The publishing industry has found its next cash cow in sexually explicit Harry Potter fan fiction, with "Alchemised" securing a seven-figure movie deal from Legendary Entertainment. The novel, which began as online fan fiction featuring graphic sexual content between Harry Potter characters, represents the complete degradation of women's literary consumption.
"Alchemised" follows the same disturbing pattern established by "Fifty Shades of Grey," which started as explicit Twilight fan fiction before becoming a publishing phenomenon. Hollywood and publishers discovered they could repackage pornographic fan fiction as "romance novels" and sell millions of copies to women hungry for increasingly depraved content.
The business model is simple: take existing beloved characters, strip away everything that made them appealing, and insert graphic sexual scenarios that would make a sailor blush. Publishers then market this literary sewage as "empowering" female fantasy while counting their profits.
This trend reflects the crisis in women's reading habits documented by Evie Magazine's analysis of the "monster smut" phenomenon. As Evie noted, women are "conditioning their brains and bodies to associate pleasure with monsters, slavery, or sexual violence" through their reading choices.
The magazine identified the core problem: "What you repeatedly fantasize about becomes necessary for arousal. If your erotic imagination centers around abuse, monstrous violence, and submission to non-human entities, your brain is reprogramming itself to crave just that."
"Alchemised" represents another step in this psychological conditioning. Women who grew up loving Harry Potter as children now consume pornographic versions of those same characters as adults, creating disturbing associations between childhood nostalgia and sexual gratification.
The author of "Alchemised" built their audience through Archive of Our Own, a fan fiction platform notorious for hosting the most extreme sexual content imaginable. The site allows users to tag stories with increasingly specific fetishes, creating echo chambers where women normalize progressively more disturbing fantasies.
Legendary Entertainment's decision to adapt this material and pay the author upwards of $3 million for the property shows Hollywood's complete abandonment of artistic standards in favor of guaranteed profits. The studio knows women will flock to theaters for any content that validates their pornographic reading habits, regardless of quality or cultural impact.
The "romantasy" genre has become a euphemism for pornography marketed to women. Publishers discovered they could slap fantasy elements onto explicit sexual content and call it literature, while readers pretend they're consuming something more sophisticated than written porn.
This represents the logical endpoint of the cultural shift that began with "Fifty Shades of Grey." That trilogy normalized abusive relationships and BDSM practices for mainstream female audiences, paving the way for increasingly extreme content to gain acceptance.
The success of "Alchemised" proves women's literary tastes have been completely corrupted by pornographic conditioning. Instead of seeking stories that inspire, educate, or genuinely entertain, female readers now demand content that feeds their artificially manufactured sexual fantasies.
Publishers and Hollywood executives celebrate this trend because it generates massive profits with minimal creative investment. Why develop original stories when you can repackage existing intellectual property with explicit sexual content and guarantee sales?
The women consuming this content claim it's "escapism" or "fantasy," but they're actually participating in their own psychological manipulation. Each purchase validates the industry's decision to prioritize pornographic content over genuine storytelling.
What do you think about Hollywood adapting pornographic fan fiction into major motion pictures? Leave a comment and let us know.
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When is this weirdo going to go all in and have a 50 Shades of Donald Duck version?
The more the left poisons relations between men and women in real life, the more they turn to haremlit and romantasy. How do we turn this around?