Everybody seems to be riding the wave of 'Pack Darling' and 'Lola and the Millionaires' these days, and they're not wrong about the conflict there. But I've been revisiting some older AO3-style serials where the tension feels less about external pack politics and more about internal omega identity crises. There's a forgotten one called 'The Broken Bond' by a writer named Sera Glass, I think? It's archived on some indie site. The conflict isn't about who gets the omega; it's about an omega who chemically rejects their own dynamic after a trauma, and the pack has to navigate a relationship that's fundamentally broken by biology. The 'heat' scenes become terrifying instead of titillating, which flips the whole trope on its head.
It's messy, sometimes the pacing is off because it was a weekly serial, but the core question of whether love can exist outside of biological imperatives in a world built on them... that stayed with me longer than any perfectly plotted bully romance. The resolution isn't neat either, which some readers hated, but felt true to the messiness of the premise.