Guyliner is this quirky, underrated webcomic that feels like a hidden gem I stumbled upon during a deep dive into indie creations. The protagonist, Leo, is this effortlessly stylish guy who’s secretly a mess—his whole vibe revolves around his signature guyliner, which he uses as armor against the world. Then there’s his polar opposite, Ethan, the 'straight-laced' best friend who’s actually anything but, with his quiet sarcasm and hidden love for Leo’s chaotic energy. The dynamic between them is pure gold, like a slow-burn dance of unresolved tension and dumb jokes.
The supporting cast adds so much flavor too: Maya, Leo’s sharp-tongued sister who sees right through his act, and Javier, the flamboyant coworker who steals every scene with his unapologetic theatrics. What I adore is how the comic balances humor with moments of raw vulnerability—like when Leo’s makeup smudges during a panic attack, and Ethan’s there with a tissue and zero judgment. It’s those tiny, human details that make the characters stick with me long after reading.
Leo and Ethan are the heart of 'Guyliner,' but let’s not forget the chaotic ensemble around them! There’s Nina, Leo’s ex who’s now his fiercest hype woman, and Dave, the barista with a knack for accidentally interrupting their deep talks. The comic’s charm lies in how these characters orbit Leo’s drama—Ethan’s dry wit cutting through his theatrics, Maya rolling her eyes but always having his back. It’s less about individual roles and more about how they collide, like a messy, beautiful family.
2025-12-10 17:55:16
19
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Unraveled (M x M romance)
Skye Black
10
7.0K
Elliot Carter never loses.
Not to his father.
Not to anyone.
And definitely not to the infuriating 'golden' boy who suddenly moves into his house.
When Elliot’s father marries Asher Brooks’ mother, his already broken world cracks even more. Asher is everything he despises—calm, disciplined, admired by everyone at university. The kind of guy who smiles like he has nothing to prove.
From the moment they meet, it’s war.
Elliot thrives on pushing buttons. Asher refuses to be provoked. Their fights are sharp, personal, and relentless, until one night, anger turns physical… and something far more dangerous ignites between them.
A line is crossed that neither of them can uncross.
Asher refuses to feel guilty.
Elliot refuses to admit he wanted it.
Now they’re trapped under the same roof, and the more they try to hate each other, the more dangerous the attraction becomes.
Because this isn’t just rivalry.
It’s obsession.
And when control becomes the weapon of choice, someone is bound to break.
The only question is... Who will break first?
Elias has lived his whole life as a lie.
Born a male Omega in a world where his kind are owned, traded, or bred, his only chance at freedom was to disappear behind a forged identity. Now he’s “Eli Arden,” Rank 2 at the most ruthless Alpha academy in the nation.
No one suspects the truth;
Not the instructors.
Not the students.
Not even the wolves who want to beat him.
Only one person watches too closely.
Ronan Vesper: Rank 1, cold-blooded, terrifying, heir to an Alpha dynasty—and the one Alpha Elias can’t afford to provoke… or attract.
But suppressants are failing. Instincts are waking. And when Ronan catches Elias mid-dose, something shifts between hunter and prey.
He should have exposed him.
He didn’t.
Now Ronan is circling him like a secret he wants to own.
And Elias is running out of time to keep his body and identity under control.
In a school where the weak are erased and the powerful take what they want…
What happens when the deadliest Alpha discovers his greatest rival is an Omega?
Lots of people are asking so here it is:
Branston high series order - Jake, Nathan, Shane, Luke, Billy.
Thank you so much for reading xxx
~~~~
Luke doesn't do relationships, he enjoys a long line of willing women and has no desire to change that.
One day the new girl at school asks him to teach her how to kiss. No relationship, no strings, a simple student/teacher relationship or is it?
My name is Christian Thompson, and once upon a time, I was the best striker in European football.
That was until he came along—Ashford Ryder, young and carefree, 10 years my junior and the new shining star.
I hate him.
At least that's what I tell myself.
Not just because he's taken my spot, but because he's everything I've struggled all my life to be, and not to be.
He's vibrant, he's happy, and the worst of all, he's openly gay.
I'm not homophobic, quite the opposite—I've lived in the closet all my life.
All my life, I've had to hide who I am to please the people around me.
European football hasn't always been this accepting of gay men, and I'd squeezed myself into a box to fit in with what they wanted of me.
It isn’t that hard when you think about my family who'd rather disown me than have an openly gay son.
So imagine how I feel when the world decides to be more accommodating to people like Ashford Ryder when they shoved me in a box.
It's not so easy to hate the happy-go-lucky striker, when he does everything to get close to me, despite my insistent hatred for him.
He's like a thorn in my side—a hot, sexy, blonde, 5ft9 thorn I can't stop thinking about.
But when one day I lose my cool around the popular striker and land myself in bad press, I end up needing his help.
It's supposed to be easy.
Spend some time with Ashford Ryder, and show our fans that we can work together—it's what I need to do to save my career.
But no one tells you how hard it is to hate someone you spend every waking hour dreaming about.
Danielle Millman has had enough of life in NYC, after being betrayed and publicly humiliated. She craves a fresh a start and after a friend's suggestion, that is exactly what she is getting at remote boarding school in Vermont. The only problem is that the girl's side was full, so she registered as Daniel. She had her mother's actress gene in her, so pretending to be a boy shouldn't be too hard. That is, until she falls a classmate. Asher is confused by the draw he feels towards his new friend Danny. Asher is ladies man.. so why is he interested in a guy? Asher is questioning his sexuality as Dani questions how long she can keep up the ruse.. especially when she runs into a familiar face. One she had hoped to never see again.
Will grew up in a reality where men were not allowed to cry, express their feelings, or do anything that was considered too feminine. The son of a wealthy Thai family, he was raised to be his father's successor in business, but Will wanted to go beyond that, and became an actor. Everything in his quiet world was fine, until he was invited to act in a Boyslove series, alongside Nate, the guy with the intimidating eyes. Nate wasn't very sociable, always very quiet, didn't like much physical contact, and wasn't romantic at all, all this before he met Will, the boy who made him smile and made his day happier. Wil and Nate's world is no longer the same, everything they believed in has disappeared, and now fiction seems to invade reality, feelings are not only those of their characters, and they can no longer disguise what they feel...
GUY is a lesser-known but fascinating piece of work, and its characters have this raw, almost chaotic energy that sticks with you. The protagonist, Guy himself, is this brooding, relentless force—think a mix of classic antihero vibes with a modern edge. He’s not your typical 'hero'; he’s flawed, driven by revenge, and has this simmering anger that makes every scene he’s in crackle with tension. Then there’s Lina, the deuteragonist, who’s his polar opposite: pragmatic, sharp-witted, and the only one who can match Guy’s intensity without resorting to brute force. Their dynamic is the heart of the story, with Lina often serving as the voice of reason in Guy’s whirlwind of destruction.
On the antagonist side, you’ve got Vex, a charismatic villain who’s more than just a one-note bad guy. He’s got layers—charisma masking cruelty, and a backstory that makes you almost sympathize before he does something horrifying. The supporting cast rounds things out, like Jiro, the grizzled mentor figure with a shady past, and Mira, the young, idealistic tech whiz who gets dragged into Guy’s mess. What I love is how none of them feel like filler; even minor characters have moments that redefine their roles. It’s a character-driven story where everyone’s got skin in the game, and that’s what makes it so gripping.