4 Jawaban2026-07-07 13:41:02
Honestly, I find the fandom can lean a bit too heavily on the "soulmate AU" thing for them. Don't get me wrong, it's popular for a reason, but after the tenth coffee shop meet-cute it starts to lose the specific sting that makes their dynamic so compelling. The best ones for me dig into the philosophical rift—stories that really sit with the fact that Geto chose a path Gojo could never follow. I recently read one where Geto never leaves, and instead they both just slowly, painfully become different kinds of monsters together while trying to protect their students. It was less about romance and more about a shared, corrosive loneliness. That bleak co-dependence hits harder than any fluffy reunion fic for me.
And can we talk about the fix-its that actually fix nothing? The ones where Gojo seals Geto away in the Prison Realm instead of killing him, and they're just stuck in an endless, silent conversation for centuries. That's the real horror and the real tragedy, way more than a simple death. It preserves their connection in the worst possible way, which feels very true to the source material's vibe of beautiful, awful things.
I gravitate towards the "fuck or fight" tension too, but only when it's woven with that deep, fundamental grief. They're not just exes; they're ex-everything.
I'm always chasing that feeling of inevitable, world-ending divergence, you know?
3 Jawaban2026-07-09 18:46:21
My reading corner is basically drowning in Gojo x Geto fics lately, and I keep bumping into a few patterns. The big one is definitely Alternate Universe – No Jujutsu High. They're always running a café together or something. It's cute, a nice break from all the canon suffering, but honestly? It can get a little samey after a while. Like, I crave that specific dynamic of being the strongest together and then falling apart, and modern AUs sometimes sand the edges off that.
Another staple is the Fix-It, obviously. Fics that pick up right after Geto leaves, with Satoru chasing him down or trying a different argument. They're a balm for the soul, but I've seen some that rewrite Geto's entire motivation to make him more 'redeemable,' which kinda misses the point of his character for me. The tragedy is baked in.
The 'Five Minutes Late' trope gets used a lot too—Satoru arriving just a moment too late to stop Geto's massacre in Shinjuku. The angst potential is maxed out there. They're often paired with hurt/comfort where Geto is injured and Satoru has to care for him, blurring enemy lines. I'm a sucker for those, even if I can predict the beats.
3 Jawaban2026-07-09 04:29:46
The one I see pop up again and again is corruption arcs. Geto’s descent into a villain and Gojo’s refusal to follow him—or worse, deciding to join him—is such a rich vein of angst. People love exploring the moment Gojo might have snapped, what could have pushed him over the edge, or how he might try to pull Geto back from the brink after all those years. It’s all about that intense, broken loyalty.
Time-travel fix-its are also huge, which makes sense. The fandom is collectively traumatized by that one day in October. So many stories have Gojo going back, armed with future knowledge, trying to prevent Geto’s defection. The variations are fascinating—does he succeed? Does he make things worse? Does he just end up stuck in a time loop, reliving the failure over and over?
The college or childhood friends AU is a softer counterpart. Just them being dumb students at Jujutsu Tech, before everything went wrong. It’s pure, uncomplicated friendship with a slow-burn romantic undertone. Those stories are like a warm blanket—you know the tragedy is coming, but here, for a little while, they’re happy.
Body-sharing or soulmate AUs also pop up a lot, given the canonical ‘my one and only’ dialogue. Fics where they can feel each other’s pain, or see through each other’s eyes, or are forced into some magical binding. It’s a literalization of their already insane connection, with tons of potential for both hurt and comfort.
4 Jawaban2026-07-11 08:53:38
the Toji/Gojo dynamic is one of those pairings that shouldn't work on paper but absolutely thrives on tension. A huge trope I see is fix-it AUs, where Toji lives and their paths cross again under different circumstances. Writers love exploring the messy, violent intimacy of their connection—lots of hate sex that's more about exorcising their respective demons than romance, at least at first. The power imbalance is a huge draw, but it's often flipped; a living Toji has this raw, grounded strength that contrasts with Satoru's godlike but isolating power.
Another popular angle is the forced proximity scenario. They get stuck together on a mission, or maybe the higher-ups assign them as reluctant partners, leading to grudging respect and eventually something else. It's a slow burn fueled by barbed insults and near-death experiences. I've also noticed a subset of stories that reimagine their fight, with Toji choosing capture over a killing blow, which spirals into a really dark, obsessive captivity narrative. The appeal lies in the brutal honesty between them—no illusions, just two devastatingly powerful men who see each other more clearly than anyone else ever could.