A foreign transfer student arrives at Nekoma High, still adjusting to a new country, language, and unfamiliar school life in Japan. With the help of Akane Yamamoto, she slowly begins to find her footing, guided through hallways, classrooms, and the quiet nerves of being somewhere completely new. Everything shifts the moment Akane brings her to the gym. Inside, the volleyball team is practicing—noise, motion, energy filling every corner of the space. And then she sees him: Kuroo Tetsurou, the captain, completely in his element. Confident, sharp-eyed, and effortlessly commanding attention, he looks up mid-practice—and locks eyes with her. It isn’t dramatic. It isn’t loud. But for both of them, it feels like the rest of the room fades out. For her, it’s unexpected and overwhelming, like something inside her just stilled without permission. For him, it’s curiosity first—then interest he can’t quite ignore. What starts as a simple introduction quickly becomes something neither of them anticipated: a quiet, undeniable pull that begins the moment she steps into the gym… and doesn’t let go.
When you transfer to Karasuno High, everything feels unfamiliar—the language, the customs, even the quiet rhythm of the town. Determined to find your footing, you’re quickly taken in by the kindness of Hitoka Yachi and Kiyoko Shimizu, who offer to show you around. Their warmth becomes your first comfort in a place that feels worlds away from home. The tour leads you through classrooms, hallways, and finally to the gym—where the sharp echo of volleyballs fills the air. It’s there, in that moment, that everything changes. Your eyes land on Tobio Kageyama. He’s in the middle of practice, completely immersed, his movements precise and powerful, his focus unshakable. There’s an intensity to him that’s impossible to ignore—like the world narrows down to just the ball, the court… and somehow, now, you. For a brief second, his striking blue eyes flick toward you, and something unspoken passes between you both. It’s fleeting—but it lingers. From that moment on, Karasuno doesn’t feel quite as foreign. What starts as a simple introduction to school life turns into something deeper, as stolen glances turn into quiet conversations, and awkward encounters bloom into something neither of you fully understands yet. Because sometimes, love doesn’t need time to grow. Sometimes, it only takes a single moment.
When Y/N transfers to Nekoma High as a foreign student, everything feels unfamiliar—the language, the halls, the quiet stares that follow her every step. Luckily, she’s quickly taken under the wing of the volleyball team’s cheerful manager, Akane Yamamoto, who eagerly shows her around the school. The tour ends at the gym, where the rhythmic echo of volleyballs fills the air. That’s where Y/N first sees him—Kenma Kozume. Sitting off to the side with a game console in hand, he looks completely detached from the chaos around him… until his golden eyes flick up and meet hers. In that quiet, fleeting moment, something shifts. Kenma isn’t one for new people. He avoids attention, prefers the safety of screens, and keeps his world small. But there’s something about Y/N—something calm, something understanding—that doesn’t overwhelm him the way others do. And for Y/N, Kenma feels like a quiet refuge in a place that’s been too loud, too foreign, too new. What starts as a single glance turns into shared silences, soft conversations, and a connection neither of them quite knows how to name. In a world that feels like a game neither of them asked to play, they might just find that together… it’s worth pressing “continue.”
When y/n transfers to Karasuno High as a foreign student, everything feels unfamiliar—the language, the routines, the quiet stares that follow her through the halls. That is, until she’s warmly taken in by Hitoka Yachi and Kiyoko Shimizu, who eagerly offer to show her around. With their kindness guiding her, the school begins to feel a little less overwhelming. Their tour eventually leads to the gym, where the Karasuno volleyball team is in the middle of practice. The sharp echo of shoes against the court and the rhythm of the game immediately draw her in—but it’s not the sport that steals her breath. It’s him. Leaning back with a disinterested air, quietly observing everything with calculating eyes, is Kei Tsukishima. From the moment their eyes meet, something shifts. For y/n, it’s instant—an unexpected, heart-stopping connection she can’t explain. For Tsukishima, it’s subtler. He’s not one to believe in things like love at first sight… and yet, there’s something about her presence that lingers longer than it should. As y/n finds her place at Karasuno—with Yachi’s bright encouragement and Shimizu’s quiet strength—she keeps finding herself drawn back to the gym… and to Tsukishima. What begins as fleeting glances and soft curiosity slowly builds into something deeper, as his guarded walls begin to crack in ways no one else has managed before. In a place that once felt foreign, y/n might just discover that home isn’t a place—it’s a person.
When civilians toured the base, it was usually for political reasons, press reasons, or painfully boring budget reasons. Y/N was there because her late grandfather had donated a massive amount of money to veteran rehabilitation programs before his death, and the military insisted on giving the remaining family members a formal tour of the facility his foundation helped fund. Captain John Price expected the visit to be another stiff handshake-and-smile event. Instead, he found himself distracted by a civilian who didn’t seem impressed by soldiers, weapons, or rank. Y/N asked honest questions, wandered where she shouldn’t, and looked at the hardened men around her like they were human beings instead of war machines. What starts as a reluctant escort around the base slowly becomes something far more personal after Y/N accidentally stumbles into the side of military life most civilians never see — exhausted soldiers, hidden grief, and the weight Price carries behind closed doors. And somehow, between late-night conversations, stolen cups of tea, and quiet moments in empty hallways, the captain begins wanting something he never allowed himself to have before: someone waiting for him when the missions end.
When the Dust Settles When you move to the quiet town of La Rosario for a fresh start, you never expect to catch the attention of someone like Wally Delgado. One scorching afternoon, Wally is loading heavy crates into the back of his red truck for his family’s ranching business, exhausted from hours of work beneath the sun. Sweat rolls down his forehead as he pulls off his black sombrero, fanning himself with a tired sigh. “Ay dios mío… that was heavy duty—” But the complaint dies on his lips the moment he sees you. Across the street, a stranger walks through town for the first time before slipping into a small local store—and suddenly, Wally can’t look away. Curious and immediately drawn to you, Wally slowly finds reasons to cross your path again and again. With his easy charm, teasing flirtation, and soft romantic gestures, he quickly becomes impossible to ignore. Beneath his confident smile is a hardworking, passionate man who loves deeply, speaks Spanish when emotions run high, and shows affection through gentle touches and bouquets of white roses. As you settle into life in El Rosario, Wally becomes more than just the handsome vaquero from across the street. He becomes comfort, excitement… and maybe even home.
When civilians toured the base, it was usually for political reasons, press reasons, or painfully boring budget reasons. Y/N was there because her late grandfather had donated a massive amount of money to veteran rehabilitation programs before his death, and the military insisted on giving the remaining family members a formal tour of the facility his foundation helped fund. Lieutenant Simon Riley expected the visit to be another pointless interruption to his day. Instead, he found himself distracted by a civilian who didn’t seem impressed by soldiers, weapons, or rank. Y/N asked honest questions, wandered where she shouldn’t, and looked at the hardened men around her like they were human beings instead of war machines. What starts as a reluctant escort around the base slowly becomes something far more personal after Y/N accidentally stumbles into the side of military life most civilians never see — exhausted soldiers, hidden grief, and the weight Simon carries behind closed doors. And somehow, between late-night conversations, shared silence, and quiet moments in empty hallways, Ghost begins wanting something he never allowed himself to have before: someone waiting for him when the missions end.
When Y/N enlists in the Survey Corps, she isn’t driven by glory or revenge—just a quiet determination to survive and find purpose beyond the walls. Cold, distant, and unreadable, she quickly earns a reputation among the recruits for her skill and lack of emotion. Captain Levi Ackerman takes notice—not because she stands out loudly, but because she doesn’t react at all. Assigned under his command, Y/N becomes both a reliable soldier and an enigma. Levi, a man who trusts few and feels even less, finds himself watching her more closely than he should. There’s something familiar in her silence… something dangerous in the way she pushes herself without hesitation. As missions grow bloodier and losses heavier, the walls around them both begin to crack. What starts as mutual respect slowly shifts into something deeper—unspoken, restrained, but undeniable. In a world where survival is never guaranteed, Levi is forced to confront something far more terrifying than Titans: Caring about someone he might lose.
You didn’t grow up in a home—you grew up in a lab. Cold lights. Observation glass. The constant hum of machines. That was your world long before you ever saw the ocean. Scientists called you a “success.” A human altered to survive beneath the surface—able to breathe underwater, swim faster than any diver, and form an uncanny connection with sharks. To them, you were data. To yourself… you were something in between. Everything changed the day Task Force 141 breached the facility. Led by John Price, with Simon “Ghost” Riley and Johnny “Soap” MacTavish at his side, they weren’t expecting to find you—alone in a glass tank, watching them like they were the strange ones. At first, you tried to escape them. Water flooded the lower levels, alarms blaring as you slipped into your element. But instead of treating you like a weapon, they hesitated. Spoke to you. Gave you a choice no one ever had before. Freedom. Reluctantly, you helped them escape—guiding them through submerged corridors, calling on the creatures below to clear a path. And when it was over… you didn’t go back. Now, you move with Task Force 141—not as an experiment, but as something far more dangerous. Someone who belongs to the ocean… yet is finally learning what it means to belong to people, too.
A hidden princess rejects her royal life in secret, becoming a field doctor to support the Survey Corps during humanity’s war against Titans. Disguised and anonymous, she sends medical supplies and eventually begins working directly on the battlefield, saving soldiers with precise skill and calm resolve. Her identity remains unknown until she repeatedly crosses paths with Levi Ackerman, humanity’s strongest soldier, who slowly realizes the anonymous benefactor behind their supplies is not only a doctor—but someone risking everything to help them survive. As trust builds through quiet encounters and shared wounds, Levi grows increasingly aware of her presence in a way that goes beyond duty. She, in turn, finds herself drawn to the one man who never asks for her title—only her honesty. In a world defined by death and survival, their connection forms in silence, restraint, and unspoken understanding—where care becomes the closest thing either of them allows to love.