4 Answers2026-07-10 12:39:59
Huh, interesting request. You're looking for stuff about Megatronus and Solus Prime. Honestly, you're digging into a pretty niche corner of the Transformers fandom there. They're these ancient, kinda mythical figures from the lore, so you don't get the daily flood of content you would for more mainstream ships.
AO3 is definitely your primary hub. You'll want to search under the 'Transformers - All Media Types' fandom tag and then use the character tags 'Megatronus/The Fallen' and 'Solus Prime'. Sometimes writers tag them under their more formal titles like 'The Fallen/Solus Prime'. Filtering for 'Complete' works might help, as a lot of these get written for specific challenges or zines and then are left as one-shots. I've found a few really atmospheric pieces there that explore the whole 'betrayal and lost love' tragedy from before the war.
Don't ignore Tumblr, either. A lot of the meta and headcanon discussion happens there, and artists or writers will often post snippets or links to their AO3 works. Searching the tags '#megatronus prime' or '#solus prime' can turn up some hidden links. It's more of a scavenger hunt, but you might stumble upon a WIP someone's passionate about. I remember one writer did a whole series of drabbles from Solus's perspective, forging each weapon and knowing what it would cost her.
FF.net is... hit or miss. The tagging system is worse, so you have to dig manually through the Transformers section, often under the 'Anime' category for some reason. It feels older, like some fics from the '08-12 era might still be there, exploring their dynamic when the Aligned continuity was fresh.
Your best bet is to look for fanworks related to the 'Thirteen' Primes as a group. Anthologies or zines focused on them will almost always have a Megatronus/Solus story. Check if the 'Transformers Big Bang' or similar events have archives. Honestly, the quality varies wildly, but when someone nails the epic, doomed romance tone, it's worth the search.
3 Answers2026-07-10 15:10:02
The core of that conflict always gets tangled up in their specific mythos, honestly. Megatronus the Harbinger and Solus the Creator, right? So many writers latch onto the ‘creator falls for her creation who becomes a destroyer’ angle. It’s inherently tragic. The push-pull I see most is between Solus’s faith in the potential for good she forged into Cybertron itself, and Megatronus’s growing nihilism or rage against the system.
Where it gets messy—and interesting—is the differing interpretations of Megatronus’s motives. Some stories paint him as fundamentally misunderstood, with Solus as his sole anchor to light until that too snaps. Others frame him as already cunning and manipulative, using their bond to get closer to her power or as a cruel game. The emotional stakes shift drastically based on which betrayal you read: is it a fall from grace witnessed in horror by a loved one, or a deliberate shattering of trust? The latter hurts more, but the former feels more operatic.
A detail I’m obsessed with is how writers handle the Forge. It’s not just a tool; it’s an extension of her spark. Gifting him a weapon from it becomes this ultimate act of intimacy and vulnerability. When he later uses violence born from that gift against her ideals, or in some AUs against her directly, the emotional resonance isn’t just about betrayal of person, but of purpose. That symbolic layer gives the conflict a weight beyond just a romantic spat.
3 Answers2026-07-10 02:38:03
I stumbled on a pretty intense one called 'A Spark's Echo' over on AO3. The writer builds a whole thing around those moments hinted at in the Aligned continuity—the philosophical arguments between Megatronus and Solus in the early days of the Primes. It's less about romance and more about this brutal, fascinating clash of ideologies. Megatronus isn't just evil here; his critiques about functionism and Cybertronian society are given real weight, and Solus isn't just a naive builder. Their debates over what they're creating and why feel genuinely tragic.
It gets into the idea that their connection was a meeting of equals that fundamentally destabilized them both, long before the betrayal. The writing can be dense with in-universe lore, but that's what makes it feel authentic for a deep-dive fan. The slow, inevitable fracture is handled really well, without making either character a simple villain or victim.
3 Answers2026-07-10 21:50:14
I’ve seen a lot of focus on the 'Fallen vs. Creator' angle. Many fics treat Megatronus’s descent into becoming The Fallen as this tragic path Solus saw coming but couldn’t stop. There’s a recurring theme of her forging the Requiem Blaster as a final, desperate attempt to anchor him to light, which ironically becomes the tool of his corruption. I find the ones that dig into the ideological clash more satisfying—he’s all raw power and ambition, she’s creation and structure, and their arguments feel like watching tectonic plates shift.
Weirdly specific, but I keep stumbling on crossovers with Norse mythology? Like, framing them as a divine smith (Solus) and a betrayed warrior-god (Megatronus) cast out. It’s a bit on the nose, but it works for epic, tragedy-of-the-gods type stories. The other big one is blending them into human-era AUs, like rival blacksmiths in a medieval setting or architects in a modern city, where the conflict becomes about destructive ambition vs. lasting creation.
4 Answers2026-07-10 05:57:25
The usual interpretation focuses on the whole 'forge and anvil' opposites attract angle – grim, warlike Megatronus finding a kind of solace and purpose with gentle, creative Solus. But I think the more compelling thread is the tragedy inherent in the myth. It’s never just a romance; it’s a story about creation and destruction being two sides of the same coin. Her life’s work literally becomes the instrument of his downfall (and hers).
That gives writers so much to play with: pre-fall domesticity contrasted with the war to come, the ethical conflicts over how her creations might be used, the slow corrosion of trust. I’ve read some that frame it as a mutual corruption – him growing softer, her growing harder – which makes the eventual break even more devastating. The best ones don’t shy away from the canonical violence but build it up from a place of genuine, broken affection.