5 Jawaban2026-07-05 17:14:11
My dive into Afton/Emily stuff got serious about two years back, and the quality really depends on what you're in it for. Archive of Our Own, obviously, is the main hub for the more intricate, character-driven pieces. The tagging system means you can find exactly the kind of dynamic you want—angsty pre-fallout stuff, twisted post-springlock codependency, even weirdly wholesome domestic AUs that make you forget they're murderous tech geniuses.
But honestly? I've stumbled on some absolute gems on smaller, more niche forums dedicated specifically to 'FNaF' lore speculation. The stories there often blend fan theory with fanfiction, so you get these dense, slow-burn narratives that try to retrofit a believable emotional history into the canon timeline. They can be a bit drier, less focused on romance per se, but the depth of connection they build between William and Henry feels more grounded to me sometimes. I remember one that framed their partnership entirely through technical journal entries and increasingly frustrated notes left on blueprints; the horror crept in so slowly.
Tumblr's a mixed bag. You have to wade through a lot of meme-y headcanons and shorter snippets, but the ones that are good are devastating in a way the longer-form platforms sometimes smooth over. There's an immediacy to the tragedy there. Wattpad and FF.net... I find the signal-to-noise ratio harder to manage for this ship. It's there, but it often leans into more straightforward tropes without the layers of guilt and tragic inevitability that make the pairing interesting in the first place.
At the end of the day, my bookmark folder is mostly AO3, with a few deep cuts from forum threads I saved as PDFs because I'm paranoid they'll vanish.
4 Jawaban2026-06-21 16:13:13
One of the most frequent tensions I've seen stems from the age gap and power imbalance inherent in the original material. Henry's established, adult life and Ellie's youth and trauma create a natural friction that writers love to explore. Is his interest protective or predatory? Is her attachment trauma bonding or genuine affection? Stories often twist around his guilt over crossing professional lines while trying to be her anchor, versus her frustration at being coddled and not seen as capable.
Then there's the external conflict with the Fireflies and the cure. That's a massive, ready-made moral dilemma. Does Henry prioritize saving the world or saving Ellie? Does Ellie feel like a means to an end, even to him? I've read fics where she runs away because she thinks he'd ultimately choose the cure, and others where he abandons everything, turning the pair into fugitives hunted by both sides. The weight of the world literally resting on their relationship is a classic source of angst.
Internal conflicts about trust and communication pop up constantly, too. Neither of them are exactly chatty about their feelings. You get lots of stories where a simple misunderstanding—Ellie overhearing part of a conversation, Henry being overly stern about safety—spirals into weeks of cold shoulders and brooding, because neither knows how to bridge the gap. It mirrors their journey's dynamic, where so much is unsaid but deeply felt.
4 Jawaban2026-06-22 08:46:58
Honestly, I've seen a ton of different directions taken with Henry/Elie pairings over the years. The most common one by far is just straight-up 'missing moments' during the Toppat Clan arc, where authors fill in the gaps between 'Infiltrating the Airship' and 'Completing the Mission.' They'll write about their dynamic as partners-in-crime, that slow build of trust, maybe a shared moment looking out over the airship deck. Some really dig into Elie being the more strategic, calm one to Henry's chaotic energy, which I think fits.
Then you've got the massive AU scene. Modern AUs are huge—coffee shop, college, office settings—where Henry is still a lovable disaster and Elie is the competent one who inexplicably puts up with him. There's also a surprising amount of soulmate AUs or fantasy crossovers. I remember one where they were rival thieves in a steampunk setting that was actually pretty well-written. The 'canon-divergence' where Henry chooses to stay with the Toppats with Elie at the end gets a lot of play, too, exploring what their life as leaders would actually look like.
My personal favorite, though, are the quieter post-canon stories that aren't just fluff. Ones that deal with the aftermath of all that chaos, the weirdness of settling into a 'normal' criminal empire routine, the unspoken things between them after everything they've been through. Those feel the most genuine to me.
3 Jawaban2026-06-21 03:47:06
I’ve been deep in that tag for a while now. Honestly, the slow-burn fics for Henry and Ellie—assuming we’re talking about 'The Last of Us' here—tend to lean really hard on the post-canon, ‘what if they met later’ scenario. The ones that nail it for me are those that respect Ellie’s guarded nature and Henry’s more pragmatic, survivalist edge from the games.
There’s one called ‘Saltwater’ on AO3 that sticks in my mind. It’s a Seattle-based AU where they’re both adults and their paths keep crossing through mutual friends, but trust takes forever to build. The writer captures Ellie’s sarcasm and Henry’s quieter, observational style without making him soft. The burn is so slow you almost forget it’s supposed to be romantic until a tiny gesture—like sharing a ration bar—feels huge.
I’d skip anything tagged ‘fluffy’ or ‘domestic’ right off the bat. The dynamic works because of the friction and shared trauma, not in spite of it. Some writers speed-run the emotional beats, but the good ones let the silence between them do a lot of the work.
4 Jawaban2026-06-21 20:11:13
I actually find a lot of the 'henry x ellie' stuff a bit heavy-handed sometimes, if I'm being totally honest. Not all of it, but there's a trend where writers use their dynamic as a vehicle for trauma recovery, which can feel predictable.
What I've enjoyed more are the fics where the growth is subtle and comes from daily, unremarkable moments. A story that stuck with me had Henry quietly teaching Ellie how to fix a leaky faucet in the cabin, and the whole metaphor wasn't about the task but about learning to mend things that are broken but still functional. The emotional growth wasn't a destination announced with fanfare; it was in Ellie realizing she could be patient, and Henry realizing he could teach without it being a survival lesson.
That kind of quiet progress feels more genuine to me than the big, tearful confession scenes, though those have their place too. I guess I just prefer the growth that sneaks up on you, like moss on a stone.
4 Jawaban2026-06-22 12:44:05
Finding fics for that specific pairing can be a bit of a scavenger hunt since 'The Henry Stickmin Collection' fandom is a bit niche compared to some of the bigger ones. Your best bet is definitely Archive of Our Own. It's become the central hub for fanfiction across most fandoms, and the tagging system there is a godsend. Try searching for the fandom tag first, then filter by the 'Ellie Rose/Henry Stickmin' relationship tag. You'll likely find a mix of one-shots and longer fics.
I've also seen some scattered stuff on FanFiction.net, but the organization isn't as robust. Sometimes people write them as part of larger crossover collections or series, so you might have to dig through a few pages of results. I remember stumbling across a fun one where they got transported into the world of 'Payday 2', which was a wild but oddly fitting mash-up.
Honestly, the ship deserves more love. Their dynamic in the games is pure gold for fanfic writers—all that banter and reluctant teamwork.