I've dug around the usual fanfiction hangouts to try and pin down who wrote 'Drowning him in regret', and the reality is a little messier than a single, neat credit. That title — or small variations of it — pops up across multiple platforms (Archive of Our Own, FanFiction.net, Wattpad, even Tumblr posts), so you can run into several different authors using it for different pairings, fandoms, and styles. Fan communities often recycle emotionally charged phrases like that, so the quickest way to find the exact author is to match the title with the specific fandom, character names, or a memorable line from the fic.
If you want a practical, reliable search path, I do this every time I’m hunting a specific fic: put the exact title in quotes in Google and add the fandom or main character name. For example: "'Drowning him in regret'" "[character name]" site:archiveofourown.org — repeat for site:fanfiction.net and site:wattpad.com. AO3 and Wattpad’s internal search can be spotty, so the site: trick often surfaces crossposts or mirrors. If the story was popular and then removed, the Wayback Machine or archive threads on Reddit/Tumblr can be lifesavers; fans frequently repost or summarize deleted works. Also check tags and pairing shorthand (like character/character) in search terms, because many fics hide under ambiguous titles but get tagged clearly.
Another route that works surprisingly well is community sleuthing: fandom-specific Discords, subreddit threads (search the subreddit for the fandom + the title), and Tumblr tag searches often reveal the original author or at least someone who saved a copy. Authors sometimes change handles or delete accounts, so you might find a post where someone says "this used to be by X" or a reblog that links to an archived copy. If the fic was crossposted to multiple sites, comparing the earliest upload date or checking the author notes can help identify the original poster. Pay attention to pen names: some authors use different handles across platforms, so a username lookup across AO3, FFN, and Wattpad sometimes connects the dots.
I get a little thrill playing detective on this stuff — tracking down a beloved fic feels like finding a lost mixtape. Even if you hit a dead end because an author removed their work, the fan community often keeps records or summaries that let you at least remember the story. It’s a bit of effort, but following the breadcrumb trail of quotes, pairings, and crossposts usually turns up who wrote the version you’re looking for, and finding that original author is always worth the chase.
2025-10-20 02:31:37
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