What Are The Best Mass Effect Crossover Fanfiction With Fantasy Worlds?

2026-07-08 19:13:20
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Mixing starships and spells can go so wrong, but the best ones make it feel inevitable. The 'Dragon Age: Origins' crossover where Shepard is a Grey Warden recruit from a crashed shuttle is probably the most polished I've read—it treats the tech like strange magic and the darkspawn like a new kind of Reaper threat. That author really nailed the party banter vibe from the games.

There's another, less famous one crossing with 'The Witcher' that just sticks in my head. Shepard as a witcher-school graduate, biotics explained as a chaotic mutation. It's grimy and philosophical in a way the source material isn't, but it works because both series are about monstrous things and the people who hunt them. The prose gets a bit clunky in fight scenes, though.

I tend to avoid the high fantasy like 'Lord of the Rings' blends; the tone clash is usually too severe. But give me a setup where the Normandy crew lands in Skyrim and has to deal with the Thalmor? I'd read that mess in a heartbeat.
2026-07-11 13:27:58
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Adam
Adam
Favorite read: Aligned Fantasy
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Honestly, most fantasy crossovers try to force Shepard into a hero's journey template that doesn't fit. The interesting exception I found was a short 'Mass Effect'/'Elder Scrolls' fic focusing on Liara as an archaeologist stumbling into Blackreach. No chosen one nonsense, just scholarly curiosity meeting dwemer ruins, with implications about the Protheans that gave me chills. It was all about the setting interaction, not power fantasies.

I dropped a 'Game of Thrones' crossover after three chapters because it became obvious the writer just wanted Garrus to snipe Joffrey (which, fair, but write an original character then). The magic system integration is usually the weakest point—biotics already are space magic, so adding actual spells often feels redundant unless the writer is very careful with the rules.
2026-07-13 01:58:29
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Xena
Xena
Favorite read: The Alien Love Series
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Search for 'A Krogan in King Arthur's Court'—it's exactly what it sounds like, hilarious and surprisingly poignant. Wrex dealing with medieval politics and declaring a quest for a 'proper tankard' is a mood. It's a one-shot, but it understands the assignment: take one element, play it for all it's worth, don't overcomplicate the cosmology.
2026-07-14 10:13:41
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What are the best Mass Effect self insert fanfiction stories?

4 Answers2026-05-02 04:51:02
Man, diving into Mass Effect fanfics is like opening a treasure chest—some gems, some weird trinkets, but the self-insert ones? Oh boy. My all-time favorite has to be 'Spectre of a Ghost' where the protagonist isn’t just some overpowered newcomer but actually grapples with Shepard’s legacy. The writer nails the existential dread of living up to a hero while carving their own path. The dialogue with Garrus feels ripped straight from the games, all that banter about calibrations and existential turian poetry. Then there’s 'Citadel Dreams,' which starts as a cliché 'wake up in the universe' trope but twists into this meta commentary on how fans romanticize the setting. The author uses their SI to call out things like 'why does everyone ignore the volus?' or 'how do quarians even sit in those suits?' It’s hilarious but also low-key profound. The krogan OC in that one? Chef’s kiss.

Where can I find Mass Effect crossover fanfiction with multiple fandoms?

3 Answers2026-07-08 08:57:30
Navigating the massive maze of ME crossover fic really depends on what kind of 'multiple fandoms' you're after. I've spent a lot of time on Archive of Our Own; the tagging system is your lifeline. You start with the 'Mass Effect' fandom tag, then filter for crossovers and sort by the number of fandoms listed. It's clunky, but I've found some weirdly specific combos that way, like a 'Mass Effect'/'Dragon Age'/'Star Wars' trilogy that somehow made sense. There's also a shift in where people post these sprawling things. A dedicated story that tries to weld three or four big universes together often just lives on its own on FanFiction.net, because the author needs more control over the chapters and notes. The comments sections on those old-school sites can be like a mini-community, debating the lore clashes. I had one saved years ago that threw Commander Shepard into the 'Star Trek' universe with a dash of 'Babylon 5', but I think the author abandoned it after twenty chapters.
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