it's way more than just a label. It's become this entire shorthand that lets you filter for a very specific kind of emotional rollercoaster. Before, you'd have to describe a whole dynamic: 'oh, it's about a character who can't choose between multiple compelling love interests, and there's all this tension...' Now you just tag 'rh' and anyone scrolling gets it. It’s like a bat-signal for messy, complicated feelings.
That efficiency is huge for talking about romantic subplots because those plots are often about the journey, not just the endgame. The 'why' behind the love triangle (or square, or pentagon) matters. Is it a supernatural bond pulling them together? A political alliance? Pure, chaotic lust? The 'rh' tag gathers all those threads under one umbrella, so the discussion can immediately dive into the meat of it: which ship you're on, why the protagonist's dilemma feels real, or whether the author is playing fair with all the contenders.
It also creates a safe space for enjoying the tension without immediate judgment. In broader book chat, a love triangle might get dismissed as 'cliché' right away. But within a 'rh' tagged conversation, there's an unspoken agreement that we're all here for that particular brand of angst and desire. We're analyzing the nuance of each glance, each almost-kiss, the mechanics of the plot that keeps the choice alive. The tag reframes the subplot from a possible weakness to the central, dissectable attraction.
Honestly, sometimes I think the discussions in the comments under a 'rh' video are better than the book itself. Seeing everyone map out their ideal outcomes, passionately defend their favorite love interest, or dissect a character's shifting loyalty—that communal unpacking is where the subplot truly comes to life.