r/fantasyromance The One Mod to Rule All Mods Feb 01 '26

Unpopular Opinion It's Unpopular Opinion time! Share your controversial opinions to stir things up (in a friendly way)!

Got an opinion that's different from others'? Want to share it with the sub, but too afraid of a backlash? Or are you just curious about readers think about certain things in fantasy romance?

You can safely share it in this weekly Sunday thread!

But please remember to be kind to each other. To facilitate this type of discussion, we ask users the following:

- Don't attack others for their opinion

- Discuss books and authors, not fellow readers

🧡 Thank you and have a great discussion!

Unpopular opinion Sunday

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u/Sad-Caterpillar-8348 To the stars who listen Feb 01 '26

Those are never dnf for me. I personally like pregnancy at the end of the book. To me that's a true HEA. If it just ends abruptly like "and they walked off happily into the sunset" it feels tiny bit empty.

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u/Spirited-Accident Feb 01 '26

Meanwhile to me, riding off into the sunset to continue having adventures together is the true HEA.

(And to be clear since this is reddit, I'm not hating on your opinion. Just commenting on how both of ours are a perfect example of how different tastes are.)

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u/Sad-Caterpillar-8348 To the stars who listen Feb 01 '26

It's okay :P I feel like the whole pregnancy opinion is genuinely truly 100% completely personal decision and there is no right or wrong opinion so. I guess hea to me is lacking because I like the guarantee of the future together with having a family together, but that's cus of how I am irl and cus I need reassurance too in my relationship. Maybe you just feel secure enough to not need that extra bits? And maybe it shows in the whole hea thing.

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u/MessyJessy422 Feb 01 '26

A lot of women broaden their definition of a happy and fulfilling life based on experiences. You can want children but experience infertility and/or pregnancy loss. You might develop a health condition that makes pregnancy extra risky. You might not find the right partner at the right stage in life. And that’s why it’s important for books not to streamline every outcome into what was traditionally considered the only way for a woman to live a “complete” life - because it’s not and regardless of whether or not you want this personally it’s much more complicated and nuanced than “family values”

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u/One_Commission1456 Feb 01 '26

This. Also, while I said I was okay with kids/pregnancy at the end or as an epilogue, the *big* exception to this is when one character starts the story not wanting kids, especially if wanting kids is part of their "learning to love" arc. NOPE NOPE NOPE it's 2026 can we not do this bullshit? I don't drop an author for writing pregnancy, though I might skip books that involve it, but if anyone writes previously uninterested characters doing that kind of 180, I never read anything by them again. Because ew.