Where To Publish Mha Villain Oc Fanfiction Online?

2026-06-29 16:01:55 293
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4 Answers

Andrew
Andrew
2026-07-02 00:22:58
Try a dedicated fanfiction subreddit like r/BokunoheroFanfiction. You can post links to your work hosted anywhere, but more importantly, you can pitch your OC's concept in a text post first. Gauge interest, ask for beta readers, and see if your villain's angle resonates. I've found my best beta there—someone who really challenged my OC's motives and made the story twice as good before it ever hit AO3. It turns publishing from a solo act into a community workshop.
Nina
Nina
2026-07-02 07:04:30
I cross-post my MHA villain stuff on both AO3 and Wattpad, but they serve totally different purposes. AO3 is my archive—clean, organized, and where my most plot-heavy, gritty work goes. The feedback is usually more detailed, especially if you tag for 'Graphic Depictions Of Violence' or 'Morally Gray Characters'. Readers come prepared for the dark stuff.

Wattpad feels more social, almost like a serialized drama. The algorithm can push your OC story if you update frequently and use popular MHA tags like '#bnha' or '#villaindeku' (even if your story isn't about him, it gets eyes). My villain OC fic there got way more chapter-by-chapter reactions, emoji comments, and fanart prompts than anywhere else. The downside is the audience skews younger; sometimes they want redemption arcs faster than I'm writing them.
Jackson
Jackson
2026-07-03 20:59:30
Honestly? I started on Quotev. It sounds old-school, and it is, but there's a tight-knit community for OCs there that I haven't found elsewhere. It’s less about massive traffic and more about building a little circle of writers who trade stories and do collaborative prompts. The interface lets you create quizzes and polls about your OC, which is a fun way to get readers invested in their backstory.

For a villain OC, that slow-burn character investment can be gold. I posted a multi-chapter fic exploring a villain's descent after a failed UA exam, and the readers who stuck with it were incredibly loyal, theorizing in the comments every week. It never would have been discovered on a bigger site, but the quality of interaction was higher for me. Sometimes the best place isn't the biggest, but the one where your specific niche huddles together.
Holden
Holden
2026-07-05 14:38:43
So you've crafted an MHA villain OC and you're ready to throw them into the fray? I totally get the struggle of finding the right spot. My own chaotic neutral 'Bloodwrath' character spent ages in my drafts because I couldn't decide.

AO3 is, hands down, the most welcoming space for darker or morally ambiguous OCs in the 'My Hero Academia' fandom. The tagging system is a lifesaver—you can flag for 'OC-Centric' and 'Villain POV' so the right readers find it. The culture there is more receptive to complex, non-canon characters exploring the underbelly of hero society compared to some other platforms. I've seen fantastic villain-centric works there that dive into Stain's ideology or the Meta Liberation Army's politics, and readers genuinely engage with the philosophical questions.

FF.net might still have a bigger overall MHA archive, but in my experience, OCs—especially villains—tend to get buried unless they're tied to a popular ship. The review culture can be hit or miss, sometimes skewing toward less constructive feedback on original characters. Still, it's worth a cross-post for exposure if you don't mind sifting through more generic comments.

Don't overlook niche spaces like specific MHA-focused Discord servers or even Tumblr blogs dedicated to OC worldbuilding. The audience is smaller, but the conversations can be incredibly deep and rewarding, perfect for fleshing out your villain's motivations with other fans.
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