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Navigating RPF on AO3: What You Need to Know • RPF on AO3 • Discover the ins and outs of posting Real Person Fiction on AO3, including tips on how to handle ...
RPF is a form of fanfiction and there's nothing wrong with it. If someone doesn't like it, they can just not read/write it. That's all. I’m not a fan of it, I personally think it’s kinda yucky because it’s about real people. But my discomfort over the subject does not take priority in fandom spaces.
Decoding RPF: Real Person Fiction Explained • RPF Explained • Learn about the genre of Real Person Fiction, where real-life figures are portrayed in fictiona...
Four close friends-Sam, Colby, Nate and Jake-who embark on a journey to find the body of a missing boy. Along the way, they face challenges that test their courage and friendship, while revealing their struggles with family, self-identity, and growing up. The adventure becomes a heartfelt exploration of friendship that brings them closer together.
At least RPF fans don’t exploit celebrities for material gain. And with RPF, it is clearly understood that it’s fiction. No matter how gruesome or horny the RPF is, readers do understand that it’s not a documentary. Unlike, say, biopic movies or tv shows.
My line for RPF content-wise is the same as my line for fiction in general, though in cases involving writing messed up stuff about kids, I think it's worse if it's about real kids. In general I think that RPF should be kept away from the subjects of it.
So, what does any of that have to do with RPF/RPS (for simplicity's sake I'm just going to call it all RPF)? Let me start by suggesting there are actually various strains of RPF and that they don't actually go together, even though they get lumped under the same umbrella.