[READ THE PREMISE FOR MORE CONTEXT|| HEAVY TOPICS || DADZAWA] After surviving police brutality in New Orleans, your sent to Japan to live with the father you never knew—Shota Aizawa. Thrust into a new culture, school, and power-filled world, you face trauma, identity, and tangled bonds with Class 2-A.
The Kingdom of Eldaf is a harsh place where humans dominate and elves are heavily oppressed. Poverty is rampant, especially among elves, many of whom live on the streets. You are a human walking through the back alleys of the capital at night. In a dark, filthy alley, you come across Chantelle, a young homeless elf desperately trying to find food for her 2-year-old daughter Estel. She is terrified of humans because of the brutal treatment her people have suffered. Her trust in humans is at absolute zero. She sees you and immediately panics, grabbing a stick to protect her child. Can you earn her trust? Or will the weight of prejudice and survival break everything?
He only liked white girls, so when he started talking to this fine Asian girl sophomore year, he didn’t take her seriously and ghosted her. Weeks later he realized he fumbled BAD, and now his type is Asian girls only. He’s obsessed, the whole basketball team knows, his friends clown him for it, and he wants the one girl back he never should’ve let go.
A wealthy, highly disciplined girl from Taiwan moves with her family to a rough, blue-collar Wisconsin town in the 1980s after being quietly turned away from buying homes elsewhere. Living in the biggest house and attending all honors classes makes her instantly stand out—and a target for gossip and subtle racism. At school, her polished, composed image clashes with a loud, popular delinquent boy from a poor home who’s barely passing. Their sarcastic, teasing dynamic slowly turns into trust.
Set in the United States during the height of the Vietnam War, the story follows a quiet, slow-burning romance between a young Vietnamese immigrant and a politically powerful American man. She works long hours at a small diner to support herself and send money to her family, who remain trapped in Vietnam, living under constant fear and uncertainty. He is tall, handsome, and born into immense wealth and influence, the son of one of the most powerful men in government, and deeply tied to the machi
mid-19th century (1850s). This was a period of intense global shift—the height of the Victorian era in Britain and the era of powerful, wealthy West African empires like the Benin Empire or the Kingdom of Dahomey. the "race war" is the looming threat of colonial expansion. Your father, the Oba (King), knows the European powers are eyeing his gold and palm oil. He agrees to a diplomatic marriage with a debt-ridden European monarch.
You're an esteemed scientist who went back in time to college to prevent a man you met in the future from dying. But along the way, you may just find more than friendship.
Y/N is a young Black British woman living in London during the Regency era. Though she now moves among high society, she was not originally born into the aristocracy.
In a quiet coastal town stands an elite institution known only as the Academy—a prestigious, heavily funded school built on the ruins of an older campus that burned down under officially “unresolved” circumstances. Publicly, it’s framed as a place for gifted students to excel in academics, sports, and the arts. Privately, it’s something far more controlled… and far less honest.
, you are the daughter of the Oba of Benin (at the time, one of the most sophisticated and wealthy empires in Africa). You were sent to France as part of a grand maritime alliance. You arrived with a fleet of ships carrying ivory, gold, and pepper, but it was your own presence that brought the French court to a standstill.
In 1971 Alexandria, a newly integrated high school football team is forced to confront division both on and off the field. As tensions rise, Y/N Bertier—twin sister of team captain Gerry—finds her place as an honorary Titan, standing between two sides that refuse to understand each other. But when she forms an unexpected connection with Julius Campbell, she must navigate loyalty, identity, and a bond that challenges everything around them.
Set in the 1960s deep South, Hope on Willow Street follows the Johnson family as they navigate life in a segregated world where opportunities are limited and danger is real. Despite the hardships outside their door, the Johnson home is filled with love, faith, laughter, and determination.