Anime Dads

One Night, Two Dads
One Night, Two Dads
Elena Carter’s world is turned upside down when her divorce is finalized, only to discover that she’s pregnant—and the father could be either her ex-husband, Ethan, or Daniel, the stranger she shared one unforgettable night with. Torn between the two men, Elena is forced to confront a past filled with betrayal and a future she never expected. As Ethan grows determined to fight for his unborn child, his jealousy and obsession threaten to destroy everything, while Daniel remains an elusive presence, caught up in his own life. With emotions running high and the truth slipping further out of reach, Elena must navigate a web of love, lies, and heartache. Will she ever know who the father is? Or will the consequences of her choices haunt her forever?
10
117 Bab
Shh, Don't Tell Daddy
Shh, Don't Tell Daddy
Trixie is wild and takes after her biker father. When she loses her position at her apprenticeship, she works in a club. As she dances her way to earn money, her boss asks her to do a private dance for a customer. After a lot of refusing, Trixie agrees. With the mask on, she dances for him, and after a passionate kiss and a little more, Trixie is left on the edge craving more. Not just more, but him.She leaves to visit her parents. Sitting by the pool, her dads shocked glare at her has her worried as he spots the tattoo. Her dad points it out to his best friend, Damon. Only a sickening look crosses Damon's face. Trixie soon finds out, the man who brought her pleasure just days before is the man she has always called Uncle, her fathers best friend, nearly twenty years older than her.As they start a secret affair that is meant to just be fun., someone falls in love. Unfortunately, that love puts Trixie in a difficult situation when her past shows up at her parents and uses every weakness she has. Will her dad find out about her affair with Damon? Will Damon and her dad find out the truth about the person from her past, and just how will they solve it?WARNINGS: This book contains scenes of BDSM, including but not limited to. Dominance, submission, bondage, edge play, and more. This book also includes Daddy kink. (Trixie calls Damon Daddy.) This book also contains scenes of abuse. The book also features scenes of rape. However, these scenes are blacked out and do not go into great detail.Ultimately, this book is smut, so most chapters will have some sexual references or sexual play.
9.9
56 Bab
My Nerd...My Baby Boy
My Nerd...My Baby Boy
Jace is a well known person at his school. *the jock. *the captain of the football team *the trouble maker. *the Greek god. *the bad boy. *the gay hottie. *the gay guy with the gay dad. *Mr. popular. Being sent to his dads office again, for the third time since the week started, his eyes landed on the most beautiful boy he had ever laid eyes on.'He's gonna be mine.' Jace put his mind to that but there's a lot he will have to learn about the boy and those things will break jace's heart but he would still fall for the boy of his dreams.
10
21 Bab
The World isn't as Ugly nor Beautiful as You Think
The World isn't as Ugly nor Beautiful as You Think
When I have a pen in my hand and paper before me, I think I want to write something to cast every despair in my pathetic life away. I have a figure of a depressed guy whose fate is too much: saving the world. He is not stupid nor even smart, he is not ugly nor even good looking. He is just a nijikon (A person who loves an anime character more than the real one) like me. He once thought to give up on life, but an event changes his life. I'm sure you guys start guessing how the story goes, but too bad, this one is different than the others.
10
73 Bab
THE REJECTED MATE, HER BEAST
THE REJECTED MATE, HER BEAST
Nora's father was a powerful witch who was presumed to have gone crazy and tried to kill the Leader of their coven. The coven shuns her for her dads wrong doings. Until one day she discovers that her father was trying to save them from the leader all along. She is determined to use her magic for good and master her skills in order to finish what her dad started. She becomes the strongest healing witch of the coven. The leader finds out about her plot and has her kept in the dungeons. One day the Beta of one of the strongest packs ever comes on behalf of the Alpha asking for help. The luna is pregnant and having complications with the pregnancy. Reluctantly they let Nora go to help her. She finds out that the Alpha is her destined mate and he rejects her immediately. She is heartbroken but stays with the Luna feeling obligated to see her through her pregnancy. It breaks her heart to see the mate happy with someone else. She works closely with Ja,ke in the clinic and she can see herself settling down with him. That is when the Leader of her coven decides to carry out his plan. Secrets are unraveled and the Alpha realizes that his luna isn't the perfect mate he had thought. Nora is determined to bring a stop to her coven leader and the werewolves are right by her side. She begins to see a different side to the Alpha and when everything is over who will she chose. The man who broke her heart or the one trying to piece it back together?
7.3
175 Bab
The Journey Towards My Dream
The Journey Towards My Dream
A war veteran and an anime fan as well, he got into anime by watching it with his grandson after his retirement, his grandson loved pokemon and so did he also came to like this world of pokemon where people didn't kill each other and people used to have fun with there pokemon, after watching Pokemon with his grandson and playing with him all day he got back his childhood which he could never experience due to the cruel war, and as of now our MC has turned 82 years old he was very satisfied with his life with no regrets and waiting for death to take him away but will death be is end or will it start a new beginning, a new legend.
4
80 Bab

Which Anime Dads Have The Most Memorable Quotes?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 09:43:04

I still get a little teary thinking about the dads who say the simplest, truest things. One that always hits me is Maes Hughes from 'Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood'—his whole vibe is a walking proclamation of family love. Lines like 'I love my wife!' (yes, screamed in the most sincere way possible) are ridiculous and sweet at once, and they remind me of late-night family chats over instant ramen.

Another dad who sticks with me is Goku from 'Dragon Ball Z'. He’s goofy and not the most responsible in everyday terms, but when he stands up and declares something like 'I am the hope of the universe,' it becomes surprisingly paternal—protecting your kids with reckless optimism is a kind of dad-heroism. And then there’s Naruto, now a father in 'Boruto': his mantra, essentially 'I won’t go back on my word,' morphs into this reassuring promise to his kids that safety and stubbornness can coexist. These quotes are memorable because they’re short, emotionally loud, and very human—exactly the kind of lines I find myself repeating when I want to sound brave to my friends.

Which Anime Dads Are The Most Protective Of Their Children?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 00:50:12

My pick for the most protective anime dads? Man, there are so many flavors of protectiveness and they hit me differently depending on the scene. I adore Maes Hughes from 'Fullmetal Alchemist' — he’s the kind of dad who’ll burst into the office with baby photos and then drop everything if his family’s in danger. That mix of goofy warmth and absolute seriousness when it matters gets me every time.

Then there’s Garp from 'One Piece'. He’s gruff and embarrassing in public, but he won’t let anyone harm Luffy; his protection is stubborn pride more than hugs. I’ve also got soft spots for Isshin Kurosaki in 'Bleach', who’s playful until someone threatens Ichigo, and for Daikichi in 'Usagi Drop' — he’s not the biological dad, but his fierce love and daily sacrifices for Rin feel like a masterclass in chosen-family protection. These dads show that being protective can look like laughter, tough love, or quiet sacrifice, and I love how each approach reflects different kinds of love.

What Lessons Do Anime Dads Teach About Fatherhood?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 18:16:16

There are so many little moments across shows that have stuck with me about what it means to be a dad. Watching 'Usagi Drop' made me rethink how ordinary gestures—picking up a snack, answering late-night cries, learning to braid hair—become the core of caregiving. I used to scoff at “slice-of-life” parenting scenes, but after seeing Daikichi quietly adapt his life, I started noticing how tiny, steady sacrifices build trust more than big speeches.

Then there’s the loud, warm kind of dad like 'Maes Hughes' in 'Fullmetal Alchemist'—the uncle-y figure who’s unabashedly proud and affectionate. He taught me that being visibly supportive and silly can make home feel safe; humor and vulnerability are parenting superpowers. On the flip side, complicated fathers like in 'Clannad' show that messed-up pasts don’t have to set the script for your kids forever. Redemption and patience are slow, not cinematic.

So I take from all of them an oddly practical mix: show up consistently, laugh with abandon, apologize when you mess up, and learn things with your kid. I sometimes catch myself humming a goofy theme song while fixing a toy and thinking, yep—this is the dad lesson I stole from anime. It’s less about perfection and more about presence, in tiny everyday ways.

Where Can I Find Anime Dads Ranked By Popularity?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 12:05:30

I get a kick out of hunting down those 'best dad' lists — they’re such a cozy, weird corner of fandom. If you want popularity-ranked lists of anime fathers, my go-to starting points are Ranker (they have user-voted lists), YouTube top-10 videos, and community polls on Crunchyroll or Anime News Network. I often open a Ranker page, then cross-check with MyAnimeList character pages and AniList user lists to see who consistently shows up. For Japanese-sourced popularity, look for Oricon or polls on anime news sites like Anime! Anime! — they sometimes run country-wide surveys that differ from English-speaking fans.

When I'm on the train I’ll skim Reddit threads (r/anime has frequent polls and threads like “best dads”), and I always peek at CBR or Screen Rant listicles because editorial picks add a different flavor than raw votes. Fandom wikis and character pages help if you want to filter by role (search tags like 'father' or 'parent'). A fun trick: search Google with "best anime dads poll" and then filter by the past year to catch recent popularity spikes tied to reboots or anniversary news.

Mixing sources is important because rankings depend on who’s voting — casual viewers, long-time fans, or region-specific communities. Cross-reference a few lists, and you’ll quickly spot the reliably loved characters (think of folks like Maes Hughes from 'Fullmetal Alchemist' or Soichiro Yagami from 'Death Note' who pop up everywhere). If you want, I can point to specific lists or help you make a short comparison of the top 10 from different sites.

Who Are The Strongest Anime Dads In Action Series?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 02:26:01

I get really hyped when someone asks about the strongest anime dads — it’s one of those topics that mixes punchy fight scenes with surprisingly tender parenting moments. For me, the obvious heavy hitters are Goku and Vegeta from 'Dragon Ball'. They both hit planet-shattering levels, but they bring different flavors: Goku’s raw, unpredictable power and Vegeta’s ruthless, trained precision. Watching them tag-team during key fights makes me cheer like I’m twelve again.

A few others I always bring up are Isshin Kurosaki from 'Bleach' (who drops jaw-dropping reveals about his past) and Van Hohenheim from 'Fullmetal Alchemist' (he carries cosmic-level baggage and power). Then there’s Naruto — not just a fighter but someone who grew into leadership and strength in 'Naruto' and beyond. I also adore Ging Freecss from 'Hunter x Hunter' as the enigmatic, insanely capable dad who chose adventure over family but still radiates competence.

If I’m ranking by pure combat potential plus the daddy vibes, I’d line them up with Vegeta and Goku near the top, Jotaro from 'JoJo's Bizarre Adventure' as the stoic powerhouse dad, and Hohenheim for the mystical/moral depth. Watching their fights while snacking on instant ramen on a late night is my comfort ritual — every punch feels like nostalgia and every dad moment lands differently.

Which Anime Dads Have Tragic Backstories On Screen?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 09:52:54

Some dads in anime hit me like a gut-punch when their pasts are revealed. Nighttime binges have me tearing up more than once because these fathers aren't just background — their histories shape entire stories.

Take Van Hohenheim from 'Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood'. Watching his centuries of isolation and the slow reveal of how he became both miracle and monster is heartbreaking. He’s the long-suffering dad who tries to atone for mistakes made before his children were even born. Then there’s Maes Hughes — he doesn’t get an ancient backstory, but his death and the way he cherished his family in even tiny scenes make his loss feel devastating. I still find myself clutching a pillow during his funeral scene.

Gendo Ikari from 'Neon Genesis Evangelion' is a different kind of tragic: manipulative, obsessed, and broken by loss. His refusal to connect is itself a product of grief, and that makes his cruelty sting harder. These shows make parenthood feel heavy and human; sometimes you just want to hug the TV screen.

Which Anime Dads Are Celebrated For Tough Love Parenting?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 19:57:16

If you like gruff, emotionally complicated dads who push their kids hard, you’re in for a treat—there’s a whole gallery of them across anime.

My top pick is Enji Todoroki from 'My Hero Academia'. Watching his arc is like watching someone slowly unclench. He’s the textbook case of tough love that starts as cold, even abusive, but gradually shifts toward accountability and attempts at real repair. I actually paused my binge a few times because those moments between him and Shoto hit so raw—like watching a real family try to rewire decades of harm.

Vegeta from 'Dragon Ball' is another favorite. He’s brutal with expectations but quietly proud; his relationship with Trunks went from strict drills to those rare, proud smiles. Then there’s Goku—he’s not the most present, but his training style with Gohan is tough-love by design, forcing growth through harsh lessons. For darker shades, Fugaku Uchiha in 'Naruto' and Grisha Yeager in 'Attack on Titan' show how imposing goals and secrets can warp children. And on the kinder-but-stern side, Isshin Kurosaki from 'Bleach' balances goofiness with surprising moments of serious guidance.

These dads aren’t perfect, but they’re compelling: they make you debate forgiveness, growth, and whether tough love heals or hurts. I keep rewatching certain scenes when I’m thinking about family dynamics—there’s always something new to notice.

How Do Anime Dads Influence Coming-Of-Age Stories?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 07:29:55

Sometimes the quietest scenes stick with me more than the big speeches—especially when a dad character is on screen. I love how fathers in anime can be the soft center or the fracture line in a coming-of-age story. Take 'Clannad' for example: the father-son tension and eventual reconciliation shapes a whole generation of Tomoya’s decisions, and watching that felt like watching someone patch a map of their past. In contrast, the absent or distant dad—seen in shows like 'Fullmetal Alchemist'—becomes a missing piece that the protagonist either chases or rejects.

I also notice smaller, subtler dads who ground a series. In 'Usagi Drop' the day-to-day parenting scenes aren’t flashy, but they teach patience, responsibility, and quiet love in a way that’s just as formative for the kid as any dramatic revelation. Those ordinary moments—fixing a bike, making dinner, giving awkward advice—are what make the coming-of-age arc feel lived-in, believable, and oddly comforting. They remind me how real growth often happens in tiny, repeated choices rather than a single grand gesture.

How Are Anime Dads Portrayed In Modern Shonen Shows?

4 Jawaban2025-08-26 23:17:42

Lately I've been struck by how modern shonen treats fathers as story engines more than background scenery. Sometimes they're the pull that sends the hero out—think of the way an absent figure like the father in 'Hunter x Hunter' (Ging) or the missing parents in older shonen push kids to search for identity. Other times they're the mirror: an overbearing, reputation-driven dad like the early depiction of Endeavor in 'My Hero Academia' forces characters to confront toxic expectations, while later redemption beats let shows explore accountability and change.

I love that contemporary series rarely keep dads one-note. There's goofy, lovable cluelessness in the 'Dragon Ball' era of parenting, bureaucratic duty vs. family in 'Boruto' with Naruto trying to be both Hokage and father, and the found-family model where a figure like Whitebeard (from 'One Piece') is more of a patriarchal anchor than a biological parent. That diversity lets writers unpack themes of legacy, trauma, and what it means to actually be present. It makes me think about how these portrayals land with different generations—kids watching now might see a path to vulnerability that older narratives rarely showed.

Can Parenting Quotes Love Help New Dads Bond With Babies?

1 Jawaban2025-08-24 10:17:42

There’s something quietly powerful about a short line of text that lands at the right time—especially for new dads who are still feeling their way in the dark during 2 a.m. feedings. I’ve stuck little quotes on my bathroom mirror and on the fridge like talismans, and more than once a silly, earnest phrase has snapped me out of the autopilot and reminded me what really matters. For me, those lines don’t replace the messy, hands-on work of parenting; they nudge me toward the kind of presence I want to bring: gentler, intentional, and a bit more patient. When I whisper a line aloud while cradling my kid or tape one to the diaper bag, it becomes part ritual, part promise. That tiny repetition builds a habit of thought that shapes how I show up in the moment.

If you’re wondering how this actually helps with bonding, think about what bonding needs: attention, responsiveness, and emotional availability. A quote about love can act like a mental anchor. I’ve read about attachment theory and seen it reflected in late-night parenting forums—when dads remind themselves that presence matters more than perfection, they tend to respond more quickly to cries, linger in eye contact, and try skin-to-skin more often. Practically, a quote can be a prompt to slow down: read it before picking up the baby, say it softly during a lullaby, or use it to start a bedtime ritual. The words alone don’t create oxytocin or replace touch, but they help trigger behaviors that do—holding longer, speaking in softer tones, and offering comfort without overthinking.

Different dads will get different mileage from quotes. I’ve seen a friend, a late-20s new dad who’s all hyper-enthusiasm and little sleep, keep a short, goofy mantra on his phone that made him laugh during meltdown moments—humor gave him access to patience. Another older dad in my parenting group used a quieter, more reflective phrase from 'The Whole-Brain Child' taped to the changing table; it reminded him to narrate feelings and to validate the baby’s state rather than just soothing mechanically. For some, quotes are a bridge to storytelling—turning a phrase into a tiny monologue you repeat while rocking so your voice becomes a predictable, calming signal. For others, they’re a conversation starter with partners: we’d read a line aloud and riff on what it means to our family, which helped us align expectations and share the emotional labor.

A little caution: quotes can feel hollow if they’re just decorative. I’ve tossed out postcards with beautiful lines that never saw real use. The trick is pairing words with deliberate practice—pick one short line, place it where you’ll actually see it, and attach a tiny action (hold for 30 seconds, hum a song, name one feeling). Keep it personal: tweak the wording until it feels like yours. And don’t pressure yourself to be poetic—sometimes the most meaningful thing a baby hears is your clumsy, genuine attempt to say something loving. If you try it, start small, notice how it changes a single interaction, and let that grow into the rest. It’s been a simple, quiet way for me to find my footing as a dad, and it might be exactly the gentle nudge someone else needs tonight.

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