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fandom5k2020-03-10 09:17 pm
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Fandom Promotion
Many of us are already planning which fandoms to offer and request! Nominations open in about a week, which may give some of us enough time to pick up a new canon before signups begin.
Use this post to promote your canon or to coordinate nominations with other fans.
Use this post to promote your canon or to coordinate nominations with other fans.
The Strange Case of Starship Iris
(Anonymous) 2020-03-11 03:12 am (UTC)(link)If you like canon f/f between leads, lots of queer characters, found family, loyalty kink, and a tight-knit spaceship crew persisting through unfair circumstances, you might like this show!
no subject
* Canon M/M
* Body horror! So very much body horror.
* Cool, terrifying, and terrifyingly cool supernatural creatures
* Lonely, traumatized people learning to trust each other
* Sexy, sexy cannibalism
The short version: Ie, an everyman high school student, finds himself the victim of a human trafficking operation meant to turn humans into livestock for a mysterious alien race. In his efforts to escape, he joins forces with two dubiously-moral men, who are the real stars of the show:
Natsune is an escaped lab experiment who was bred to be nothing but a constantly-regenerating source of meat. Living life as a chew toy for aliens hasn't given him the best social skills, but he's doing his best to shut down the system that caused him to exist in the first place.
Yamabiki is a young science prodigy turned pseudo-mad-scientist. He's openly bisexual and wields his sexuality as a weapon/defense mechanism, thanks to some traumatic past experiences. His father-in-law is part of the team that created Natsune, but Yamabiki himself isn't so keen on pleasing their alien overlords - especially given his crush on Natsune.
The whole series is available on Amazon, Google Play, iBooks...basically anywhere that sells licensed manga. It's complete at 7 (relatively short) volumes.
Content warnings: There's absurd amounts of violence, blood, and guts. There's several scenes of noncon, both implied and onscreen (F>M, M>F, and M>M).
no subject
(Anonymous) 2020-03-12 12:20 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
no subject
(Anonymous) 2020-03-12 01:07 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
Dimension 20: Fantasy High & The Unsleeping City
Fantasy High
Dimension 20 is an actual play D&D show, with Fantasy High being its first season. Season 1 is 17 episodes of around 1.5 hours each, and all up for free on YouTube. It's on the longer side but it's very addictive and super easy to binge watch. Season 2 is longer, and isn't necessary to watch (since Season 1 wraps up most of its storylines nicely and there's a long canon gap before Season 2). Some of Season 2 is up on Youtube, but if you wanted to watch it all, you can get a free trial on Dropout for 7 days to catch it all.
Fantasy High's elevator pitch is "what if John Huges directed D&D?" I'd recommend giving it until the end of episode 2, when some wild shit goes down and mostly everyone gets hooked from there.
It has:
- Adorable dumbasses in spades which leads to great team dynamics and really funny cast who do a lot of incredible roleplaying work and fantastic character development
- A fantastic mystery that makes sense, is foreshadowed well, and that is puzzled out with some very awkward but accurate teenage antics
- Space for both casefic and just pure fluff or angst!
- Canon queer characters (3 in season 1, at least 7 so far in season 2), plus a non-canon m/m ship that may or may not come to fruition (PLEASE let it come to fruition)
- Really well done autistic representation in one of the love interests in season 2
- Dragons! Pirates! A nofap warlock baddie! Car chases! Sad dads! Ice cream dates! Awkward teenagers trying their best! NiceGuys(TM)! Lunch tables that could kill you! Tearful and touching moments with families! Anarcho-socialist halflings!
It's good. It's very, very good -- and accessible to those who have never played D&D before!
The Unsleeping City
Dimension 20's second season of actual play D&D was The Unsleeping City, which has the same players as Fantasy High! It's set in New York, which has a hidden magical plane that the average person can't see, as well as sixth borough made of dreams. Three player characters are well-established in the magical world, and three player characters are completely new. Among their number includes the "vox populi", the voice of the people, and the "vox phantasma" the voice and protector of the dream borough.
The first 8 episodes are available on YouTube, after that, unfortunately the rest is on Dropout (but again, you can get a 7-day free trial!).
It has:
- A fantastic cast with intense, secretive and many-layered backstories that come out over the course of play, as well as history between the characters. There's also a lot of tension between some of them, explored in a genuine and interesting way
- A villain that is obvious straight away so instead of mystery, you get all this juicy tension and find out a lot about the character. They are based on an actual historical figure, too!
- A trans player character (played by a trans player!)
- More lore than you can shake a stick out, and very lived-in feel (plus lots of NY references)
- A magical bodega cat! A battle during a broadway show! Moving and sad explorations of failed relationships! A talking dog made of light! Genuine friendships that grow over the course of the story! Revolutionary rats! Terrifying vampire clubs!
I started watching it on Saturday, I'm already just a few episodes away from the end (and I've been busy these last few days!). It's not as spontaneously fun as Fantasy High, nor as quite as charming (it's hard to be as charming as FH!), but I'd say that the story is much richer to make up for that, as well as players who have matured in their character building.
Watch Dogs
(Anonymous) 2020-03-12 01:21 am (UTC)(link)Watch Dogs is the first entry into the series, a crime noir story following an enraged former criminal that's turned his attention (and his violence) towards the circles he used to occupy. It has:
- a seedy underbelly of crime
- a completely amoral villain protagonist
- actual consequences for that villain protagonist's actions
- frankly the funniest amoral villain sidekick alive
- no really, Jordi Chin makes everything worth it
- surprisingly robust third person shooting and stealth mechanics, even if the hacking mechanics are all contextual and a little weak
But maybe edgy manpain isn't your thing. Maybe you're looking at that and going 'jesus, not another one'. Maybe you want your hacking game to, like, actually revolve around hacker culture.
Watch Dogs 2 is the lighter, funnier, more poignant little brother to the first game. When hackers went 'hey, that's stupid' about some of the key plot points in the first game, the devs listened and actually did their homework for the second. If WD1 is a cold and rainy Chicago night, then WD2 is a sunny breath of fresh West Coast air. It has:
- a black male main character and
- racism, both overt and more insidious in the tech industry, acknowledged and combatted
- a canonically autistic side character who's treated with respect
- literally an entire mission revolving around kink and porn shoots
- found family/nakama
- genuinely some of the best third person freeroam shooting and parkour in an urban crime sim
- much more nuanced and useful hacking mechanics
- the ability to do a full stealth/no death run that's supported by the level design
- a long, hard look at what it means to be a product in the social media tech giant future we live in now
Both games have a full playtime of roughly 18 hours including side missions (but not all side content, since WD1 is chock full of things to bullshit around with for hours without achieving much plotwise.) If picking up a new game isn't something you're up to, WD1's cutscenes movie (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWlKjw3LBDk) runs about five hours including the dialogue between missions, while WD2's cutscenes move (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNyn4Hg8Yyo) runs about the same, with between missions dialogue and not including DLC content.
Aiden is a depressed mess that fucks up his own life and never quite digs himself out of that hole he deservedly put himself in.
Marcus is an empathetic darling who always gets back up after getting knocked down and is going to make the world a better place, no matter who tries to stop him.
Both of them are really really good games in their own way, with a taste of variety to boot!
Content Warnings: Both games feature privacy invasions where the player is functionally a voyeur and those include references to suicide, eating disorders, abuse, and drug use, and both games have human trafficking subplots. WD1 has onscreen torture and objectification/dehumanization of women. Both games feature a sudden and abrupt main cast member death. Also, y'know, guns.
Re: Watch Dogs
(Anonymous) 2020-03-13 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)Re: Watch Dogs
(Anonymous) 2020-03-19 12:02 pm (UTC)(link)Re: Watch Dogs
(Anonymous) 2020-03-21 07:53 pm (UTC)(link)There's no melee combat (only takedowns which are an instant KO if you get close enough to use them) and in WD1 you start with a stealth pistol that can headshot and one-hit kill most enemies, so it's more forgiving towards shooting gameplay. WD2 can be beat without shooting anyone at all, and Marcus's stungun is a 1KO like the rest of the melee takedowns.
Re: Watch Dogs
(Anonymous) 2020-03-23 11:08 am (UTC)(link)All for the Game - Nora Sakavic
Features:
+Canon M/M
+Underdog sports story
+Strange mafia and pro-sports politics
+Not quite team-as-family, but team-growing-to-like-and-protect-each-other-eventually
+Ridiculous amounts of whump, like, seriously, ridiculous
+Rape and torture and abuse recovery
+Lots of great characters
+Characters breaking free of abusive situations and recovering from trauma
+Often described as "very iddy". If it even partially hits your id, you're likely to have a good time
Warnings, that may be features, as non-spoilery as possible:
+Rape and past CSA
+Violence and torture, somewhat graphic
+Abusive relationships, including a "human pet" sort of thing
+Alcoholism
+Drug use, drug abuse, noncon drugging, legally enforced drug use (+very medically inaccurate drug stuff)
What I'm (probably) Requesting:
Neil/Andrew and/or Neil/Riko (or Neil & Riko).
Neil/Andrew is a codependent, unhealthy, but somewhat functional canon relationship between two very damaged people. Trust, promises, protection, and finding purpose and some form of joy instead of surviving day by day. Canon or AUs, I like many things!
Neil/Riko is a non-canon ship between a torturer and someone he sees as property. I like sadistic rapist Riko or Riko catching feelings or Riko being less fucked up, depending on the story. Really, I just love anything with these two together, especially if it involves Riko being brought down to Neil's level somehow.
The books are available from Amazon Books. The first book, The Foxhole Court, is free and the other two, The Raven King and The King's Men, are $0.99 each. All of this for $2 USD!
Feel free to ask me about anything else, I'm happy to answer questions or search my copies for anything you'd like!
MARIMASHITA! IRUMA-KUN
(Anonymous) 2020-03-12 01:59 pm (UTC)(link)However, Sullivan, the demon in question has no ill-will towards our protagonist! Quite the contrary, the only reason he bought a human was that he needed a grandson! Iruma, who is physically incapable of saying "no" to anyone agrees to his request to become this old demon's grandson. Sullivan, of course, wants the best for his grandson and so arranges for Iruma to attend a school. A demon school. Which Iruma will need to attend while hiding his human origins, as humans are not supposed to be in demon world. Iruma sets up to the school with an iron-clad plan to not stand out...
...which falls apart immediately, because Sullivan is none other than the principal of the demon school and has every intention of bragging to the entire shool about his grandson. Things only downhill from there with Iruma accidentally impressing entire school by reciting a dangerous incantation and ending the day by unintentionally suplexing another student. Who is so impressed that he swears eternal loyalty to our protagonist.
Yeah, the not standing out plan might need some reworking.
Marimashita! Iruma-kun is a comedy, but more of the old-school kind. Rather than recent comedies that mostly rely on subversing tropes, Iruma-kun is more of a wacky comedy in the vein of Ranma 1/2 with a colorful quirky cast that keeps bouncing off each other. The series is also extremely wholesome. Even though Iruma keeps getting into dangerous situations that seem extremely unlucky, the end result always ends up positive for him. Iruma quickly gains friends in the new school and ends up enjoying his new life much more than he expected.
The characters are honestly, the biggest stand-out. Iruma seems like a pretty static character at a first glance, but as people start supporting him he quickly starts developing. It's a theme through the series that all characters are more than they seem at a first glance. Even professor Nebarious, who is a local version of professor Snape, ends up being much more interesting character with justified reasons to dislike the main character. Iruma-kun also has some really nice worldbuilding. Even though a lot of elements feel random at first, the more time we spend in the demon world the more coherent it feels. All the weirdness just fits together and creates and entertaining mix that's really interesting to watch.
The first season of Iruma-kun anime is complete and available on Crunchyroll (https://www.crunchyroll.com/welcome-to-demon-school-iruma-kun). You can watch it for free even without an account. The second season had been announced, but the first season with it's 23 episodes is a satisfying watch on it's own. There are no major differences between manga and anime adaptations so if you can more easily get access to manga, or you decided to pick up manga after finishing the anime then there should be no continuity problems.
David Blaize by E.F. Benson
A gently humorous novel about boys at an English boarding school in the early 20th century. This time with canon homoerotic feelings and angst.
What Makes It So Iddy
This is a boarding school novel where the boys are explicitly flirting, whipping one other with racquet handles, fainting in one another's arms, cuddling in bed, reciting romantic poetry to one another while swimming naked, repressing their desperate feelings for one another, literally actually saving one another's lives with the power of love... I can't.
The iddiness largely resides with David's best friend Frank Maddox. Frank is handsome, brilliant, athletic, friendly—and yet not at all annoying—and the object of David's intense hero worship. Frank's only 'flaw' is that he is gay and desperately in love with David, and has also hooked up with other boys. His internalized homophobia and repression and self-loathing are deliciously angsty. But he's also really fun and playful. He's a wonderful creation.
There's a sequel is about David's years at Cambridge that you don't need to read to fulfill most requests. Since Frank is three years older, they don't overlap much, and Frank is away being an archaeologist in Greece (swoon!) for large swaths of it. But the parts he's in are fantastic, and their UST is possibly even more ridiculous than in the first book. And they don't get canon het endings! \o/
Where You Can Find It
'David Blaize' is free on Gutenberg here. I found an online copy of the sequel here. The sequel is, to be honest, a bit dull, given that Frank keeps leaving. My recommendation is to read it on a web browser, control-F-ing for his name and reading only the parts where his name shows up a lot. That's what I did.
There's also a totally unconnected book called "David Blaize and the Blue Door" that is the author's attempt to write an Alice In Wonderland-style novel. It's set when David was really little and has no connection to the other books. (I haven't read it and I don't know of anyone in the fandom who has; don't bother.)
Likely Requests
Frank/David is, obviously, the main fandom OTP, and there are often requests for them. However, I'll be requesting Frank/many various crossover men.
Designated Survivor: 60 Days
(Anonymous) 2020-03-12 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)A bomb blows up the National Assembly Building and kills the Korean President and many high-ranking politicians. Park Mu-Jin, Minister for Environment with six months experience, is the highest ranking official left alive. He is now the Acting President for sixty days until the next election all while there's a hunt for the bombers behind the attack.
The show involves a lot of political tension, the threat of future attacks and threat of war. There's a huge focus on the growing mutual loyalty and respect between Park Mu-Jin and the staff over the series and how their relationships develop. The show starts with Park Mu-Jin agreeing to allow the staff to do all the work as they have more experience having worked under the previous President but he steadily grows as a politician and takes control when he feels he needs to. There's also a strong dedication between Park Mu-Jin and his family, who have been dragged into it all as well. There's a lot of questions about who can be trusted - both in identifying the bomber(s) and the day to day politics - and who they want to be able to trust. There's a fair amount of hurt/comfort, in the first few episodes alone there's a focus on the grief and stress all of the characters are feeling, and there's more later on (both physical and emotional).
The second part of the plot is focused on the Terrorism Task Force hunting down the culprits, uncovering the truth and getting involved in multiple action and chase scenes.
It's available on Netflix. One episode title does contain a spoiler and so do the preview stills so don't scroll too far ahead if you want to avoid them.
Psmith - by P.G. Wodehouse
Short novels about a hilarious, eccentric, brilliant, badass, dandy hero in early 20th century England. In almost every book, Psmith ends up throwing himself on his sword in various hilarious and dramatic ways for the benefit of his best friend, Mike, who is a non-eccentric, everyman cricket star.
Why You Will Love It
Do you like completely devoted, self-sacrificing best friends who are immensely shippable? Do you like mysteries, heists, hijinks, and action scenes? Do you like some of the masterfully funny writing the English language has ever produced?
This series often gets recced as a good example of the English boarding school genre; however, only the first book takes place at school. The rest put the boys in a variety of locales and situations – from dreamy English castles to New York City to London.
The greatest draws of the series are:
• Psmith's dialogue – The guy talks non-stop and it's always so weird and funny and charming. But then, when necessity demands, he will very calmly, very sexily take you down and make you squirm. He's also surprisingly great in a fist or gunfight. He's perfect.
• Odd Couples – Mike is the opposite of Psmith in terms of dialogue and temperament. They complement one another so well, and he's such a woobie. Wodehouse allows Mike to wallow in so much angst, which makes Psmith's sly resolutions all the more satisfying.
Where You Can Find It
All four books are free for legal download on Gutenberg HERE. You don't need to read all of them, but just fyi, the order is:
• Mike & Psmith – classic boarding school hijinks | meet-cute | devoted roommates | so much loyalty porn
• Psmith In the City – living and working in London | devoted roommates | even more loyalty porn
• Psmith, Journalist – Psmith vs NYC gangsters | gun fights | running a newspaper | a ridiculously shippy Ch2 & Epilogue
• Leave It to Psmith – country estate hijinks | identity porn | grand larceny | comedy of errors
'Mike & Psmith' or 'Psmith In the City' are the most relevant for most requests, so it's best to start with one of those. 'Leave It to Psmith' is a greater masterpiece, and is the one I read first to fall in love with Psmith; unfortunately, Mike doesn't appear much (even though he is Psmith's main motivation. I'd read 'Psmith, Journalist' last.
If, after reading these, you find yourself (like me) equally in love with Mike as with Psmith, try the prequel called simply "Mike", found on Gutenberg here. It's a classic boarding school novel about Mike before he met Psmith. I wouldn't recommend starting with it, since it's not as interesting as the Psmith ones (and therefore might bore you and make you stop before you get to the good stuff). It isn't remotely necessary to understand the later ones.
Extra Note
I know a lot of people consider writing Wodehouse fic intimidating ; however, this is not Jeeves. Mike's canonical 3rd person POV is incredibly straightforward and simple. I promise. Please? Pretty please?
Spacelords
Spacelords is a F2P third-person shooter/brawler about a group known as Raiders of the Broken Planet, who were recruited by an alien in order to repel the human invasion of his planet. You can watch all the cutscenes here and I've compiled most of the lore related to my favorite characters here.
You should check it out if...
✓ "Hot badasses beating the shit out of each other IN SPACE" sounds like your thing.
✓ You like nasty, buff, immortal metalhead mercenaries.
✓ You like bratty hackers that are universally agreed to be little shits.
✓ You're tired of men being flat as a board. Spacelords knows its male characters are hot and they have actual asses holy shit.
✓ You want a game with such a chill fandom there's an entire canon-compliant visual novel for it.
Richard II
Selling Points:
-It's a play! If you're good with Early Modern English/reading Shakespeare, or you have a couple of hours to kill by watching a filmed version, you can consume the whole canon in like a day.
-The language is absolutely fucking stunning, and if you are at all inclined towards "one tiny thing is different" AUs, a lot of the recurrent metaphors make it ridiculously easy to AU in a "just add magic/daemons/dragons/weird ceremonies constructed entirely for the id" kind of way. Also, it just makes the whole thing an absolute joy to read, or to listen to.
-Characters you can read in many, many different and valid ways. Both of the main characters (Richard and Henry Bolingbroke) can easily be interpreted in more or less charitable fashions depending on how you feel about them and upon the staged/filmed version of the play you've seen.
-So much medieval political drama. Lots of backstabbing and land-grabbing and tower-imprisoning.
-Also, tons and tons of whump potential.
-If you like to fall into research rabbit-holes, the historical events upon which it is based are fascinating.
-So much slashy tension between multiple different combinations of characters, especially pronounced in certain versions. Depending on the production, it's quite possible to get a "bitter exes" vibe off Henry and Richard, and at least one production (RSC 2014) has given Richard a romance with the Duke of Aumerle. Then there are Bushy, Bagot, and Green, who can be easily shipped with Richard or each other.
-If you, like me, are shallow and mainly watch period dramas for the pretty clothes, there are quite a few versions with lovely costuming, Hollow Crown's rendition in particular.
Versions:
Since this is a four hundred (give or take a few decades) year old play, there are a whole lot of ways to consume it. Reading is a good bet, and the full text of the play can be found in a bunch of different places online (MIT has a very basic full text here, Folger Digital Texts has a rather more eye-pleasing version here, and Open Source Shakespeare is right over here) if you can't access it in a physical edition/don't want to. As for filmed productions, you'll probably have the best time finding either the Hollow Crown version (part of a BBC project producing films of all the histories save King John and Henry VIII) starring Ben Whishaw as Richard and Rory Kinnear as Henry Bolingbroke. Patrick Stewart is in that one too, as is The Guy Who Played Albert in Victoria. This tends to be my favorite of the popular variants, just because both Richard and Henry feel very human in it. But many other people are equally if not more fond of the 2014 filmed RSC production with David Tennant as Richard. This one's definitely more overtly gay, if that's a plus for you, but it's also for lack of a better word, a nastier, darker production in many ways. There are quite a few other filmed variants floating around out there, most of which are varying levels of old, which could be a plus or a minus for you depending on your tolerance for what are essentially made-for-TV movies from the fifties, sixties, and seventies.
What I'm Probably Requesting:
I love Henry/Richard. A lot. In all variants, both consensual and not-so-much. They're kind of my forever OTP and again, there are quite a few different ways to interpret them, so that's fun. It is also highly probable that I wind up requesting Richard/Duke of Aumerle, because they have a pretty slashy relationship that's catnip if you're into loyalty tropes or betrayal or whatnot (note: a lot of productions slot Aumerle into an ending role he does not fulfill in the actual text. I can only assume this is for maximum angst points, but it is also very much Canon to These Productions Only).
Anyhow, these are my Thoughts On Richard II. Sorry for this absurd ramble of a promo, but please do consider this wonderful play!
Hannibal (TV)
- Weird dream sequences!
- Very good imagery you can pick apart and meta about for days
- Canon-ish M/M (like, they don't kiss, but...)
- Pretentious dialogue
- Whump by the dozen
It follows the life of Will Graham, an eccentric FBI academy teacher who goes back to working in the field as a profiler, before a traumatic experience sends him into being a patient of esteemed psychiatrist Dr. Hannibal Lecter. But, of course, Hannibal holds many secrets.
Warnings:
- Gore. So much gore.
- Implied and explicit cannibalism
- Body horror
- Implied CSA and rape in various episodes in season 2, and in late season 3 as well
- Medical abuse (withholding medical information from a patient, pretending nothing is wrong with them, provoking seizures and time loss; seen in the last three episodes of season 1 and in some flashbacks in season 2)
- Gaslighting (Common theme through season 1)
- Nonconsensual drug use (two scenes in season 2)
- One scene that I don't know how to describe but that upset me. Someone puts a tube down someone's throat without their consent and without them being quite conscious. Choking noises. Very reminiscent of a rape scene. It's a flashback in season 2; stay safe.
Where to watch it:
It's on Amazon Prime for the US. Everywhere else it depends. You can find it pretty easily on pirating sites.
It's 3 seasons of 13 episodes each, and it is very bingeable.
What I plan to request:
- Will/Hannibal! Them being disasters together after the finale, learning how to love each other, the works.
- Will/Hannibal & Abigail. Just... murder family. I want murder family.
Sarazanmai
The anime follows Kazuki and his friends, Enta and Toi, as they get transformed into kappas by a mysterious kappa prince, Keppi, and defeat monsters and learn about themselves and each other along the way. Every time they defeat a monster, the boy who delivered the killing blow has one of his most embarrassing secrets leaked to the other two. There is also a secondary, fan-favorite storyline that involves the antagonists, Reo and Mabu. Coincidentally, their story is one of my favorite love stories of all time, although I can't say much more without spoiling.
One of the main themes of the anime is the conflict between "desire" and "love", and what that even means. But don't go into it thinking that the plot is going to say that "love" is inherently better, because it's a bit more complicated than that!
If you live in a country that can access these websites, it's available for streaming both on Funimation (dub) and Crunchyroll (sub). And if you want to do some more digging, there is also a prequel manga about Reo and Mabu that is set to be localized in English soon (although I'm sure scanlations are still floating around), and a now wiped in-character prequel Twitter account (also from Reo and Mabu's point of view) that was backed up and translated here, although be careful looking at it because the first tweet (as displayed by the website) is a major spoiler! There are also two light novels that retell/expand on the anime, but you probably won't be able to read them unless you can read Japanese because (to my knowledge) all English translations have been pulled from the internet due to their upcoming official localization.
Content warnings: a lot of butt jokes/butt imagery (so much so that I'd say this anime is probably NSFW despite it being neither porn nor excessively violent), unusual kink discussion including one brief BDSM scene, yakuza activity (including a waterboarding scene and drug references), police brutality, gun and fantasy violence (most is non-bloody, but there are a few bloody scenes), fantasy gore (a character repeatedly pulls out non-realistic organs out of another character), very heavily implied sexual abuse, harm to children/teens, on-screen character death, light gambling, smoking (Twitter only), suicidal ideation, unhealthy relationships (sibling, romantic, friendships)
I will probably be requesting ReoMabu and/or Otter (the Big Bad) fic.