TNTM's debut is one of those things that snuck up on me—I wasn’t actively tracking it, but when I stumbled across their early content, it felt like discovering a hidden gem. From what I’ve pieced together, they first appeared around the mid-2010s, probably 2015 or 2016, though exact dates are fuzzy because their early work was scattered across smaller platforms before gaining traction. I remember watching their sketches and thinking how raw but inventive they were, like a DIY version of mainstream comedy with a weirdly charming edge. They had this knack for turning mundane scenarios into absurdist humor, which made them stand out even before they hit bigger platforms like YouTube or TikTok.
What’s fascinating is how their style evolved. Those early videos had a lo-fi, almost guerrilla feel—minimal editing, handheld camera work, but packed with punchlines that landed harder because of the simplicity. By the time they started collaborating with other creators or getting featured in compilations, you could tell they’d honed their voice. It’s wild to think how much digital media has changed since then, and TNTM’s journey kinda mirrors that shift from niche online humor to polished, algorithm-friendly content. Still, I’ll always have a soft spot for their chaotic beginnings.
TNTM popped up on my radar around 2016, when a friend sent me a clip of their sketch about a guy trying to order coffee while being haunted by a ghost who only spoke in emojis. It was bizarrely specific and hilarious, and that’s when I realized they’d been quietly building a cult following. Their debut wasn’t some big rollout—just organic, weirdly relatable content that caught fire. Funny how the best stuff often starts that way.
2026-06-04 08:07:45
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Dreg watched as she walked over to the fireplace to get warmth. “You cower away from my presence, tell me Ilena do you not want this marriage?”
“It is my duty as a princess of Thane to serve as your tribute.” She stated softly.
It was an answer but not the answer that Dreg was expecting. Her statement only meant that she was willing to be married to him just to fulfil her duty as a tribute and that irks him.
He raised her chin up to face him. “Then don’t cower away from my touch, you are my wife now not the princess of Thanes.”
******
The Northern beast king of Sulcar requests a tribute from the Eastern kingdom of Thanes and what better tribute than Ilena, the wretched princess of Thanes.
Through a sudden marriage to the Northern beast king, Ilena is thrust into a whole new world that she could never have fathom.
She discovers the hidden secrets buried in the blood of the Sulcarns and is faced with hurdles of being a worthy queen and a worthy mate for the ruthless beast king.
Join Ilena through the roller coaster of adventures, betrayals, thriller and not to forget, the steamy romance that brews between her and the Northern King.
I hated Seth Mallory with everything I had. He hated me just as much. If he drove a knife through my heart, I’d probably thank him.
That’s how it’s always been—fire and ice, rivals to the core. Until the day he found out my secret.
I’m gay. He’s not. End of story, right?
Except it wasn’t. Seth Mallory, my worst enemy, wasn’t just angry. He was obsessed—with me. With teasing me, taunting me, and tempting me in ways I couldn’t resist.
It was all fun and games, playing with the enemy, until it wasn’t.
Because Seth isn’t who I thought he was. And when the game we started spirals out of control, I’m not sure either of us will survive the fallout—on the ice or off.
Kaia loves to write stories, her best friend Xander told her an exciting news about a writing contest on her dream University, it gave Kaia the perfect opportunity because she was writing the same genre, romance and tragedy. She was so keen on making her story good, but all things will change when she accidentally went inside her story. She saw her characters come to life and became friends with them. Kaia was torn if she should continue writing the story and ending it with the tragic one where the main character would die, or will she give up the contest for the character to live a happy ending. Xander was supportive with her and had been always there for her from the very start, but what would happen if a guy named Jake would be the cause of them to break their friendship apart, and a new girl who came in the scene. They both like each other but they don't want to risk their friendship, little did they know that Kaia's story would bring them together.
The story was suppose to be a real phoenix would driven out the wild sparrow out from the family but then, how it will be possible if all of the original characters of the certain novel had changed drastically?
The original title "Phoenix Lady: Comeback of the Real Daughter" was a novel wherein the storyline is about the long lost real daughter of the prestigious wealthy family was found making the fake daughter jealous and did wicked things. This was a story about the comeback of the real daughter who exposed the white lotus scheming fake daughter. Claim her real family, her status of being the only lady of Jin Family and become the original fiancee of the male lead.
However, all things changed when the soul of the characters was moved by the God making the three sons of Jin Family and the male lead reborn to avenge the female lead of the story from the clutches of the fake daughter villain . . . but why did the two female characters also change?!
Based in real life events*** Kit was surprised when her best friend Mitsuhide shows up at her door with the news of a sister she didn't know of. She stepped up and helped through the first part until they kept adding more and more to the situation. As he started to find his feet with dealing with everything that was surrounding his sister and her unborn babies he knew that he had met his match in Kit. She was everything that he wanted in his life and to help him with everything yet to come.That was until he got hit with the news that someone close to her had done this to his sister. He raged but at the wrong person. Will they work everything out or will the happiness end for both of them?
I had been on a business trip overseas for less than six months when I suddenly received a call from the hospital.
"Mr. Jones, your wife is having a difficult labor. Should we proceed with a C-section or try to continue with a natural delivery?"
The words hit me like a bolt of lightning. I stood there, frozen. When I left, my wife had not shown any sign of pregnancy. How could she be giving birth less than six months later?
I quickly dialed her number. The moment the call connected, I heard her cries of pain.
"Honey, what's wrong?"
From the other end of the line, I could hear a nurse urging her to push harder. However, my wife forced her voice to sound calm.
"Sweetheart, I just slipped and fell a moment ago. It's nothing serious. You should keep focusing on your business trip. Don't worry about me."
As I listened, the faint sound of a baby crying filtered through the phone. My grip tightened so hard around the phone that it nearly cracked.
"Is that so? Then, get some rest," I said calmly.
After hanging up, I immediately called my father, the richest man in the country.
"Dad, Rebecca's cheating on me. She's in the delivery room right now, having another man's child. Stop all investments in the Harris family immediately. I want her thrown out with nothing to her name."
TNTM stands for 'Tales Never Told Much,' a relatively obscure but fascinating indie webcomic series that's been quietly gaining traction among niche online communities. It blends surreal fantasy elements with slice-of-life storytelling, following a group of characters who discover they're living inside an unfinished manuscript. The creator plays with meta-narrative tropes—like characters realizing their dialogues are being rewritten mid-scene—which gives it this weirdly immersive vibe. I stumbled upon it while deep-diving through forum recommendations, and what hooked me was how it balances existential dread with absurd humor. The art style shifts dramatically between arcs, mimicking different genres as the 'author' within the story experiments. It’s one of those hidden gems that makes you feel like you’ve cracked a secret code when you discuss it with fellow fans.
What’s wild is how TNTM leverages its obscurity as part of its charm. There’s no official wiki, and fan theories about unresolved plot threads spiral into collaborative storytelling. Some readers even argue the comic’s unfinished arcs are intentional, mirroring its themes. It reminds me of early 'Homestuck' days, where the community’s collective detective work became half the fun. The creator occasionally drops cryptic ARG-style clues in social media posts, too. If you’re into experimental narratives that break the fourth wall without feeling gimmicky, this might be your next obsession. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve reread it just to spot new details.
You know, TNTM's approach to storytelling feels like a breath of fresh air in a landscape that often recycles the same tropes. What stands out to me is how they blend unconventional narrative structures with deeply personal character arcs. Take their use of fragmented timelines—it’s not just a gimmick; it mirrors how memory works, jumping between pivotal moments like a conversation with an old friend recalling shared history. Their stories often linger in ambiguity, refusing to spoon-feed answers, which sparks endless debates in fan circles. I’ve lost count of how many late-night forum threads dissect whether a character’s action was heroic or selfish, and that ambiguity is deliberate. It invites audiences to project their own experiences onto the narrative, making it feel intensely relatable.
Another layer is their embrace of collaborative storytelling. They’ll drop cryptic lore hints across social media, turning worldbuilding into a communal activity. It reminds me of the early days of 'Lost', but with better payoff. Fans aren’t just consumers—they’re detectives piecing together clues, which makes the story feel alive beyond the screen or page. The way they handle themes like identity and technology isn’t preachy either; it’s woven into everyday moments, like a character debating whether to delete an old message thread that holds painful memories. That subtlety makes their work resonate long after the credits roll or the last page turns. Honestly, I think they’re redefining what 'interactive storytelling' means without relying on gimmicks like alternate endings.
The TNTM franchise has this fascinating backstory that feels like it was plucked straight out of an indie creator's dream. From what I've pieced together over years of digging into obscure forums and early interviews, it started as a passion project by a small team of creators who blended cyberpunk aesthetics with dark humor. The name itself—TNTM—was initially an inside joke about 'things that never take off,' but ironically, it exploded in popularity after a cult following latched onto its gritty, anti-establishment themes. The lead designer, who went by the pseudonym 'Vex' in early credits, was this reclusive artist known for their underground webcomics before the franchise took off. They later brought in collaborators to expand the universe into games and merch, but those early days had this raw, DIY charm that still resonates with fans.
What's wild is how the franchise evolved without losing its edge. Even after mainstream success, the creators kept experimenting—branching into animated shorts, ARG-style marketing, and even a tabletop RPG. There's a documentary floating around that interviews some of the original team, and hearing them reminisce about sleeping on office floors to hit deadlines makes the whole thing feel even more legendary. I love how TNTM's lore mirrors its real-life origins: scrappy, unpredictable, and full of inside jokes that only hardcore fans would catch.