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  2. List of fandom names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fandom_names

    List of fandom names. Taylor Swift posing with Swifties. Many fandoms in popular culture have their own names that distinguish them from other fan communities. These names are popular with singers, music groups, films, authors, television shows, books, games, sports teams, and actors. Some of the terms are coined by fans while others are ...

  3. List of fictional computers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_computers

    Fictional computers may be depicted as considerably more sophisticated than anything yet devised in the real world. Fictional computers may be referred to with a made-up manufacturer's brand name and model number or a nickname. This is a list of computers that have appeared in notable works of fiction. The work may be about the computer, or the ...

  4. LGBT themes in anime and manga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_themes_in_anime_and_manga

    In anime and manga, the term " LGBTQ themes" includes lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender material. Outside Japan, anime generally refers to a specific Japanese-style of animation, but the word anime is used by the Japanese themselves to broadly describe all forms of animated media there. [1] [2] According to Harry Benshoff and Sean Griffin ...

  5. Yaoi fandom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaoi_fandom

    The yaoi fandom consists of the readers of yaoi (also called Boys' Love or abbreviated to BL), a genre of male homosexual narratives. Individuals in the yaoi fandom may attend conventions, maintain/post to fansites, create fanfiction / fanart, etc. In the mid-1990s, estimates of the size of the Japanese yaoi fandom were at 100,000–500,000 people.

  6. Play It Cool, Guys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Play_It_Cool,_Guys

    Play It Cool, Guys (Japanese: クールドジ男子, Hepburn: Kūru Doji Danshi, lit. ' Cool Clumsy Guys ' ) is a Japanese web manga series written and illustrated by Kokone Nata. It has been serialized on the Pixiv website since February 2019, with its chapters collected into five tankōbon volumes as of October 2022.

  7. Yaoi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaoi

    The genre originated in the 1970s as a subgenre of shōjo manga, or comics for girls. Several terms were used for the new genre, including shōnen-ai (少年愛, lit. "boy love"), tanbi (耽美, lit. "aesthete" or "aesthetic"), and June (ジュネ, [dʑɯne]). The term yaoi emerged in the late 1970s and early 1980s in the context of dōjinshi ...

  8. Lolicon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lolicon

    A manga-style depiction of young girls wearing lingerie. Lolicon artwork often blends childlike characteristics with erotic undertones. In Japanese popular culture, lolicon (ロリコン, rorikon) is a genre of fictional media which focuses on young (or young-looking) girl characters, particularly in a sexually suggestive or erotic manner. The term, a portmanteau of the English-language phrase ...

  9. Lists of nicknames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_nicknames

    This is a list of nickname-related list articles on Wikipedia. A nicknameis "a familiar or humorous name given to a person or thing instead of or as well as the real name." [1]A nickname is often considered desirable, symbolising a form of acceptance, but can sometimes be a form of ridicule. A moniker also means a nickname or personal name.