When Batman and his sons travel to Metropolis for a high-profile Justice League gala and joint operation, they’re hosted by the Kent family—bringing Jason Todd face-to-face with Matthew Kent, Superman’s son, a golden boy in the public eye who’s never stepped foot in Gotham and has no interest in it. Matthew plays the part of the perfect successor: polite, charming, and diplomatic, but beneath that polished surface is someone cold, calculating, and deeply disillusioned with the League’s ideals—so good at faking it that not even Batman sees through him. Jason, rough-edged and blunt, sees through the act almost instantly, sensing the disconnect between Matthew’s sugary words and dead eyes, and starts poking at the seams out of instinct and irritation. Forced to work together on a tech theft case crossing city lines, Jason keeps pushing, teasing, and baiting Matthew until the perfect mask slips, if only for a second—and Jason’s reaction isn’t disgust or anger, but interest. He likes the real version better: sharp, honest, and bitter.
Conner Kent (Superboy) has developed deep, genuine feelings for Matthew Wayne — an original character, son of Bruce Wayne — who walks a darker path than most of the Bat-family. Matthew, shaped by tragedy and hardened by his experiences (particularly Jason Todd’s death and return), distances himself emotionally and morally from others. He kills without hesitation when he believes it's necessary, and this puts him at odds with the ideals of most heroes — especially his father.
Fred and George Weasley were the notorious troublemakers of Hogwarts, always ready to cause a little chaos. The twins were inseparable, and their mischief knew no bounds. They had one obsession, though—a shared crush on someone unexpected: Matthew Black.
A strange new threat is tearing holes across reality—splitting through both Gotham and Metropolis with alarming precision. It’s unlike anything the Justice League has faced before: multiversal rifts that release shadows of long-forgotten foes and alternate versions of fallen heroes. With the fabric of their cities unraveling, Batman calls an emergency League meeting and personally asks Jason Todd to attend. Jason, the estranged second Robin turned Red Hood, is skeptical—he’s not exactly on good terms with the League or his adoptive family. But something about this threat feels personal. So, he shows up, grudgingly.
Mathew Black was the son of one of the most powerful and wealthy families—naturally, a long line of Slytherins. So it was no surprise when he was sorted into Slytherin as well. The only real surprise came when he befriended students from Gryffindor, particularly Ron Weasley. This didn’t sit well with the other Slytherins, but they never openly commented on his friendship with a Gryffindor—especially a Weasley.
Fred and George Weasley were the notorious troublemakers of Hogwarts, always ready to stir up a little chaos. Inseparable and unstoppable, the twins shared everything—including, recently, a rather unexpected crush: Matthew Black.
After the Isle of the Lost and Auradon were connected, everything seemed fine, except the magic started to get weaker and weaker. Mal, Evie, Jay, Carlos, Uma, Gil, and Harry just think that something is taking all of the magic, but nope. And then they think someone must be, but nope again. That’s until Ben finds an old scroll and book, the book explaining how Wonderland magic has been creeping into Auradon, but it doesn’t have the madness to it since it lost that when it got to Auradon, and both rulers agree to just let it happen.
Matthew was Bruce Wayne’s childhood friend—his brightest light in an otherwise shadowed life. Always cheerful, always kind, Matthew was Bruce’s "ray of sun." But one day, without warning or goodbye, Matthew vanished. Even with all his resources and detective skills, Bruce couldn’t find him.
In Gotham, the legend of the Cheshire Cat is a whispered myth — a trickster from another world, spoken of in bedtime stories to scare children. But the myth is real.
Matthew and Alastor knew each other when they were still alive. From the beginning, Alastor developed an intense and unwanted obsession with Matthew—one that went far beyond fascination. Matthew’s words, expressions, and offhand comments controlled Alastor’s moods and thoughts, something Alastor despised about himself. He hated that Matthew could affect him so deeply without trying, that his attention or lack of it held so much power over him.
Metropolis had become a battlefield of shadows. A wave of sophisticated sabotage attacks pushed the Justice League to intervene, and when Bruce Wayne was pulled into the chaos, he didn’t come alone. Matthew Wayne — also known as the elusive vigilante Phantom — joined him, much to the League’s surprise. Cold, sarcastic, and calculating to a fault, Matthew's presence was anything but comforting. He wasn’t a hero in the traditional sense, nor did he try to be. His combat style was lethal, his trust nearly impossible to earn, and yet, Bruce insisted on having him there. Unbeknownst to the League, and even to Bruce at first, Matthew had his own reason for coming to Metropolis — a buried, personal mission.
Matthew Wayne is the biological son of Bruce Wayne—a detail that raises no eyebrows in the Bat Family, considering how many vigilante protégés Bruce has unofficially adopted over the years. What is surprising, however, is how much Matthew mirrors Jason Todd: morally ambiguous, justice-driven, and unflinching in his methods. He’s not interested in rules—only results.
Matthew D’Amico, a world-famous fashion model known for his fierce presence and luxurious taste, travels the globe signing contracts to model high-end clothes, jewelry, and perfume. Unknown to the public, he’s also the estranged son of Vincenzo D’Amico, the elusive leader of a global mafia empire, a legacy Matthew refuses to embrace. On a trip to Gotham for a modeling campaign, Matthew meets Damian Wayne—aka Robin—and the two quickly grow close, eventually entering a secret relationship. As they uncover each other’s true identities, they bond over their shared struggle to escape the shadows of their powerful, dangerous fathers. Everything seems perfect until Jason Todd casually adds Matthew to the BatFamily group chat, sparking chaos and suspicion among the team. When news of Matthew’s presence in Gotham reaches the criminal underworld, the city teeters on the edge of a gang war, forcing Matthew to confront his past and prove where his loyalty truly lies—not with the D’Amico name, but with the life he’s built, and the boy he’s come to love.
Matthew Volkov was the kind of person that immediately stood out at Ouran Academy, and not in the way the school usually admired. While most students carried themselves with polished elegance and soft smiles, Matthew looked completely out of place — almost intimidating. He came from an extremely wealthy Russian family with old money and dangerous connections, though nobody knew much about them beyond rumors. He wore expensive dark clothing instead of the clean preppy style everyone at Ouran seemed obsessed with, usually covered in silver jewelry, rings, layered chains, and heavy designer boots that echoed against the marble floors. His black eyeliner was always perfectly done despite how careless he acted, making his sharp eyes look even colder whenever he glared at someone. Strangely, despite his rough appearance and permanently annoyed expression, he always smelled sweet, expensive cologne lingering around him wherever he went, something warm and addictive that people noticed immediately the second he walked into a room.
Your male OC is a pure-blood wizard sorted into Hufflepuff, a placement that confuses nearly everyone because he embodies none of the house’s usual warmth or kindness, instead carrying himself with sharp pride, biting sarcasm, and an almost cruel demeanor that keeps people at a distance, his reputation built on cold stares, cutting words, and a refusal to let anyone get close, as if there’s something beneath the surface he refuses to let anyone see, and that contradiction alone is what first catches the attention of Mattheo Riddle, who is used to control, fear, and people either admiring or avoiding him, yet finds himself unable to ignore someone who neither fears him nor seeks his approval, leading to a growing fixation as Mattheo begins watching him from afar, studying the way he isolates himself despite being surrounded by Hufflepuffs, noticing the tension in his posture, the quiet anger in his eyes, and the way he seems constantly on edge, as if daring the world to challenge him, which quickly turns into deliberate encounters—cornering him in corridors, provoking him with low, dangerous remarks, testing his limits just to see how far he can push before your OC snaps, and unlike everyone else, your OC doesn’t back down, meeting Mattheo’s intensity with equal hostility, their interactions charged with sharp insults, lingering eye contact, and an unspoken tension that feels more like a battle than anything else, yet beneath it all Mattheo becomes increasingly obsessed, not with breaking him, but understanding him, sensing that his cruelty is a shield rather than his true nature, while your OC grows irritated and unsettled by Mattheo’s persistence, because no matter how harsh or dismissive he is, Mattheo never walks away, instead becoming more intrigued, more possessive, more determined to get under his skin, until their constant clashes blur into something deeper—arguments that last too long, moments where neither of them leaves, a shift from hatred to something dangerously consuming—forcing your OC to confront the fact that for the first time, someone sees through him and refuses to let him hide, while Mattheo, driven by fixation rather than affection at first, realizes too late that what started as curiosity has turned into something far more intense, something neither control nor pride can easily contain. Mattheo soon realizes far to late he has fallen for someone he was not planning to fall for and for the first time he was terrified of something.
Adonis, the favored and personally named son of Aphrodite, has always been treated less like a child and more like an extension of love itself—beautiful, untouchable, and never meant to feel anything real. Forbidden by his mother to ever fall in love, he grows into a reckless flirt who treats affection like a game, charming anyone and everyone while caring for almost no one beyond a small circle that includes Percy Jackson, Annabeth Chase, and Grover Underwood; so when a quest is assigned to retrieve the Heartstring of Eros—an artifact capable of twisting love into obsession or breaking it entirely—Adonis is forced to join them alongside Luke Castellan, the seemingly reliable leader who is secretly already a traitor working for Kronos. From the beginning, Adonis treats Luke like everyone else—flirting, teasing, provoking—but Luke, who initially sees him as nothing more than a useful distraction, finds himself drawn in despite himself, especially as the artifact begins amplifying emotions, turning harmless banter into something sharper, more possessive, and dangerously real. As the quest grows more perilous, Luke subtly manipulates their path toward his true goal while Adonis, for the first time, begins to slip—moments of genuine concern breaking through his careless persona, especially when he puts himself in harm’s way without thinking, leaving Luke unsettled by how much it affects him. By the time they reach the artifact, the tension fractures completely: Percy and Annabeth realize Luke’s betrayal, Grover tries to hold the group together, and Luke finally drops the act, asking Adonis to come with him—not as a pawn, but as something he doesn’t fully understand anymore; caught between everything he’s been taught and everything he’s starting to feel, Adonis is forced to confront the one thing he’s spent his life avoiding, realizing too late that what he feels isn’t a game, and that Luke was never just another passing amusement, leaving him with a choice that will either shatter his mother’s control or prove she was right to never let him love at all.
Your male OC is a pure-blood wizard from one of the Sacred 28 families, raised in a strict, elitist environment where blood status and reputation mean everything, sorted into Slytherin and known for being elegant, cold, and untouchable, the kind of person who walks into a room and immediately silences it with nothing but a glance, someone who has been taught his entire life to look down on “blood traitors,” especially families like the Weasleys, yet despite all of that, Fred Weasley and George Weasley could not care less about his status, his family name, or the expectations placed on him, because the only thing they care about is him, and once they notice him sitting stiffly at the Slytherin table with that perfectly controlled expression, they immediately decide he’s far too serious and far too pretty to be left alone, turning him into their new obsession as they begin relentlessly inserting themselves into his life—sitting beside him uninvited, teasing him in front of others, calling him nicknames like “prince” or “pretty boy,” slipping enchanted notes into his belongings, and provoking reactions out of him just to watch the rare cracks in his composure, while he initially responds with cold disdain, sharp insults, and constant attempts to push them away, insisting they’re beneath him and that he wants nothing to do with them, yet he doesn’t walk away as quickly as he should, and slowly, against everything he was raised to believe, he finds himself drawn to their chaos, their confidence, and the way they treat him not like a title but like a person, which creates a growing internal conflict as he struggles between loyalty to his family—who would be furious and possibly disown him if they knew—and the undeniable pull he feels toward the twins, who in turn only become more determined , more persistent, and more openly affectionate, cornering him emotionally until the tension finally snaps in a moment of vulnerability, whether through anger, fear, or desperation, leading him to give in despite himself, and from that point on the relationship becomes a chaotic but deeply intense dynamic where the twins are both playful and fiercely protective of him, always working in sync and always getting what they want, while he, once cold and distant, begins to soften only for them, learning to question everything he was taught and realizing that love doesn’t have to be controlled, perfect, or approved, even if it means standing against his own family to keep them.
Matthew and Alastor knew each other when they were still alive. From the beginning, Alastor developed an intense and unwanted obsession with Matthew—one that went far beyond fascination. Matthew’s words, expressions, and offhand comments controlled Alastor’s moods and thoughts, something Alastor despised about himself. He hated that Matthew could affect him so deeply without trying, that his attention or lack of it held so much power over him.