Who Wrote The Viral Fanfic Titled Marrying You In 2019?

2025-08-27 13:28:02 189

4 Answers

Yasmine
Yasmine
2025-08-30 16:37:16
When I first heard about the 2019 buzz around 'marrying you', I did a quick sweep of archives and fandom hubs and came away thinking: there wasn’t a single author who owned that viral label. The problem is the title is generic and several unrelated works used it and gained traction in different corners of the fandomverse.

Practical tips from my digging: use platform-specific searches (site:wattpad.com "marrying you" 2019), check AO3 by filtering by date, and scan Tumblr tags for reblogs from 2019. If you have a snippet of text, paste it in quotes into Google; exact-phrase searches often hit the original post or a repost that credits the creator. Reddit threads from late 2019 sometimes have links to the original uploads, too.

I’d start with the place you remember seeing it and follow the reblog/retweet trail—viral content usually leaves a breadcrumb path you can follow.
Aaron
Aaron
2025-09-01 00:02:26
I was digging through my old bookmarks and fanfic folders the other day and stumbled back into the whole mystery of the viral 'marrying you' fic from 2019—fun trip down rabbit holes. I can't point to a single definitive author because that title was used by multiple creators across platforms that year, and different fandoms had their own viral takes. Some blew up on Wattpad, others on Tumblr, and a few clips were reposted on Twitter and TikTok which muddied the origin story.

If you want to track the specific one you saw, start with the platform where you first read it. Look for the original post date, the author's profile (many used pseudonyms), and any reblog chains. For Wattpad or AO3, check the publication date and comments — readers often tag when something goes viral. If it was a TikTok or Twitter snippet you watched, that can lead you back to the uploader who might credit the writer.

I love these little detective adventures because they show how stories move around the internet—sometimes the thing that goes viral is a fragment, not the full work. If you tell me where you saw it, I can help narrow the search further.
Annabelle
Annabelle
2025-09-01 15:54:50
I still recall seeing a clip from a 'marrying you' piece pop up in my feed back in 2019 and thinking how tenderly written it felt. I chased that feeling through a half-hour of frantic Googling and realized pretty fast that multiple fanfic authors published stories titled 'marrying you' around that time. Some were one-shots, others multi-chapter; some were shunted to mainstream attention by a viral TikTok reading or a Tumblr reblog chain.

Instead of naming a single writer (I don’t want to misattribute someone), I’ll share what actually worked for me: find a memorable line from the fic and search it in quotes; filter results by year; check the comment sections where readers often tag the author; and, if the post was shared on social media, follow the earliest repost — that’s usually closest to the source. Also, the Wayback Machine is a weirdly good friend for lost posts.

If you tell me a line or where you originally saw it, I’ll happily help chase down the original author with you.
Victoria
Victoria
2025-09-02 15:14:42
I dug a little into this because it’s the kind of internet mystery I love. Short version: ‘marrying you’ was a common title and several different 2019 fanfics with that name went viral in different fandom circles, so there isn’t a single clear author to credit across the board.

If you want to find one particular version, try searching the exact phrase from the fic, use date filters set to 2019, and check platforms like Wattpad, AO3, Tumblr, and Twitter. Look at repost chains and early commenters — often someone tags or credits the creator. You might also ask in the fandom’s subreddit or tag on Tumblr; people who saw it when it first trended often remember the author handle.

Happy to help narrow it down if you can share where or when you first encountered it.
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