stevita:
I would really love to see more genre fiction in weight gain circles. Give me fat or gaining detectives, vampires, space mercenaries, residents in Small Towns where Weird Stuff Keeps Happening, suburban drug kingpins forced into manufacturing contraband to keep their families afloat, cursed pirates, Royal concubines...basically take all the stuff people already love reading about and Make It Fat.
girlcrisis:
Twigzybird on here and Shrubberylogistics on Deviantart do a good job of exploring a wide range of genres in their weight gain fiction. It’s a difficult balance to strike though and takes a lot of talent to balance theme, plot, character development etc while keeping fat at the forefront of the story.
I would really love to see more genre fiction in weight gain circles. Give me fat or gaining detectives, vampires, space mercenaries, residents in Small Towns where Weird Stuff Keeps Happening, suburban drug kingpins forced into manufacturing contraband to keep their families afloat, cursed pirates, Royal concubines...basically take all the stuff people already love reading about and Make It Fat.
girlcrisis:
Twigzybird on here and Shrubberylogistics on Deviantart do a good job of exploring a wide range of genres in their weight gain fiction. It’s a difficult balance to strike though and takes a lot of talent to balance theme, plot, character development etc while keeping fat at the forefront of the story.
Feeder862, possibly the best writer here, and newbie BlackjackandBerries also have this talent in abundance.
I’m thinking of mixing up genres — like Westworld or Cowboys-and Aliens.
I also think that we could use more stories that explore classic myths, urban myths and fairytales. I do enjoy a good Hansel and Gretel re-imagining, but also I would love to see more from African, Asian and Latinex folklore with a feederism twist.
In fact, that brings up another thing missing in our story catalogue — racial and ethnic diversity.
4 years