Underverse Frisk

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I Loved You Before I Knew Better
I Loved You Before I Knew Better
Arthur Black is the heir to the Alpha position in the Northland pack. He's cold and decisive, and he intimidates the rest of the pack. All in all, he's a cold-blooded black wolf. But after he and I get together, he formally announces to the entire pack that I, Ella Grant, am his mate. He never speaks with other she-wolves just to make me feel extremely secure. But what he doesn't know is that I've already personally witnessed his betrayal to my love. On the night of the full moon, Arthur embraces a sexy she-wolf while kissing her. He remarks casually, "Ella told me before that she will leave me if she ever finds out that I've cheated on her. I love her, and I can't ever lose her. "That's why you'd better not expose our affair to Ella. Otherwise… well, you know the consequences of doing so." The she-wolf, Lilian Frisk, retorts in displeasure, "Then why did you still seek me out?" Arthur smiles. "I'm just toying around with you, you see. You know that the she-wolf I love is Ella. But I've been staring at her face and sleeping with her for seven whole years. Even a devoted wolf like me needs something new every now and then."
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10 Chapters
Billionaire's Match
Billionaire's Match
After two years of marriage, Khloe Roswell went to reissue her marriage certificate—and discovered the document she'd cherished was a forgery. Determined to confront her husband, Trey Fox, she instead overheard the devastating truth: the man who had tenderly cared for her for six years had, in fact, been married for five—to their university’s advisor, who was six years older than him. She wasn't just his cover; he had branded her barren and forced her to raise his child with another woman. Disgusted, Khloe called the lawyer about her inheritance. Her declaration was simple and left no room for doubt. "I am unmarried. I have no children. The assets are mine, and mine alone." With that, she walked away without a backward glance. Trey, smug and convinced she had nowhere to go, waited for her to come crawling back. He never imagined the day he'd see Khloe again in a marriage alliance broadcast to the nation. Now, she stood in the spotlight, commanding unimaginable wealth, side-by-side with a man at the pinnacle of power—basking in the world's envy.
9.1
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1171 Chapters
The Unwanted Wife and Her Secret Twins
The Unwanted Wife and Her Secret Twins
A poignant and emotional tale about Mia, a woman trapped in a loveless marriage that was built on a business arrangement rather than affection. Married to Kyle Branson, a successful and detached businessman, Mia's life is an unacknowledged shadow to his true love—her younger stepsister, Taylor. When Mia unexpectedly discovers she is pregnant with twins, the news shakes her world, especially since her marriage contract forbids pregnancy. As Mia grapples with the reality of carrying Kyle's children, she faces not only the crushing weight of their cold, contractual relationship but also the sting of betrayal as Kyle continues his affair with Taylor. Mia’s internal battle intensifies as she navigates the emotional turmoil of being invisible to the man she once loved and the looming secret of her pregnancy.
9.1
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525 Chapters
The Debt Collector
The Debt Collector
Alexander Wolf is a notorious and ruthless leader for the Mafia. He only cared about two things in life: Money and Power which he had both. He wasn't afraid to eliminate anything or anyone that gets in the way.But everything changed when he saw her. The innocent and naive daughter of the man who he almost killed for not repaying his debt. She was a sweet little thing who could be the perfect toy to play with until her father's debts were paid. Will he use her and throw her away just like every other girl or is she one who will finally melt his heart made of ice?
9.7
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56 Chapters
My Best Friend's Brother
My Best Friend's Brother
What happens when you have a steamy one night stand with your best friend's brother —yeah, the one you hate— and he returns for more? ********************************** Joan Madison has always despised Aaron Thompson, her best friend's arrogant, insufferable brother. The feeling was mutual—until it wasn't. A vacation meant for relaxation with her friend Rhoda takes a different turn when Joan finds herself tangled in a steamy, reckless encounter with the one man she swore she’d never want. What should’ve been a fleeting mistake becomes something far more dangerous as Aaron refuses to let her go—and his hunger for her only deepens. Jo’s trapped between desire and defiance, but one thing is clear: this game they’ve started could burn them both.
10
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202 Chapters
The Trap Of Ace
The Trap Of Ace
Seven years ago, Emerald Hutton had left her family and friends behind for high school in New York City, cradling her broken heart in her hands, to escape just only one person. Her brother's best friend, whom she loved from the day he'd saved her from bullies at the age of seven. Broken by the boy of her dreams and betrayed by her loved ones, Emerald had learned to bury the pieces of her heart in the deepest corner of her memories.Until seven years later, she has to come back to her hometown after finishing her college. The place where now the cold-hearted stone of a billionaire resides, whom her dead heart once used to beat for.Scarred by his past, Achilles Valencian had turned into the man everyone feared. The scorch of his life had filled his heart with bottomless darkness. And the only light that had kept him sane, was his Rosebud. A girl with freckles and turquoise eyes he'd adored all his life. His best friend's little sister.After years of distance, when the time has finally come to capture his light into his territory, Achilles Valencian will play his game. A game to claim what's his. Will Emerald be able to distinguish the flames of love and desire, and charms of the wave that had once flooded her to keep her heart safe? Or she will let the devil lure her into his trap? Because no one ever could escape from his games. He gets what he wants. And this game is called...The trap of Ace. *** Book one of 'Obsessive Billionaires' series
9.5
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78 Chapters

How Do Chara And Frisk Influence Undertale'S Multiple Endings?

4 Answers2025-08-26 06:26:37

The wild thing about 'Undertale' is how simple player choices—killing or showing mercy—fold into something way bigger than combat mechanics. Frisk is the body you control: your decisions in each encounter (to spare, to fight, to flee) change who lives, who dies, and which scenes you unlock. That directly branches into Neutral, True Pacifist, and Genocide outcomes. If you spare everyone and do the friendship bits required, you get the warm, emotionally rich True Pacifist ending where Frisk’s connections with characters matter. If you slaughter everything, the world reshapes into the No Mercy/Genocide path and darker revelations follow.

Chara sits on the opposite end of that moral axis as a kind of narrative echo. They're tied to the game's lore—an earlier human whose death and wishes hang over the Underground—but their real power in endings is meta: they feel like the embodiment of the player's willingness to harm. On a Genocide run the game treats your choices as merging with Chara's will; the story voice and epilogue suggest a takeover where consequences become permanent unless you perform drastic file-level actions.

Then there's the save/load trickery: 'Determination' makes events persist, and the game remembers your past runs in subtle lines and different NPC reactions. That memory means Frisk's immediate choices and the longer-term imprint of previous runs together decide which ending you get and how haunting it feels.

Which AU Tropes Define Sans X Frisk Fan Stories?

2 Answers2025-10-31 05:59:28

Imagine walking into a chaotic, warm corner of the 'Undertale' fandom — that’s the vibe you get in most sans x frisk tags. The defining AU tropes tend to cluster around a few big ideas: role-reversal, moral redefinition, and timeline manipulation. Role-reversal AUs (think swaps where Sans and Frisk trade places or personalities) let writers play with who teaches whom, who heals, who jokes to hide pain. Moral redefinition shows up as pacifist-Frisk vs. morally gray or aggressive-Frisk AUs, or versions where Sans is more lethal or more solicitous. Timeline and memory AUs — resets, time loops, erased memories — are everywhere, because the reset mechanic in 'Undertale' is fanfiction candy: it gives authors a plausible way to make Sans tired, weary, obsessed, protective, or unbearably clingy toward Frisk.

Beyond those structural tropes, the character dynamics have their own recurring patterns. You'll see a lot of pining-versus-grumpiness (Sans the lazy, deadpan jokester hiding feelings; Frisk the small, earnest anchor who slowly breaks through), or protective-caretaker flips where Sans becomes overbearing after too many losses. Hurt/comfort is a cornerstone: post-genocide healing, PTSD recovery, or the classic sickfic where one of them nurses the other. Many writers also use 'age-shift' or 'human AU' to skirt the canon-age awkwardness — Frisk becomes older, or both are placed in a world where monster/human distinctions don't carry the same weight. Found-family and redemption arcs are common too: Frisk often becomes someone worth living for, and Sans’s weariness gets softened by patient kindness.

When I read these stories, I notice small recurring beats that make the ship feel cozy: shared meals, apathetic-but-sincere one-liners, late-night walks through silent ruins, and the quiet moments after a battle where Sans is unexpectedly gentle. Crossovers and mashups are also popular — throwing them into a 'goth' or 'royal' AU, or a horror-tinged 'Horrortale' version, shifts the emotional stakes without changing the core relationship. Personally, I’m endlessly amused by how adaptable the dynamic is: whether it’s fluffy domestic scenes or tear-soaked reconciliation, the same basic cues — sarcasm, protectiveness, stubborn small gestures — keep the pairing believable and emotionally satisfying for me.

Who Is Frisk In Undertale Underverse?

3 Answers2026-04-15 07:22:16

Frisk in 'Undertale Underverse' is such a fascinating character because they carry this quiet, almost mysterious energy that makes you want to dig deeper. In the original 'Undertale,' Frisk is the human child who falls into the Underground, and their journey is all about choice—whether to show mercy or fight. But in 'Underverse,' a fan-made AU, Frisk takes on a more complex role. They’re often portrayed as a bridge between timelines, someone who’s aware of the multiverse’s chaos. The way different creators interpret Frisk’s personality ranges from stoic and determined to deeply empathetic, which keeps the character fresh.

What really hooks me is how 'Underverse' plays with Frisk’s connection to Chara and Flowey. Some versions depict Frisk as a reluctant hero, caught between saving the world and unraveling it. Others show them as a silent observer, watching timelines collapse. The ambiguity is part of the charm—you never get a full answer, just glimpses. It’s like piecing together a puzzle where every fan artist adds their own piece. That’s why I keep coming back to AUs like this; they turn a already great character into something even richer.

How Old Is Frisk

2 Answers2025-03-19 18:19:25

Frisk is portrayed as a child, typically depicted around 13-14 years old in 'Undertale'. They represent innocence and self-discovery throughout the game. Their age contributes to the themes of growth and morality as players navigate the story.

Which Songs Fit A Sans X Frisk Romantic Playlist Best?

1 Answers2025-11-03 17:57:56

Frisk carries that stubborn, hopeful resilience. I like to imagine the playlist moving from lighthearted, skeleton-pun energy into cozy domestic moments, then into the softer, slightly melancholy tracks that acknowledge stakes and mortality without killing the warmth. 'Undertale' themes and subtle chiptune textures woven into indie, lo-fi, and acoustic songs really sell that balance for me.

- I Will Follow You Into The Dark — Death Cab for Cutie: This one is quintessential for the kind of devotion that would come from someone who knows how fragile life is. It’s simple acoustic and quietly intense, which suits Sans’s protective streak.

- Nothing's Gonna Hurt You Baby — Cigarettes After Sex: Dreamy, protective, and a little surreal — it captures the hush of a promise after a battle or an anxious day, perfect for late-night reassurance.

- Bones — MS MR: The chorus leans into skeleton imagery while staying wistful; it’s great for when the pairing leans into flirting with mortality in a tender way.

- Skeleton Boy — Friendly Fires: Playful and upbeat, this one scratches the surface of the sassy, flirty side of Sans. Use it early in the playlist when the mood is light and cheeky.

- Holocene — Bon Iver: That smallness-against-the-universe vibe is great for reflective moments between them, where Frisk’s optimism meets Sans’s existential jokes.

- First Day of My Life — Bright Eyes: Pure domestic tenderness. I picture this playing while they share a quiet breakfast or walk somewhere ordinary and soft.

- Sea of Love — Cat Power: Sparse and intimate, it feels like a hushed confession. Ideal for a slow moment when things are unguarded.

- Love Like Ghosts — Lord Huron: A bit haunting but sweet — fits the ethereal undertones of someone who’s partly otherworldly and partly human.

- Pale Blue Eyes — The Velvet Underground: A melancholy, nostalgic love song that highlights longing without melodrama.

- Somebody Else — The 1975: Use this for tension or complicated feelings — it’s bittersweet and modern, great for a chapter where jealousy or distance creeps in.

- Coffee — Sylvan Esso: Quirky, intimate, and a little bouncy; perfect for playful mornings and small domestic routines.

- Skinny Love — Bon Iver: Fragile and raw, it works when vulnerability takes center stage, the sort of track where Sans’s jokes fall away and true emotion shows.

- Megalovania (piano/acoustic cover): Toss in a soft cover of Sans’s theme as a wink — it ties the playlist back to 'Undertale' and can be the playful cue that reminds listeners of Sans’s tougher exterior.

- Your Hand in Mine — Explosions in the Sky: Instrumental and cinematic, great for the ending stretch where everything feels steady and safe; no words needed, just the feeling of walking somewhere together.

When I order these, I like starting with the flirtier, upbeat tracks (Skeleton Boy, Coffee), slide into warm domestic love songs (First Day of My Life, Sea of Love), then let the deeper, reflective pieces close things out (Holocene, I Will Follow You Into The Dark, Your Hand in Mine). Sprinkle an Undertale cover or two as palate cleansers to keep the pairing’s roots obvious. Building a playlist like this feels like writing a tiny soundtrack for moments — silly puns, shared snacks, quiet confessions, and that comforting sense that someone’s always watching your back. It never fails to make me smile imagining them together.

Is Frisk The Protagonist In Undertale?

2 Answers2026-05-03 08:26:20

The question about Frisk's role in 'Undertale' is fascinating because it taps into the game's deliberate ambiguity. Technically, yes, Frisk is the character we control—the one navigating the Underground, interacting with monsters, and making choices that shape the story. But 'Undertale' plays with the idea of protagonist identity in such a clever way. Frisk isn't just a blank slate; they're a vessel for the player's decisions, yet also their own entity with subtle hints of personality. The game even blurs the line between Frisk and the player during key moments, especially in the Genocide route, where the narrative forces you to confront whether you or Frisk are truly responsible for the actions taken.

What makes this even more intriguing is how Frisk contrasts with Chara, the first fallen human. Depending on your playthrough, Chara's presence complicates Frisk's role, making you wonder who's really driving the story. Toby Fox crafted this layered narrative where the 'protagonist' isn't just a hero or avatar—they're part of a larger commentary on agency and morality in games. I love how 'Undertale' makes you question whether Frisk is a character, a puppet, or something in between. It's one of those games that lingers in your mind long after the credits roll.

What Are Killer Sans' Abilities In Underverse?

3 Answers2026-04-23 07:12:27

Killer Sans in 'Underverse' is this terrifying force of nature, and his abilities are a twisted reflection of the original Sans but dialed up to nightmare fuel. He's got the classic Gaster Blasters, but they're darker, more erratic, and way more aggressive—like they’re not just firing beams but almost seem alive with how they track targets. His teleportation isn’t just for dodging; it’s used to disorient, appearing right in your face mid-attack. And let’s talk about his KR (karma) effect—it’s not just lingering damage; it feels like it’s eating away at your soul, way more persistent than the original Sans’ version.

Then there’s his 'special' moves. Remember how Sans in 'Undertale' spams bones in clever patterns? Killer cranks that up to insanity, with bones that phase in and out of reality or come at you from impossible angles. His fight in 'Underverse' isn’t just hard; it’s mean. He breaks rules, like attacking during your turn or ignoring invincibility frames. It’s like he’s not just fighting you—he’s toying with you, reveling in the chaos. The way he laughs while tearing you apart? Chills every time.

How To Defeat Killer Sans In Underverse?

3 Answers2026-04-23 22:01:30

Killer Sans from 'Underverse' is one of those bosses that makes you sweat just thinking about it. I spent hours trying to crack his patterns, and the key is patience. His attacks are fast, but they follow a rhythm—once you catch it, you can dodge more consistently. Memorize his teleport spots; he often reappears behind you for a cheap shot.

Another trick is to stay mid-range. Too close, and his melee combos wreck you. Too far, and he spams those brutal Gaster Blasters. I found success with hit-and-run tactics, using quick attacks before backing off. Also, don’t panic-heal. Save your items for when he’s in his 'attack cooldown' phase. And hey, if all else fails? Grind a bit to level up your defense. Sometimes, brute survival works.

Who Are The Best Artists For Core Frisk Fanart?

4 Answers2026-04-29 05:51:57

Core Frisk fanart has this vibrant niche community where certain artists just get the aesthetic. My personal favorites include folks like 'RustyQuill' on Tumblr, who blends the game's pixelated charm with surreal watercolor backgrounds—their take on the judgment hall scene lives in my head rent-free. Then there's 'VoidScribbles,' whose angular, ink-heavy style makes Frisk look like they stepped out of a grim fairy tale. Both artists capture the duality of innocence and determination that defines the character.

What's cool is how different artists emphasize different aspects. Some go hyper-cute (think chibi Frisk with a glowing heart), while others dive into the darker undertones, like 'DreemurrReactor's' haunting charcoal pieces. If you explore platforms like DeviantArt or Pixiv, you'll find hidden gems in every corner—just search tags like '#undertale OC' or '#core frisk AU' to fall down the rabbit hole.

Is 'Frisk' Based On Real-Life Events Or Purely Fictional?

1 Answers2025-06-20 01:15:41

I've spent way too much time obsessing over 'Frisk,' and honestly, it's one of those stories that blurs the line between reality and fiction so skillfully you start questioning everything. The narrative doesn’t outright claim to be based on real events, but it’s dripping with this unsettling realism that makes you wonder. The protagonist’s experiences—especially the raw, unfiltered emotions and the chaotic relationships—feel ripped from someone’s diary. There’s a gritty authenticity to the way trauma and desire are portrayed, like the author took fragments of real-life struggles and twisted them into something darker and more poetic.

What really gets me is the setting. The grimy streets, the suffocating loneliness, even the way conversations unfold—it all feels too precise to be purely imagined. Some scenes, like the protagonist’s encounters in seedy bars or the way violence erupts out of nowhere, mirror reports I’ve read about underground subcultures in the '90s. The book doesn’t spoon-feed you a true story, but it’s clear the author drew inspiration from real-world chaos. It’s like they took the numbness of disaffected youth, the brutality of unchecked impulses, and the fragility of human connection, then cranked it all up to eleven. That’s what makes it hit so hard.

And then there’s the ambiguity. The story refuses to tie itself to any specific event, which is genius. It lets you project your own fears onto it. I’ve talked to people who swear it’s a metaphor for the AIDS crisis, others who see it as commentary on toxic masculinity, and some who insist it’s just a grotesque fantasy. That’s the beauty of it—it’s a mirror. If you’ve ever felt lost or reckless or desperate, 'Frisk' feels real. If you haven’t, it reads like the most disturbing fairy tale. Either way, it sticks with you like a scar.

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