Most recommendations I see are for Orga or Mikazuki, which is fair, but I'm more interested in the side characters. Take Merribit, for instance. She enters this brutal world as an outsider, and fics that chart her journey from a hesitant observer to the emotional core of the group are deeply satisfying. They show growth through empathy and steadiness, not combat prowess. There's a particular one-shot about her writing letters to families of fallen Tekkadan members, a duty she takes on that no one asked her to do. It's a quiet, devastating look at how she carves out a purpose and grows into the crew's conscience, forging her own kind of strength without ever picking up a weapon. That subtlety stays with me longer than most action-packed fics.
For character growth stuff, I usually look for fics where the whole point is pulling someone out of their default state. 'Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans' has such a messed-up baseline for everyone that any positive change feels monumental. There's this one long fic I drifted away from, but the premise stuck with me: it followed Kudelia after the series, having her grapple with the actual, messy politics of independence instead of just being a symbol. She kept failing, making compromises that made her sick, and the writer didn't shy away from how naive some of her canon idealism was. That felt like real growth—painful and unglamorous.
Another angle I like is fics that explore what 'family' means for Tekkadan after everything. Not just fluffy domestic stuff, but the awkward, sometimes resentful process of learning to live without a war to fight. I read one that focused on Ride, years later, still carrying all that anger but slowly being worn down by the mundane responsibilities of looking after the others. His growth wasn't about becoming a hero; it was about learning to put down a weapon because someone needed a hand fixing a generator. Those small, quiet victories often hit harder than another epic battle rewrite.
Honestly, sometimes the best character studies come from crossovers that force a perspective shift. There was a weirdly effective one with 'The Legend of Korra' where a post-canon Mikazuki ends up in Republic City. Stripped of his Gundam and his role as the 'devil,' he has to learn to communicate using words instead of just understanding through a mobile suit's feedback. The growth was in him developing a sense of self outside of being Orga's tool, which the main series only hints at. It’s niche, but those kinds of narrative experiments can unlock a character in ways a straightforward sequel can't.
2026-07-13 07:07:40
12
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Lycan King's Fearless Little Warrior
Timi Rachael
9.8
12.3K
Elsie Willow is not the dainty girl everyone expects her to be. As the daughter of the pack's head warrior, she grew up around brawling and combat. She didn't just learn to fight; she fell in love with it and became the best in her pack.
However, because she is the youngest and only girl, her family pampers and protects her. Her life takes a turn for the worse when she is chosen to be the mate of the Alpha’s arrogant son. Elsie refuses to accept a life of submission.
When a call for new warriors arrives from the Iron Hold, she sees a chance to escape. She cuts her hair, binds her chest, and masks her scent to join the conscription in secret.
In the brutal environment of the Iron Hold, Elsie’s skills shine. Her success eventually brings her face to face with the powerful Lycan King. As war approaches, the King finds himself relying on Elsie’s sharp mind and fighting spirit. In the heat of battle and growing danger, an unexpected bond begins to form between the King and his fearless warrior.
An alpha protects them all… At least, a real one does.
Twelve years ago friend and fellow alpha, Hunter and Melina Blue, lost their lives when their beta orchestrated a massive coup. Ten years ago Alpha Demetri Black was forced to close his borders to keep the violent rogues that took over at bay. Today, the original members of the Blue Ridge pack are dwindling and fear for their lives. Desperate for an alpha to help them, they dare to cross the border into the territory of a killer, at least that’s what Alpha Black is rumored to be; merciless. It’s only when his son attacks and severely injures the remaining member of Blue Ridge’s warriors that the pack’s trespassing comes to Demetri’s attention as does Damian’s deep hatred for helping the pack that couldn’t help themselves. Will Damian’s attitude change when he discovers the truth behind the Blue Ridge pack? Will Alpha Demetri be the alpha they need? The one who protects them all?
Welcome back to the Crimson Dawn pack with the third emotional book in the series.
Content warning: This book contains descriptions of mental, physical and sexual abuse that sensitive readers may find disturbing. For adult readers only.
Hannah has spent the last ten years in an orphanage, ever since the night her entire pack was murdered. The daughter of Alpha's, she has been a rogue since that fateful night. Her life is turned upside down once again when she meets her mate. Her joy at his acceptance of her as his mate, even with he rogue status is short lived as a previously unknown threat makes itself known, revealing Hannah's true heritage in the process. Will she rise to the challenge and claim her rightful place on the Were-throne, or will the enemy of her parents succeed in eliminating the last wolf in their way for taking the throne?
Nadia has lived in the orphanage since the day she was born—a girl no one ever wanted to adopt.
But just as she’s about to turn eighteen, everything changes.
A mysterious billionaire, Vincent Voss, shows up and claims her as his daughter.
He insists Nadia is a werewolf—just like him—and that she must return to the world she truly belongs to.
Nadia thinks he’s insane… until the truth proves impossible to deny.
Now, she’s about to begin a journey that will take her from an unwanted orphan to the future queen of the werewolf nation.
Reborn in Fire, Driven by Vengeance
Lyra trusted them, Selene, her best friend. Damon, the boy she loved. But their betrayal came sharp and swift, ending her life and stealing her power in a ruthless bid to claim Ether Pack, the most powerful werewolf pack in existence.
What they didn’t count on… was her return.
Reborn stronger, fiercer, and fueled by vengeance, Lyra is back to reclaim everything that was stolen from her. This time, she’s no pawn, she’s the storm.
But standing at the heart of the Ether Pack is Killian, the mate she once rejected… and the only one who stayed loyal until her final breath. Now, Lyra must decide: will she burn everything to the ground, or rise with Killian at her side and take back the crown that was always meant to be hers?
Betrayal lit the fire. Love may be the only thing that can tame it.
A story between a werewolf young master and a naive human man. The werewolf is a rich second generation from a prestigious family lineage. He falls in love at first sight with the human man, but instead of pursuing and cherishing him, this pampered young master repeatedly hurts him, intentionally or unintentionally, even leading to his death.
Out of guilt and to atone for his sins, the werewolf young master asks his wizard butler to help him resurrect the human man. The wizard butler informs him that with each resurrection, the human man will return with a new identity but will have to pay a price each time: his life will become tougher and his character will be more innocent.
Despite the warnings, the werewolf young master, driven by his desire to reunite with the human man, insists on his resurrection, regardless of the consequences.
Alternative universe IBO fics, man, they're practically a subgenre of their own. The AU potential in that series is nuts because the core premise—child soldiers in a brutal, class-stratified space colony system—is so ripe for flipping. You get the classic 'what if' scenarios: 'What if Mikazuki and Orga ran a legit business instead of a mercenary group?' I've seen one where Tekkadan is a struggling mechanic shop on Chryse, fixing mobile workers, and the conflict comes from corporate sabotage instead of open warfare. The character dynamics shift completely; Mikazuki's bluntness becomes a liability in customer service, and Orga's leadership is about managing payroll.
Then there are the complete transplants. I stumbled on a fantasy AU last year that reimagined the entire cast as knights, mages, and nobles in a medieval kingdom. Gjallarhorn becomes a corrupt church-state, the mobile suits are animated stone golems, and the 'calamity war' is some ancient magical cataclysm. It sounds wild, but seeing how the writer mapped Kudelia's idealism onto a political marriage plot, or made Akihiro's quest for revenge a literal knight's oath, was strangely coherent. Those stories often live on Archive of Our Own, tagged heavily with 'Alternate Universe - Fantasy' and 'Canon-Typical Violence' even without the mechs.
The modern AUs are a mixed bag. High school settings are common, but the more interesting ones use the modern frame to explore the systemic issues in a new way. A standout for me was a corporate drama AU set in a sprawling megacorp. Tekkadan is a disgruntled, overlooked maintenance department, the Brewers are a rival department trying to absorb them, and the 'mobile suits' are proprietary software platforms they fight over. It kept the tension and loyalty themes but through boardroom politics and code. The appeal isn't just the novelty; it's seeing how the characters' core traits—Orga's ambition, Biscuit's caution, Mikazuki's singular focus—manifest in a world without physical combat. You find these by searching the 'Alternate Universe - Modern Setting' tag and then filtering for longer, more plot-driven works.
You'd have decent luck over on Archive of Our Own by using the '&' tag for relationships, which marks platonic bonds. I filtered for Mika & Orga and got a bunch of stuff that really digs into their messed-up, codependent loyalty. Some writers there are incredible at parsing that found family trauma without forcing romance into it.
Don't just stop at the main pairing tag though. Try searching for 'Gen' works or adding 'Friendship' as an additional tag. I found this one series that expands the Turbines crew dynamics in a way the show never had time for. Wattpad's algorithm is hit-or-miss, but I've bookmarked a couple long, slow-burn fics about the Tekkadan boys just trying to be normal teenagers between battles, which hits a specific sweet spot.