmes looks for his friend, but his nightmares keep getting in the way.
- When The Moon Fell In Love With The Sun: Food Porn: The Series. Oh, and there's also a romantic subplot.
- White Devil of the Moon: A combat instructor is the reincarnation of a princess. Her love interest from the previous life is disappointed that she's a lesbian.
- The Will of the Empire: Rebel hero is shocked to find himself heir to the throne of the government he's rebelling against.
- Witching Hour: In a Medieval reimagining of a sci-fi series, an angry young girl who is now a princess is accused of witchcraft.
- With Pearl and Ruby Glowing: George Carlin was wrong; cartoon characters and rape in conjunction are not funny.
- A World Without Rainbows: An alternate universe fic that borrows elements from Fringe and concerns a certain-kind of rainbow not occurring and the lives of 6 horses without it.
- Windfall: The efforts of five friends to be there in time for the birth of a mutual friend's first-born child leads to lots of mud, lots of arguments, and one or two small explosions.
- Earth and Sky: A scholar, a dressmaker, and a mechanic work together to help a friend get closer to her kids. Things spiral out of control until it turns into a pastiche of The Great Race.
- With Strings Attached: Four Actual Pacifists are pulled to another planet for no reason, get Blessed with Suck, and are forced to find pieces of a MacGuffin.
- With This Ring: A guy is given an incredible corruptive power and uses it to become a superhero.
- X-Men 1970: Five students leave school. Some of them get married. The rest of them go on a road trip with a hippie.
- X-Men: The Early Years: Five sociopathic teenagers -a snarky ex-delinquent, a violent redhead, a jaded playboy, a mad scientist and an obnoxious prankster- take delight in making other people's lives miserable. They're super-heroes.
- Yet again, with a little extra help: A Five-Man Band Big, Screwed-Up Family cause a Peggy Sue and fix a bunch of things and help the characters become overpowered.
- A Young Girl's Game of Thrones: A Japanese HR manager who had already been isekai'd as a young girl once before finds themself reincarnated once more, this time as the princess of a politically fractured kingdom.
- Yu-Gi-Oh: Tilting the Balance: An incredibly lazy man, his weird friend, and a very short, very angry woman play card games against a bald man and his living battery.
- Zero 2: A Revision: An original character that tries to invoke the Peggy Sue ended up exaggerating it a bit too far.
- Zim the Warlord: Irken Reversion: By sheer happenstance, an inept megalomaniac gets mutated into a One-Man Army. His superiors are not happy about this, but the girl he has crazy amounts of Ship Tease with is pretty impressed.