4 Jawaban2026-07-07 13:22:55
Okay, so I'm kinda surprised by how much traction this ship has. The appeal's always felt… thin to me? It seems built entirely on a one-sided dynamic Teruhashi's built in her head, since Saiki sees right through it.
Most fics I've clicked on try to force a romance by having Saiki 'suddenly' notice her beauty or decide her persistence is charming. That completely misses the point of his character—his whole thing is finding all human interaction tedious, and her act is the most tedious of all. The rare ones that work lean into that. I read one where she finally gives up the 'perfect girl' performance out of sheer frustration, and his internal monologue is just 'Finally, something interesting.' That crack in her facade, and his appreciation for the genuine annoyance underneath, felt way more authentic than any love confession.
I guess the dynamic only gets interesting when the fanfiction decides to dismantle the premise of the series itself.
3 Jawaban2026-07-07 21:33:30
Watching these two try to force a romantic narrative when their entire dynamic is based on miscommunication and opposing worldviews creates a specific type of tension that feels uniquely charged. You’ve got Teruhashi wanting the perfect storybook romance with the one guy immune to her charm, and Saiki constantly trying to dismantle any scenario that looks remotely like a trope. Good fics lean into that friction—they don't smooth it over too quickly. The ones I bookmark are usually about Teruhashi slowly realizing she's genuinely curious about the real person behind the psychic walls, not just the conquest, while Saiki begrudgingly acknowledges her persistence as something other than a nuisance. It's less about grand confessions and more about tiny, irritating compromises that somehow add up to something resembling affection.
That push-pull is where all the meat is. A common pitfall is making Saiki too soft too fast; he's a sarcastic brick wall for a reason. The tension deflates if he becomes just another smitten character. The best explorations keep his internal voice cynical even as his actions reluctantly shift. Teruhashi's side is tricky too—reducing her to just a shallow popular girl misses the point. Her obsession with being 'perfect' and how Saiki threatens that self-image is a goldmine for character work. When writers dig into that, the romantic tension stops being will-they-won't-they and starts being about two flawed people navigating a connection that fundamentally challenges how they see themselves.
4 Jawaban2026-07-07 11:20:15
Man, I feel this search in my soul. Finding that specific 'oh no he's hot' energy between Saiki and Teruhashi is a whole mood, but it can be scattered. AO3 is my usual haunt—their tagging system is a lifesaver. If you filter by the 'The Disastrous Life of Saiki K.' fandom and then the pairing 'Kusuo Saiki/Kokomi Teruhashi,' you'll get a solid list. Adding the 'Romantic Comedy' or 'Fluff' tags helps narrow it down. The real trick is sorting by kudos or bookmarks; some of the older gems get buried otherwise.
Don't sleep on FanFiction.net either, though the tagging is messier. You gotta use the search function and wade through some crossovers. I found a hilarious one there called 'Unspoken Agreement' where Teruhashi's 'oh poor me' act accidentally works on Saiki for once, and his internal monologue is peak comedy. Wattpad has a different vibe—more modern AUs, like coffee shop or university settings, if that's your thing. Just be prepared to sift through a lot of unfinished works.
The dynamic is perfect for rom-com, right? Teruhashi's desperate need for attention versus Saiki's desperate need for anonymity creates this fantastic push-pull. The best fics capture that—Teruhashi scheming her cutest schemes, Saiki being utterly deadpan but maybe, just maybe, noticing her a tiny bit more than he lets on. I live for the moments where his psychic powers backfire because of her sheer, universe-bending luck.
3 Jawaban2026-07-07 15:56:42
I spend way too much time searching for good fics of these two. AO3 is the obvious winner for quality, but the tagging system there can be a double-edged sword. I'll filter by Saiki/Teruhashi, sort by kudos, and still feel like I'm sifting through a lot of repetitive coffee shop AUs or overly fluffy one-shots. The real standouts often have fewer hits because they're slower, character-study focused pieces that don't rely on the usual tropes.
Sometimes I venture onto Japanese fanfic sites like Pixiv or Syosetu for a different flavor. The dynamic shifts completely—the humor is more understated, and the misunderstandings feel even more grounded in the original manga's tone. Translation is a barrier, but browser extensions help. Honestly, the top-rated stories aren't always the best ones; sometimes a buried fic with a weird premise nails their dynamic perfectly.
4 Jawaban2026-07-07 13:20:56
I feel like I'm the last person to figure out Ao3 has the highest concentration of Saiki/teruhashi fics? They're really into the deep psychological stuff there. Like I saw a multi-chapter where she realizes his apathy is a shield because he can actually read minds and feels overwhelmed by everyone's expectations, and he starts to value her genuine if misguided affection. It's pretty complex character work sometimes.
On fanfiction.net you'll still find a lot of the older, more tropey stuff—"locked in the storage closet" kind of plots. It's comforting in a predictable way, but the tagging system on archive of our own makes finding specific dynamics way easier. I've also come across some on Pixiv if you're up for navigating the tags in Japanese, though that's more for art with accompanying short stories.
5 Jawaban2026-07-07 21:37:27
I'm not sure there's a single 'best' list anyone can give, but I keep going back to this one story, 'Anomalous Interference,' on AO3. It's set after the manga ends, with Toritsuka trying to get his spirit medium business off the ground and Saiki reluctantly getting dragged in because Toritsuka keeps attracting psychic phenomena that are too powerful for him to handle alone. The slow-burn of Saiki's begrudging tolerance turning into something like partnership feels very true to character.
What I love is that it doesn't force a romance. It's more about two people who, on paper, should never interact, building a weirdly functional dynamic out of mutual annoyance and occasional necessity. The author nails Saiki's deadpan internal monologue and Toritsuka's persistent, lecherous optimism. It's less about shipping and more about exploring what a friendship between these two would actually look like if Saiki ever stopped running away. The ending leaves it ambiguous, which fits them perfectly.
4 Jawaban2026-07-07 13:44:35
It's hard to top a twist that recontextualizes their entire dynamic from the jump. I read one once where the twist was that the "psychic connection" Saiki always groaned about wasn't just annoyance—it was a genuine, two-way empathic link Toritsuka accidentally forged during one of his usual attempts to peek into Saiki's mind. The fic built it up like Saiki was just being his usual grumpy self, but the reveal was that he was actually constantly feeling the emotional fallout of Toritsuka's own loneliness and self-loathing, which he'd buried under all that pervy bravado. That hit different.
Suddenly Saiki's irritation wasn't just about the nuisance; it was this unbearable intimacy forced on someone who values his solitude above all else, while also being unable to ignore the very real pain of the person he acts like he can't stand. The twist didn't change their banter, but it gave every sarcastic comment Saiki made a layer of reluctant, pissed-off caretaking. It made their ending feel earned, not saccharine.
4 Jawaban2026-07-07 11:54:24
Honestly, I don't think 'best' is the right word because tastes vary so much. The classic slow-burn from rivals to grudging respect to 'oh no he's hot' is everywhere, and done well in stuff like 'Don't Call Me God' where Saiki's internal monologue about her being a 'nuisance' slowly loses conviction.
What I search for instead is fics that get the mechanics of Saiki's powers right—the way he'd have to actively filter out her 'offu' aura, or accidentally read her genuine, non-perfect thoughts. There's a short one called 'Static Interference' that nails this; Teruhashi's presence creates a weird 'signal static' in his mind, and he can't figure out why it's the only psychic noise that's vaguely pleasant. That specific angle makes it stand out.
Lots of people love the coffee jelly bribes or the 'accidental date' tropes, which are fun, but the ones that linger with me explore her frustration. She's used to adoration being effortless, and Saichi's indifference is the one puzzle she can't solve, which becomes genuine attraction. That shift in her motivation is gold for character study.