Hater

Alpha's number 1 Hater
Alpha's number 1 Hater
Aimie who was sheltered her whole life, her father left him alone in the serpentine forest Aimie wants to know the truth about herself; she finds a lot of scattered clauses she can use in finding her true identity until she meets the Fourth, a wolf disguised as a human who lived In the heart of a serpentine forest. Who has a mysterious life. They held hands to unravel the real identity of each until they found out that aimie was a deity and fourth was destined to become an alpha and marry aimie. But unfortunate things happened aimie and fourth was cursed by a cruel witch. Can their love be the solution to all the heartaches they face? Or It's is the best way to cut the string that holds them?
Not enough ratings
4 Chapters
Manhater (English)
Manhater (English)
The word “Marriage” is not in the vocabulary of an Alona Desepeda. She is known to be picky when it comes to men and doesn’t care about her love life. She prefers the life she has and believes she doesn’t have to get married to be content with life. But her outlook on life as a Man hater has suddenly changed, since he met Karlos Miguel Sermiento, the man who is mischievous, rude and often admired by women. When due to a tragic accident, Alona was forced to marry the son of their partner in the company, it was Karlos. At first, she didn't like him and often irritated when she heard the young man's voice. But as time goes on, she gradually falls into his charisma. Alona thought that Karlos really felt for her was true, but it was all just a show. Will she still love Karlos if she discovers his big secret? Or will she simply choose to be martyred for the sake of love?
Not enough ratings
87 Chapters
The Roommates : Haters or Lovers?
The Roommates : Haters or Lovers?
"Be in your limits, especially with me. I'm not like your others one, I will not think twice to make your life hell." She said looking directly into his eyes. "Trust me, baby girl. Every good girl falls for the bad boy and one day you will too, mark my word". He smirked and confidence was evident on his face. "Impossible," She said and started to walk away. "We will see." He shouted. ***************** "What the hell are you doing here? Just get out of my room." She shouted tightening the hold on the knot of her bathrobe. " You are here baby girl. Oh God thank you so much! By the way, you are looking so----- "Just get the hell out of my room." She yelled again "Why should I go out of here, this is my room too." He said calmly. "What do you mean?" She asked, confused "WE ARE ROOMMATES, BABY GIRL." ********************* He is JAXON WILSON, the bad boy. . . She is SAMARA GRAY, the good girl. Haters or lovers? What changes will come in their life when they both share the same room?
10
17 Chapters
CEO boyfriend for rent
CEO boyfriend for rent
After being betrayed by her sister and boyfriend, Barbara Calvin decided to nurse her wound and vow not to fall in love but then again, she had to attend a ball, the only option is renting a boyfriend. She ended up renting a cold-hearted CEO, whom she accidentally punched because he reminded her of her predicament. CEO Dante, who the city refers to as a woman hater, and his slogan is punishing any offender, even for the slightest thing they do to him. Will he reciprocate the love she had for him when she start falling in love with him even without knowing his true identity? After finding out the truth, will she still love him or move on with her life?
9.6
192 Chapters
The Hated Slave Luna.
The Hated Slave Luna.
Alyssa suddenly becomes a rogue slave once her pack gets attacked by rogues and her mom is killed, she runs to another pack for refuge but she lands into the hands of the ruthless Alpha. Alpha Lance has always had the face of the man who killed his parents in his mind, he swore revenge on the man, and he finds out Alyssa is the daughter of the man who he swore revenge on, and she's his mate. Alpha Lance promises to make Alyssa suffer for her father's mistake, and Alyssa is hurt that her mate who she thought would love her is behaving this way with her. Alyssa becomes a slave in the shadow moon pack, and she tortured everyday by the Alpha. Will Alpha Lance change his mind? Will Alyssa forgive him? What will she do when she realizes she has a bigger enemy and hater than the Alpha?
7.2
154 Chapters
Take My Heart
Take My Heart
Gamma, a hater and heartbreaker of beings called women. For him, only his adoptive mother and younger brother are the women he loves. The others don't matter. However, Angel was different. That girl was able to conquer the heart of a famous violinist like Gamma, a person who should be shunned by any good girl. Can Angel fall into Gamma's entangling love trap? Can Gamma finally find a real woman who is not as shitty as her evil mother? Those beautiful notes were swiped from the proud violin, singing a love song that captivated the heart. Or is it hurting their heart? __________________________________ Welcome to this sweet love stories, one that is wrapped either with hatred, revenge, sincerity or compulsion. Welcome and pray for the characters inside, hope they will always be happy.
8.3
102 Chapters

How Does A Hater Impact An Anime Fandom'S Reputation?

4 Answers2025-08-30 01:05:43

Sometimes a single loud hater can feel like they own the room, and that’s the danger — they shape first impressions. I’ve seen this happen: someone posts persistent, nasty takes about a show and it gets screen-capped, clipped, and shared out of context. Suddenly outsiders see the fandom as aggressive or immature instead of passionate. That kind of viral negativity can scare off casual viewers who might've fallen in love with 'One Piece' or 'My Hero Academia' if they’d experienced the community first.

More subtly, haters distort internal culture. When negativity becomes normalized, quieter fans self-censor, new people hesitate to join conversations, and creativity drops because people are afraid of backlash. Platforms amplify outrage, too; algorithms favor engagement, and conflict is engagement. So the loud minority can end up dictating what the rest of the community is known for.

I try to combat this by amplifying the good: spotlighting creative fanart, thoughtful essays, and friendly threads that welcome newcomers. Report and block where necessary, but also model the behavior you want. Being a visible, kind presence matters — it slowly changes the narrative, even if haters are loud right now.

When Does A Hater Escalate Fanfiction Criticism Into Harassment?

4 Answers2025-08-30 15:11:41

Sometimes I watch comment threads spiral and it makes my stomach drop — there’s a pretty clear line where critique becomes something darker. At first it’s just picky takes about plot holes or mismatched characterization, the kind of nitpicking you see around 'Harry Potter' or fanfics that rewrite canon. That’s criticism, even if it’s snarky. But once the remarks stop focusing on the work and start attacking the person who wrote it, that’s where escalation begins: insults about appearance, slurs, doxxing, threats, or repeatedly tagging someone across platforms to harass them.

Another big sign for me is persistence and intent. One blunt comment is bad, but coordinated or repeated messages with the express purpose of silencing, embarrassing, or frightening the writer — that’s harassment. The same goes for rallying others to pile on (brigading) or sending violent or sexual threats. I’ve flagged posts where people dug up private info and posted it publicly; that crossed the line immediately.

If you’re on the receiving end, I’ve found documenting everything and using block/report tools helps, plus reaching out to supportive corners of the community. Creators and readers shouldn’t have to tolerate abuse for sharing or critiquing stories, and it’s on the platforms and moderators to enforce boundaries so creativity doesn’t get squashed.

Why Does A Hater Target Book Authors And Adaptations?

4 Answers2025-08-30 22:05:22

There's this weird mix of personal stake and performative theater that drives people to lash out at authors or adaptations, and I've seen it play out in book clubs, comment sections, and even over beers with friends. When a beloved story gets changed — say something as divisive as 'Game of Thrones' or a fresh take on 'Dune' — fans feel like a part of their life got rewritten. That sense of ownership makes criticism sting like betrayal, not merely opinion-shaping.

On top of that, social media hands out applause for outrage. I had a friend who put years into a novella and got a tidal wave of angry DMs after some plot choices; most were less about literary critique and more about people projecting their own frustrations. Some folks are gatekeeping tradition, others want attention or likes, and a few genuinely misunderstand how different mediums force different storytelling choices. Adaptations compress, designers reinterpret, and marketing turns nuance into clickbait. All those factors combine into a perfect storm where authors become easy targets instead of complex creators, and online mobs amplify tiny grievances into moral crusades that feel unavoidable.

When Can A Hater Motivate Positive Change In A Fandom'S Culture?

4 Answers2025-08-30 20:38:24

Sometimes the nastiest comment is the one that forces the room to take a long, uncomfortable look at itself.

A few years back I lurked in a forum where a particularly bitter post tore into how new fans were being treated—mean threads, gatekeeping, and moderators who let nastiness slide. The tone was horrible, but they listed specific examples, timestamps, and screenshots. That combination of sharp critique and evidence pushed our small community to adopt clearer rules, add an onboarding thread for newcomers, and train a few volunteers to de-escalate fights. It didn't happen overnight; people argued for weeks, but the hater's intensity acted like a spotlight revealing systemic problems. That spotlight was painful but useful.

I don’t mean to glorify being cruel—most hate is just noise. But when critique is precise, repeated, and impossible to ignore, it can catalyze change. Sometimes a fandom needs a rude wake-up call to move from complacency to care, especially when that rude voice exposes patterns others were too comfortable to see.

How Should Creators Respond When A Hater Attacks A TV Series?

4 Answers2025-08-30 22:18:42

Honestly, when someone launches a noisy attack on a TV series I’m connected to, my instinct is to breathe and treat it like feedback in a crowded bar—loud, emotional, not always useful. I try to separate the venom from the valid critique. If there’s a pattern in what people are upset about—plot holes, representation issues, pacing—I take notes and bring those into private conversations with my collaborators. Public rebuttals rarely calm things; measured acknowledgement plus a promise to listen goes much further.

That said, I never confuse engaging with trolls and engaging with thoughtful viewers. For genuine critiques, I’ll thank them, clarify intentions if it helps, and point to creative choices or constraints when it’s relevant. For outright harassment, I let moderation tools do the heavy lifting. Over time I’ve learned that transparency, humility, and occasional humility-laced humor disarm far more than defensiveness—just like how fans forgave some of the rougher moments after 'Game of Thrones' because creators actually explained their thinking afterward.

How Can A Hater Alter Public Perception Of An Author'S Interview?

4 Answers2025-08-28 06:32:41

When an interview goes live, a single person with a grudge can do a lot more than grumble in the comments. I’ve seen it play out like a short, mean magic trick: they take one line, strip it of context, and shove it into a headline or a single-image post until people have a full-blown opinion based on a fragment. That quote-mining paired with a spicy caption, a couple retweets from loud accounts, and suddenly the frame isn’t about the interview’s nuance — it’s about outrage.
What I try to do in those moments is think of perception like a meme that spreads. Haters use selective editing, fake screenshots, mistranslations, and overlays of inflammatory commentary to create a simple, sharable narrative. They also weaponize algorithms: early engagement signals push the misleading clip up feeds, while coordinated replies and mass-reporting can bury corrections. It’s cheap and effective.
If you want to counter it, promote context aggressively: share full timestamps, transcripts, and original links. Encourage neutral, reputable outlets to quote-check. Sometimes a calm thread explaining what was actually said, highlighting the exchange in full, does more than shouting. Personally, I prefer the route where the community curates context — people who actually cared about the creator will repost the whole segment and crowd-source clarity. It doesn’t stop every smear, but it slows the virality and gives readers a fair shot at understanding the real conversation.

How Can A Hater Affect A Movie'S Box Office Success?

4 Answers2025-08-30 12:41:34

I get a little fired up talking about this, because as someone who follows fandom drama and box office numbers, the impact of a hater can be surprisingly large and oddly complicated.

On a basic level, haters shape perception. If enough people trash a film on social media, they create a negative signal that casual viewers pick up on. That can scare off people who only go to the movies when they're sure it's worth it, which hits opening weekend ticket sales and ruins the movie’s momentum. That initial weekend is crucial: theaters decide screen counts based on those numbers, and a drop there can mean fewer showtimes the next week, which snowballs.

But it isn't all one-way. Sometimes the noise from haters creates curiosity; I've gone to see films just because the online scorn made me wonder if it was really that bad. Also, organized review bombing or smear campaigns are getting easier with bots and coordinated posts, yet studios can fight back with strong early marketing, influencer previews, and better critic screenings. So a hater can dent box office performance, but savvy PR, positive word-of-mouth from real fans, and international markets can blunt or even reverse the damage — it’s messy, human, and oddly meta when fandom turns into marketing warfare.

How Does A Hater Shape Online Soundtrack Or OST Discussions?

4 Answers2025-08-30 07:02:17

Scrolling through a soundtrack thread while brewing my morning coffee is one of my weird little rituals, and that's where I noticed how a single hater can tilt a whole conversation. They don't always need to be loud; a contemptuous one-liner or a boldly wrong hot take gets more traction than you think. People respond, others pile on, and the thread becomes less about the music and more about defending taste. Algorithms love that friction, so the post gets boosted, drawing in more folks who are there for drama rather than discussion.

That said, haters aren't purely destructive. I've seen the same snarky critic spark a forensic breakdown of a singer's technique, or push listeners to timestamp moments and dissect orchestration. On balance, though, the initial tone matters: polite, evidence-backed critique steers a conversation toward insight; knee-jerk derision turns it into a circus. When I notice a thread tilting toxic, I try to drop timestamps, links to interviews, or calm counterpoints—little things that nudge the focus back to the soundtrack itself and not just the outrage. It doesn't always work, but sometimes a clip of a composer talking about their process brings people back into the music.

What Makes A Hater Influence Merchandise Sales For Franchises?

4 Answers2025-08-30 08:07:21

There's an odd dance between outrage and demand that always fascinates me. When I see haters attack a franchise or a specific product, my first instinct is to watch how the conversation spreads — trolls and critics are basically free PR machines. Controversy hooks the algorithm: comments, reposts, and hot takes push merchandise into feeds where casual buyers suddenly notice it.

From my own window as someone who compulsively scrolls fandom spaces, I notice three concrete things: attention equals curiosity (people check the item to see what the fuss is about), polarization creates loyal buyers (defenders buy to ‘own’ the narrative), and scarcity kicks in when factories or stores pull stock to avoid backlash. That last bit is wild — a pulled figure or cancelled shirt can become a collector's grail overnight. So haters sometimes tank mainstream sales but unintentionally trigger niche demand, aftermarket spikes, and long-tail interest that companies didn’t predict. I try to keep this in mind when I decide whether to join a pile-on or just quietly buy the thing I actually like.

Why Would A Hater Single Out A Manga Artist'S Style Changes?

4 Answers2025-08-30 23:09:51

I get why people blow up when an artist suddenly shifts their look — I've been that person who paused mid-scroll and actually went back to stare at a page because something felt 'off.' For me, it clicks into place: the art was part of a routine, like a favorite coffee mug, and when it changes it feels like someone swapped the mug for a new color without telling me. That sense of mild betrayal mixes with nostalgia and the comfort of predictability.

Beyond feelings, I've noticed a few practical triggers. Fans build visual vocabularies around characters — line weight, facial proportions, shading — and when those cues change it makes recognition harder. Combine that with people who loudly equate style with authenticity, plus social media threads that reward outrage, and you get a concentrated hater reaction. Sometimes there's also a blurred background: the artist could be experimenting, under deadline pressure, or trying to draw differently after studying new influences, but public reaction rarely gives them the benefit of the doubt.

I try to remind myself that growth can look awkward before it becomes graceful. When I'm in the thick of a series I loved in one style, I still grumble, but I also peek at sketch notes or interviews to see why the change happened. That little context often calms me down and makes me enjoy the new direction more — or at least accept it as part of the creator's journey.

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