Thanks for looking at my fanfics. "What's a fanfic?", you ask? A fanfic (or 'fic for short) is a work of fiction that uses characters and settings created by someone else, often without the prior consent or knowledge of the person who created those characters or settings. They're most common in science fiction and fantasy genres, but also exist for other types of stories. Some Usenet newsgroups are dedicated to circulating fanfics - these include (but aren't limited to) rec.arts.anime.creative, alt.startrek.creative, and alt.tv.x-files.creative.
A Certain Distance - A somewhat-serious story, crossing the characters from Oh My Goddess, Ranma ½, and Sailor Moon. What happens when some of the most powerful people on the planet have to attend the same school?
Now with a silly Bonus Omake Section!
A Certain Uncle (or Two) [Drabble] - An alternate ending to A Certain Distance, not meant to be taken seriously.
Ah! Mihoshi-sama - What if Mihoshi (from Tenchi Muyo!) crash-landed on the Nekomi Tech Men's Dorm just as Keiichi was about to make the telephone call that started off Oh My Goddess!? It starts off "light and fluffy", but gets quite serious by the end. (Also available in Acrobat format)
Almost As Good - An extremely serious story, based on Bubblegum Crisis and an idea from "Linna Yamazaki" (linnayamazaki {at} hotmail.com). What happens when an action hero takes a major injury?
Deep Space Nene [Bet] - A somewhat-serious story (but not a "dark" story), loosely based on Bubblegum Crisis and a plotline from the US television show Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
The Dukes of El-Hazard [Bet] - A humour piece, loosely based on El-Hazard, The Magnificent World and the US television show The Dukes of Hazzard.
The End of the Beginning - As one story ends, another begins ... A short "character piece."
Mind Games - Eventually, the people you annoy are going to do something about it. And when those people have the ability to build androids that look human, their revenge can be quite insidious ... A reasonably-serious story based in the original Bubblegum Crisis world.
Pyogora 2000 [Drabble] - Another silly story, with the restrictions that all drabbles have. This homage to Godzilla movies was my entry in Kitsy and Tail Kinker's Crossover Drabble Challenge.
Snack Cakes Save the Day, Anime Style - Four silly short pieces with a common theme: What if Hostess was still using the same ad campaign they used back in the mid-1970s? (The fourth piece is by Brian Dinnigan - thanks for letting me display it here, Brian!)
Tangent - Airbats [Tangent] - A serious story, drawing inspiration from 801 T.T.S. Airbats - a sequel to James King's Tangent - Vampire Princess Miyu (available at the Tangents Homepage).
Tangent - El-Hazard [Tangent] - A reasonably serious story, drawing inspiration from El-Hazard, The Magnificent World - Intrepid computer security consultant Makoto Mizuhara is hired to protect the computers running Chicago's "El" from the hacker known only as "Ifurita."
Tangent - Gunsmith Cats [Tangent] - A silly story, drawing inspiration from Kenichi Sonoda's Gunsmith Cats manga and anime. This is another sequel to a James King story (available at the Tangents Homepage), and quite possibly the silliest story here.
The Ultimate Revengefic - They don't get sillier than this! All the characters that we fanfic writers use decide they've had enough ... Written in collaboration with James King, and kept on his website, so it'll look a bit different than the rest of these fanfics. Someday, I may put a copy on this site, too ...
Bet: In the summer and fall of 1998, Gregg Sharp wrote some stories that he threaded together with a common framing device: "The Bet". In them, an "Elder god of mischief" named Toltiir accepted ideas for changes in established stories, and the best one would go on to become an ongoing series of its own. (The winning story, Featherbrite's Tale, is on Gregg Sharp's web page.) One of the stories he wrote was a crossover of the Japanese cartoon Ranma ½ and the US sitcom Three's Company. That one inspired me to write two of my own.
Drabble: A story of exactly one hundred words, not counting the title and legal disclaimers.
Tangent: A "tangent" is a story that uses the same character names as existing stories, but is otherwise completely unrelated to the original source material. The name comes from the Tangent line of comic books published by DC Comics, where the format first appeared in its current form. The Anime Tangent Universe Mailing List, created by Joe Monson, is dedicated to applying the same concept to various anime. I've written a three of these on my own and collaborated on two more. The two that aren't here, MD Geist and Those Obnoxious Aliens, are available on the ATU-ML homepage.
Here's a list of the stories I haven't released:
The "where do these shows take place?" list - a list of where all the "modern-day" anime take place. This list has some uses for crossover-fanfic writers, but also might be of interest to everyone else. Warning: This list is still in "beta" stage!
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This is http://robkelk.tripod.com/fanfics.html or its mirror, http://www.ravensgarage.com/~rkelk/fanfics.html - it was last updated on 11 June 2001
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