Frenemies

ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Scent
Personality
Ideal Love Pattern
Secret Desire
Your Dark Side
Start Test
FATE OF FRENEMIES
FATE OF FRENEMIES
Maxine waters is a young girl of twenty one who works towards her dream of becoming a professional in photography but that was before she met Edward Hanks professionally known as Dan. Edward is a popular actor in the country and he contracted Maxine to be his fiancee because of some family issues. Both of them are cruel to each other and become worse enemies. Their relationship unraveled alot of deep secrets and mysteries that had been buried for years. What happens when fate changes all their plans and casts a natural and unbreakable spell on them ?? * * * * * * " So you believe true love exists" Edward smirked and i felt my blood boil. "Ofcourse it exists, money isn't always everything" I said calmly but deep down i felt like digging my hands into his face. "Money can buy everything" he said confidently and i started to laugh, I never knew rich people could be this dumb. "Money can't buy love or happiness or peace of mind, it can't buy me either" I said and walked out of the cafe with a mischievous smile.........
10
|
9 Chapters
Frenemies: Ashley and Oliver
Frenemies: Ashley and Oliver
You think I'm a bully because of house problems, or parent problems” he tells me sneering it out as he walks towards me, which makes me move back as reflex. “Well pretty face, you’ve got it all wrong” he whispers out, taking another step towards me, and as a reflex I move back, until I discover my back has hit the locker “I am a bully because I want to be, because I like it, it is like a hobby you know, so, get the fuck out of my face” he tells me, sneering the last statement, which caught me off-guard, and makes me shiver. “too bad for you also, seems like you’ve seen your match, and I would mind the tone you speak to me Mister” I tell him walking towards him, which makes him take several steps back He looks at me with a face full of surprise, seems like the first time someone stands up to him, I don't know and in fact I don't care.
10
|
26 Chapters
Nathan: Branston High Series
Nathan: Branston High Series
Lots of people are asking so here it is: Branston high series order - Jake, Nathan, Shane, Luke, Billy. Thank you so much for reading xxx ~~~~~ Nathan and Leanna were childhood friends until they weren't. Now, they hate one another but no one knows why. They say there's a thin line between love and hate, but do these two frenemies truly hate one another and will they have a happy ending or is there someone else trying to get in the way?
10
|
47 Chapters
From Rogue To Alpha
From Rogue To Alpha
From Rogue to Alpha: Elaina is a young and beautiful female, noble, and a complete kick ass woman. But in many others eyes she has one big flaw... She is a rogue. At the ripe age of 18 she took the Red Dawn pack from an evil Alpha and became the greatest and ONLY female Alpha the world has ever had! She is smart, ambitious, and very beautiful protecting her pack and keeping it flourishing. A true protector. Meet Silas Cohen. Young and devilishly handsome billionaire mogul. Human at that. Always searching for a piece of himself he is missing. Not the playboy type but the type you take home to your mom. And he thinks he has found the perfect woman to fit those dreams. But.. What happens when he is made aware or what she really is? Only time will tell. Follow Elaina, New to it's name : The Moon Forest Pack and Silas on a journey of kick assery, treachery and betrayal! You never know where this will end up and who will be the one to turn their back on their friends, family and frenemies!
10
|
16 Chapters
The Ruthless Billionaire's Revenge
The Ruthless Billionaire's Revenge
Billionaire Adrian Calloway had everything—power, success, and a woman he loved. But when Elena Carter, the only woman he ever trusted, seemingly betrayed him, his world shattered. Now, years later, he returns with a plan: force her into a contract job, make her pay for her sins, and then cast her aside. But as he tightens his grip, cracks appear in his revenge plot. The deeper he digs, the more he uncovers a sinister truth—Elena never betrayed him. The real culprit? His best friend, Lucas Bennett, who forged evidence to keep them apart. Fueled by guilt, passion, and unresolved emotions, Adrian finds himself at a crossroads with more frenemies unveiling. Will he seek redemption or lose the only woman who ever truly loved him?
Not enough ratings
|
169 Chapters
Auctioned to my Brother's Bestfriend
Auctioned to my Brother's Bestfriend
"50 million dollars"The words hang in the air and Angelica Smith was auctioned to Damien Victor.Kidnapped and sold, the first shock came to her when she learned that her bidder was none other than her brother's best friend.Little did she know that it was only the first of many dark secrets that were yet to be revealed because he was no longer the same man whom she used to admire in her teenage years.The one who can never see a scratch on her skin wanted to leave such deep marks that she remembers her whole life and she wasn't even sure why he was taking revenge on her.What would happen when she learned about his hidden intentions?Will she ever be able to come out of his cage or will she remain his plaything?✿✿✿✿✿✿✿'No one can hurt, touch, see, or feel you except me. You are mine, Tesoro. I will break you until you don't accept it' ~ Damien Victor 'You can have my body, not my soul. I will never submit to you, even if you kill me' ~ Angelica Smith ××××××××Features highly mature content 🔞
9.5
|
125 Chapters

What Are The Best Frenemies Books To Read?

4 Answers2026-04-13 09:13:35

Frenemies? Oh, that dynamic is pure gold in literature! One of my all-time favorites has to be 'The Cruel Prince' by Holly Black—Jude and Cardan’s relationship is this delicious mix of venom and vulnerability. They’re constantly undermining each other, yet you can’t help but root for them to collide in the best (or worst) ways.

Another gem is 'These Violent Delights' by Chloe Gong. Juliette and Roma are heirs to rival gangs in 1920s Shanghai, and their history adds layers to every snarky exchange. The tension is so thick you could cut it with a knife. And let’s not forget 'Red, White & Royal Blue'—Alex and Henry start as political rivals with razor-sharp banter before things get… complicated. Honestly, frenemies-to-lovers might just be my favorite trope because it’s never just about hate—it’s about passion disguised as rivalry.

Why Do Frenemies Form In High School Friend Groups?

4 Answers2025-10-17 10:18:41

High school friend groups are like long-running arcs in 'My Hero Academia'—alliances shift, rivalries flare, and characters who seem inseparable today can act like enemies tomorrow. I think frenemies form because adolescence is basically social chemistry under pressure: everyone is experimenting with identity, trying to claim status, and learning how to manage hurt feelings without very good tools. Add limited social resources (attention, gossip, shared spaces like classes or clubs), mixed signals, and the heavy weight of insecurity, and you've got a perfect storm where polite smiles and sharp comments coexist.

A lot of it comes down to comparison and competition. Teens are constantly sizing up one another — who's cooler, who's dating whom, who got the lead in the play. That competitive energy doesn't always turn into outright enemies; sometimes it turns into a kind of performative closeness where someone is supportive in public but snide in private. I've seen entire friendship groups where people will back each other up in front of teachers but subtly undermine each other through offhand comments or social media. The anonymity and curated perfection of online posts amplify this: one photo, one offhand caption, and suddenly someone reads jealousy where none was intended. So what looks like friendliness on the surface is often fragile, contingent, and threaded with resentment.

Emotional immaturity is another big factor. Teen brains are still developing the parts that regulate impulse and foresee long-term consequences, so reactions can be dramatic and exaggerated. A small slight can be stored up and then unleashed later in a passive-aggressive remark or exclusion. Add peer pressure—where loyalty to the group sometimes means tolerating subtle hostility—and you've got friendships that function more like alliances of convenience. People also fear being alone; staying connected to a group that occasionally stabs you in the back can feel safer than walking away and facing the unknown. That fear keeps frenemies in orbit long after the good parts of the relationship have gone.

Navigating this mess taught me a lot. Setting clearer boundaries, noticing patterns rather than excusing every bad moment, and investing in people who show consistent care (not just performative affections) helped me escape the worst cycles. It also helped to reframe some of those relationships as transitional — people who play a role for a season in your life but aren't meant to be forever. Looking back, the chaotic, snarky, sometimes painful friendships of high school were a strange sort of training ground for adult relationships: they taught me how to spot manipulation, how to speak up, and how to choose my tribe more mindfully. I still think there's a weird bittersweet charm to it all; the drama makes great stories later, and the lessons stick with you in the best possible way.

What Signs Show Frenemies In Romantic Relationships?

4 Answers2025-10-17 17:16:40

You can spot a frenemy in a romantic relationship by paying attention to the small, repeatable patterns that feel off even when everything looks fine on the surface. I’ve learned to notice things like backhanded compliments — the kind that sound supportive but leave you doubting yourself — and the classic flip between intense attention and sudden coldness. If someone praises you publicly but downplays or dismisses you privately, that inconsistency is a big red flag. Other signs that have stood out for me are passive-aggressive digs disguised as jokes, frequent comparisons to exes or others, and a weird need to compete with you rather than build with you. Social media behavior is another tell: subtle jabs in captions, vague-posting right after arguments, or flaunting affection only when an audience is watching often point to performative affection rather than genuine care.

Beyond the surface drama, the emotional mechanics are what really gave me the creeps in past situations. Frenemies tend to test your boundaries deliberately — flirting with others to see how you react, making you feel guilty for setting limits, or insisting they’re ‘just joking’ when they cross a line. Gaslighting is sadly common: they twist facts so you doubt your memory or feelings, leaving you apologizing more than they do. I once watched a friend unravel in a relationship where their partner would love-bomb for a week and then vanish emotionally, blaming the friend for being ‘too needy’ when the friend called it out. That rollercoaster is exhausting. Another pattern I’ve seen is triangulation — bringing third parties into your fights, whether it’s listeners who are fed slanted versions of events or comments meant to pit you against mutual friends. That isolation is a control move dressed up as drama.

When it comes to dealing with frenemies, my approach has been practical and slow: collect patterns, not one-off slips, and trust the trend. I try to name behaviors out loud, either in a calm conversation with the person or with a trusted friend, because saying it makes it harder for someone to gaslight me later. Boundaries are my favorite tool — clear, non-negotiable lines about what’s ok and what isn’t — and I’ve found them liberating rather than mean. If the behavior keeps happening, I start scaling back emotional investment and make a plan to distance myself. Sometimes therapy or couples’ counseling helps if both people genuinely want to change; other times, walking away is the healthiest move. Watching how relationships are written in media helps me too: I love the rivalry-turned-affection in 'Toradora!' and the strategic mind games in 'Kaguya-sama: Love is War' as contrasts — they show how tricky lines between teasing and toxicity can be. In the end, trusting a nagging gut feeling and protecting my peace has saved me from a lot of messy heartbreak, and it’s a habit I’m oddly proud of keeping.

How Do Frenemies Affect Workplace Productivity?

4 Answers2025-10-17 16:28:50

Frenemies at work are like a slow, sticky web: they look harmless at first but snag momentum before you notice. I’ve dealt with colleagues who’re charming in group chats but subtly undercut plans in meetings, and that kind of behavior eats at productivity in ways that numbers don’t always show. It’s not just the time spent dealing with petty drama — it’s the mental energy you lose trying to predict whether the person next to you will support you or quietly redirect credit. That uncertainty raises stress, fragments focus, and turns simple decisions into mini-politics sessions.

In practical terms, the fallout shows up everywhere. Meetings become theater: people hedge opinions, skip constructive disagreement, or hoard crucial information. Projects slow because nobody wants to hand off work to someone who might take it as an opportunity to one-up them. I’ve seen perfectly competent teams produce patchy outcomes because they were busy managing impressions instead of solving problems. The emotional toll is real, too — having to perform extra kindness or constantly document decisions adds invisible ‘work’ that saps stamina. That invisible labor often results in long-term consequences like burnout, lowered morale, and higher turnover, which of course wreck productivity more than a one-off conflict ever could.

Not all effects are purely negative though; a little rivalry sometimes sharpens people up. The danger is when friendly competition morphs into strategic undermining or passive-aggression — then the team loses psychological safety and creativity dries up. From my experience, the best countermeasures are practical and interpersonal: set clear boundaries, keep objective records of tasks and decisions, and lean into transparent, task-focused communication. If someone’s playing politics, neutralize it with facts and shared goals. Build small alliances based on trust and shared outcomes, not personality, and make sure managers know the difference between healthy friction and sabotage. If the pattern becomes harassment or chronic obstruction, escalation with documented examples is necessary — a toxic frenemy can’t be wished away.

I’ve watched teams recover when leadership named the issue and reset expectations about accountability and respect, and I’ve also seen great people leave because their extra emotional labor never got recognized. That mixed bag keeps me cautious but pragmatic: prioritize the work, protect your focus, and don’t let charming sabotage become a norm — it’ll slow you down faster than any technical bottleneck.

Can Frenemies Books Teach Us About Real Friendships?

4 Answers2026-04-13 06:25:17

Frenemies in literature often mirror the messy, complicated relationships we navigate in real life. Take 'Gossip Girl' or 'Pretty Little Liars'—those books thrive on tension between characters who are both allies and rivals. What strikes me is how these dynamics reveal the fragility of trust and the power of forgiveness. Real friendships aren’t always sunshine; they weather storms, jealousy, and even betrayal. Frenemies stories exaggerate these moments, but they also show how bonds can deepen after conflict.

I’ve noticed how books like 'The Selection' series or 'Crazy Rich Asians' use frenemy tropes to explore societal pressures. The way characters balance competition with genuine care feels oddly relatable. It makes me wonder if the best friendships aren’t the flawless ones but those that survive the ugly phases. Maybe that’s why I keep rereading 'The Song of Achilles'—Patroclus and Achilles’ journey from rivals to soulmates hits harder because of their early friction.

Who Are The Best Frenemies In TV Shows?

5 Answers2026-06-08 19:47:03

The dynamic between Blair and Serena in 'Gossip Girl' is peak frenemy energy—glamorous, toxic, and endlessly entertaining. They slash each other’s designer dresses one episode and share tearful apologies in a limo the next. What makes them iconic is how their rivalry never overshadows their deep, messed-up love. Even when sabotaging each other’s Ivy League dreams, you sense they’d burn Manhattan down for one another. That messy loyalty is what keeps fans rewatching their schemes a decade later.

The 'Riverdale' trio—Betty, Veronica, and Cheryl—serve a more chaotic flavor of frenemy-ism. They’ll team up to solve murders but still throw shade at pep rallies. Cheryl’s especially fascinating because she weaponizes Southern belle charm to hide how much she craves their acceptance. It’s less about dresses and more about who holds power in a town where everyone’s hiding a corpse. The way these relationships blur ally and adversary lines makes them weirdly relatable—we’ve all had friendships where the line between support and competition gets hazy.

How Do Frenemies Books Portray Complex Relationships?

4 Answers2026-04-13 20:21:16

Frenemies books have this knack for capturing the messy, electric tension between people who can't stand each other but can't stay away either. Take 'They Both Die at the End'—on the surface, it's about two boys with a death sentence, but the way their relationship oscillates between resentment and reliance is pure frenemy gold. The best ones don’t just pit characters against each other; they make you feel the pull of their connection despite the barbs.

What fascinates me is how these dynamics mirror real-life rivalries. In 'The Cruel Prince', Jude and Cardan’s vicious back-and-forth is laced with this undeniable chemistry that makes you root for them even when they’re tearing each other down. It’s not just about conflict; it’s about the vulnerability hiding beneath the snark. That’s why I keep coming back—these stories make rivalry feel almost romantic.

How Do Frenemies Impact Office Politics And Promotions?

4 Answers2025-10-17 13:48:59

Office dynamics can feel like a weird crossover between a tactical RPG and a soap opera, and frenemies are the NPCs who act friendly while quietly shifting the battleground. I've run into people who smile in meetings and then quietly reroute credit, or who offer to help and then use that access to steer decisions in ways that benefit them. That kind of double-edged friendliness screws with how visibility, reputation, and promotion decisions get made — because promotions aren’t just about results, they’re also about perceived reliability, cultural fit, and who the decision-makers trust when filling a role.

Frenemies influence the flow of information more than most people realize. When someone pretends to champion your work but withholds context from others or frames your contribution as 'helpful but not decisive,' it changes what managers see. I've watched projects where one person's careful phrasing in status updates or meetings subtly minimized another person's role. That kind of behavior can create a narrative that someone is less ready for stretch assignments or leadership, even when their output is strong. On the flip side, a frenemy might amplify your mistakes to its allies while quietly taking credit for your work in private conversations. Those micro-moves matter because performance reviews and promotion committees often rely on anecdotes and reputation as much as hard metrics.

Navigating this wasn't elegant at first — I had to learn to document, speak up, and build real allies. I started keeping concise project notes and sending short recap emails after key meetings; not because I wanted to be paranoid, but because a clear paper trail made it harder for someone's interpretive framing to stick. I also invested in building relationships across teams, so more people could vouch for my contributions. Another thing that helped was being vocal about outcomes: demos, shared dashboards, and publicizing wins in team channels shifted the frame from hearsay to evidence. Mentorship matters too. Having a sponsor who understands your trajectory and can advocate for you in private helps neutralize the whispers and the subtle nudges from frenemies.

There are emotional costs, though. Frenemy dynamics are draining, and I found that sustainable strategies balance being professional with protecting your energy. I learned to accept that you can't control everyone’s motives, but you can control how much access you grant and how visible your work is. When it came time for promotions, those who combined measurable results with a wide, genuine network tended to do better than those who were either flashy but isolated or quietly excellent but invisible. Personally, I try to treat people with basic kindness but keep important decisions, documentation, and stakeholder conversations in the open — it keeps the political noise from derailing the actual work. Plus, it makes the workplace feel a lot less like a battlefield and more like a complicated team sport I actually enjoy playing.

What Makes Frenemies Books So Addictive?

4 Answers2026-04-13 00:25:11

Frenemies books hook me because they tap into that delicious tension between love and hate, where every interaction feels like a powder keg about to explode. There's something so relatable about characters who can't stand each other yet can't stay away—it mirrors those messy, real-life relationships we've all had. The best ones, like 'The Hating Game' or 'Beach Read', balance witty banter with genuine emotional depth, making you root for them even as they sabotage their own happiness.

What really gets me is the slow burn. The way these stories peel back layers to reveal why the characters clash, how their flaws complement each other, and that moment when hostility turns to something warmer. It's not just romance—it's psychological chess, full of ego and vulnerability. Plus, the payoff when they finally admit their feelings? Pure serotonin.

Which Celebrity Frenemies Have The Best Chemistry?

5 Answers2026-06-08 11:42:44

One of the most fascinating frenemy dynamics has to be Taylor Swift and Katy Perry. Their feud was legendary, filled with subliminal digs in songs like 'Bad Blood' and 'Swish Swish,' but what made it compelling was the underlying respect. When they finally reconciled at that 'Reputation' tour moment, it felt like watching two queens acknowledging each other's power. The chemistry wasn’t just in the rivalry—it was in the way they mirrored each other’s careers, pushing one another to innovate. Even now, their interactions have this playful tension, like they’re still keeping score but in a way that’s almost affectionate. It’s the kind of drama that makes pop culture so addictive.

Another pair that comes to mind is Leonardo DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire. Their friendship is well-documented, but there’s this unspoken competition—both child stars who grew up in the industry, yet their paths diverged in fascinating ways. Leo became the Oscar-winning leading man, while Tobey leaned into producing and quieter roles. Their chemistry is less about public spats and more about this quiet, mutual understanding of what the other sacrificed. When they team up for projects, it feels like two old rivals who’ve made peace but still can’t resist a little one-upmanship.

Related Searches
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status