đ ď¸đ âWhereâs the Love?â: The Struggles of Writing Gen Fanfiction
Every time I hit âpublishâ on a new fic, I brace myself â not for hate, not for mistakes, but for silence. And more often than not, that silence comes when Iâve written something without romance at its core.
Because letâs face it: if your fic doesnât have shipping, itâs statistically doomed to underperform.
đ According to AO3 data, more than 85% of bookmarked and hit-count-heavy fics are tagged with romantic or sexual pairings. And when you look at Tumblr reblogs, Twitter/X rec threads, and even fanfic awards? The trend is clear: love stories dominate. And if your fic is about found family, grief, personal growth, moral conflict, or slice-of-life friendship moments... well. Good luck breaking 500 hits.
And thatâs not wrong. Romance is powerful. Itâs emotional, itâs validating, and it drives plot with satisfying clarity. A well-written ship can change how we read canon â and ourselves.
But still. Sometimes I wish that a fic about a character rebuilding their identity post-trauma got the same attention as one where they kiss someone for the first time. That we could crave inner worlds as much as we crave intimacy.
đ Writing gen (general) fiction isnât just harder to get read. Itâs harder to get noticed, categorised, or even respected. You tag it as âgen,â and people assume itâs dry, boring, plot-only, or worse: that youâre playing it safe. That youâre not going deep enough.
But I am going deep. I just want to explore the ache of legacy. Or the cost of violence. Or what it means to be loyal when no one asks you to be. And yes, sometimes those things matter more than âwill they or wonât they.â
đ I've seen incredible character studies sink unnoticed while fluff-fics soar. And again: romance isnât the problem. The bias is.
We all say we love worldbuilding. Character arcs. Quiet moments. But fandom attention doesnât always reflect that. And for those of us who write gen, itâs easy to feel invisible.
I'm a romance writer, at least, always with a bit of romance. I shouldn't be complaining⌠but I am. Or rather, I reflect, I reflect on my own bias, on whether I review Gen fanfics or not, on how I organize my searches, on whether I'm being unfair to myself by not giving my soul different stories to feed on.
đ§ ⨠If youâre one of the readers who leaves kudos, reblogs, or comments on these kinds of fics â thank you. Youâre rare, and you make all the difference.
And if youâre a writer feeling discouraged? I see you. Your work is powerful. Even if it doesnât trend. Even if it doesnât get shouted about. Even if itâs read in silence, at 2 a.m., by someone who desperately needed it.
Keep writing. Not everything that matters gets bookmarked.
[Naoko Takeuchi]

















