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{{trope}}
Due to language and adaptation barriers, nearly all popular anime is subject to [[Fanon]] levels proportional to their age; ''[[Fanon/Anime and Manga/Sailor Moon|Sailor Moon]]'' and ''[[Fanon/Anime and Manga/Ranma ½|Ranma ½]]'' are two notable examples. The advent of the Internet has made fact-checking much easier. It has not, however, stopped flame wars about favored characters or plot lines based solely on fanon. Some tropes, such as Akane Tendo's (of ''Ranma ½'') supposed psychotic tendencies, have been so over-elaborated-upon by fans that they become psychotically defensive of their incorrect beliefs. On the other hand, cultural and literary differences on the very notion of what's "canon" means that there's considerable room for fanon to grow. A notable example would be ''[[Gundam]].''
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== Subpages ==
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== ''[[Axis Powers Hetalia]]'' ==
* Some parts of the ''[[Axis Powers Hetalia]]'' fanon comes from [[Real Life]] since they're based on interpretations of world events. Others, however, are 100% fanon or only ''very'' loosely based on history. Some examples below.
** First type:
*** During the [[American Civil War]] or the [[Korean War]] (neither touched on by the author), there is a personification of CSA and North Korea. CSA is killed, North Korea is alive and continues to be crazy. In case of Korea this stems from a translation issue, as the Korea in Hetalia canon ''is'' South Korea (he's called ?? "kankoku", which specifically means South Korea), so presumably there's a canonical North Korea as well.
**** A variation of this is that America has a split personality during this time period.
*** Another one is about North Korea being [[Anime Chinese Girl|female]]. It's based in some Himaruya doddles that have a female Korea.
*** The Holy Roman Empire ''really'' did grow up to become Germany. This question is still unresolved in canon {{spoiler|though the Valentines strip hints at this one ''possibly'' being canon}}, but the fandom can't stand the thought of [[Forgotten Fallen Friend|HRE being killed]]. [[Tear Jerker|We can't blame the fans, tho.]]
*** [[Anime Chinese Girl|Vietnam]]'s transition from an [[Country Mouse|innocent fisher girl]] to a [[Broken Bird|hardened warrior]].
**** Those who follow the "North Korea is female" fanon bit also give her a similar treatment.
*** Fellow [[Anime Chinese Girl]] Taiwan either being a [[Dragon Lady]] during [[World War Two]], or having [[wikipedia:Foot binding|bound feet]] per China's orders.
** Second type:
*** [[Cute Mute|Egypt]]'s hair. Fanwork almost always described him as longhaired, but a Himaruya doodle showed him without his ''[[wikipedia:Kefiyeh|kefiyeh]]'' headgear... [[media:11c5zj8.gif|and with very short hair]].
*** Taiwan and Hong Kong being [[Half-Identical Twins]], as well as the Italies being twins too. It's neither confirmed nor denied, and in the case of the Asians they haven't even appeared in the strips.
*** The Italies aren't twins, since Romano is 23 and Veneziano is 20. A more prominent case of fanon is the idea that America and Canada are twins, despite having different birth dates (their respective Independence Days); however, they resemble each other enough that Canada is frequently mistaken for America and Canada doesn't have a canon age, so the fanon abounds.
*** Sweden having a [[Drop the Hammer|war hammer]] as his [[Weapon of Choice]]... despite having a [[BFS]] (and sometimes a quarter-staff) in official art and Himaruya doodles.
*** A large percentage of the fandom believes that [[Ensemble Darkhorse|Prussia]] survived his dissolution by the Allies and became [[East Germany]]. Opinions are further split on the topic of whether or not he [[Tear Jerker|survived the reunification]].
**** Considering he managed to write a blog, I'd say it's pretty much confirmed he's still around. The fanon that abounds around that point is that he's a basement dweller in Germany's house.
**** Wasn't Prussia's transformation into [[East Germany]] ''confirmed'' by [[Word of God]]? I'm pretty sure it was mentioned in one of the author's notes that he was stuck doing menial jobs for Russia in those times.
**** Some evidence fueling the theory is that Prussia's nickname for Germany is "West", presumably short for West Germany.
*** Denmark being a [[Yandere]] for either Sweden or Norway. And Norway being a [[Tsundere]] for Denmark.
*** If not made into a [[Broken Bird]], Vietnam will be shown as the East Asian's [[Team Mom]].
** Actually, when many characters are either just mentioned or show up only in [[All There in the Manual|supplementary materials]], [[Fanon]] is just around the corner. Since the fans have no real idea of what the characters are like, except for their looks and some basic personality traits spelled in the character profiles, you find yourself with ''many'' options to play/write/etc. them. Such as [[Perpetual Frowner|Hong Kong]] being depicted as a [[Sugar and Ice Personality]] and Belgium being a mix of [[The Ojou]] and [[Bottle Fairy]], personality wise.
** Also, it's believed that the infamous "vital regions" [[Memetic Mutation|memetic line]] has been used by either Prussia or Russia in a regular basis. Thing is, [[Beam Me Up, Scotty|they have not]]. The ones ''have'' used it in canon are actually ''Austria'' (in [https://web.archive.org/web/20120415200637/http://aph.starry-sky.com/mrt.html the "Maria Theresa" series]) and Spain (in [https://web.archive.org/web/20120415200600/http://aph.starry-sky.com/gift.html Spain's Lazy Morning"])
** In the Western fandom, everybody seems to believe that Sweden speaks in a horribly mumbled speech. In some cases it's portrayed as so bad that [[The Unintelligible|only Finland can decipher it]]. In the original Japanese, Sweden speaks in a northern Japanese dialect. Quirky? Yes. Unintelligible? No. He does [[The Quiet One|speak very little]], though, which might reinforce the image of him mumbling. Note that he's not the only character to have an accent but the others are usually translated speaking normally. Examples: [[The Idiot From Osaka|Spain]], Denmark, Norway, Turkey and [[Informed Ability|informedly]] at least Belgium.
*** Funnily enough, no one seems to do this to Norway whose dialect in Japanese is actually a lot more quirky and more difficult to decipher than Sweden's.
** The heights of certain characters. Russia tends to get portrayed as huge (admittedly, he is definitely one of the tallest) and America also seems to gain a few inches every now and then, but especially France grows quite a bit in fanworks. Canada and England, then again, have a strong tendency to shrink in fans's minds. Occationally Finland too. This might have [[One Head Taller|something]] to do with the latter's [[Uke|other fanon attributes]], although it's worth noting that ''the author himself'' doesn't seem to stick to these heights very strictly, especially England is often drawn as ''really'' being quite shorter than he's supposed to be. The main eight's (supposedly) canon heights are mentioned in a note with [https://web.archive.org/web/20120422104828/http://aph.starry-sky.com/03.html an early strip] (scroll down for the list).
** England being America's father or father figure (sometimes also Canada's, though that's usually France). This may come from a mistranslation in the comic version of America's Storage Cleaning (the anime has it correctly), and/or the popular "FrUK family" ship in which France and England raise little America and Canada, and/or some people's firm belief that they share a father/son dynamics. Canon, by the way, makes it pretty clear that they regarded each other as brothers and had an older brother/younger brother dynamics (though that may not have translated well due to cultural differences).
*** On a similar note, a lot of fanfiction writers have a female "Native American-tan" serve as the mother to America and Canada, before they are adopted by England and France. The series has never touched on personifications for the Native Americans, and there's no reason to think that there would be one single personification for them all, as opposed to one for each of the different tribes.
** Some countries' human names. Yekaterina "Katyusha" Braginskaya, for example, was never an official name for Ukraine, only a very popular fanon one.
** For areas that have yet to pop up fanon typically has them as one gender. For example Scotland is almost always a boy and Puerto Rico is a girl.
** The personifications of the US states are portrayed as America's children, either adopted conceived from the nations that used to own the territory (for example, Texas is either adopted from Mexico, or s/[[Mister Seahorse|he]] conceived Texas with America.)
==
* By far he most accepted mistake is assuming it's [[Canon]] that Sesshoumaru has inherited the title "Lord of the Western Lands" from his father. Their ranks and positions were rarely covered in [[Canon]] and left to hints such as the existence of inheritable servants (Myouga, for example, who became Inuyasha's servant not Sesshoumaru's) and Sesshoumaru's extremely high-quality clothing which itself is never commented on. However, the manga never once stated either Sesshoumaru or his father ''ruled'' any land. The misunderstanding came out of their father ''only once'' being referred to as a [[Youkai]] "who prowled the west" with no explanation or elaboration of what that actually meant. Fanon often expands this belief into Sesshoumaru possessing a manor, castle or palace in these "western lands" he supposedly rules, complete with many servants and there being neighbouring "lands" with their own lords (Kouga is often one despite the manga suggesting he's not even the overlord of the entirety of the existing wolf-youkai-tribe, only the Eastern one). In reality, throughout the run of the series Sesshomaru has never been shown to have any sort of home or castle, or any servants except for Jaken and Rin, as he's a wandering nomad like most of the rest of the cast. His ''mother'' lives in a palace that floats in the sky that took Sesshoumaru several days of active searching to locate but how that relates to Sesshoumaru is again never explored in the manga.
* Another popular belief is that youkai "mark" their mates with some sort of bite on the neck or breastbone and that they go through animal-based mating seasons (and yes it's almost always the ''[[Critical Research Failure|male]]'' [[Critical Research Failure|dog or wolf youkai that "go into heat"]]).
* Mostly prevalent in [[Alternate Universe]] stories, youkai have access to enchanted charms (almost always rings) that cause them to appear human when worn, thereby explaining why in the canon Kagome almost never meets any youkai in the present era.
* Jaken is universally believed to be serving Sesshoumaru as a result of a life-debt he owes him. The source of this belief comes from a random stand-alone [[Filler]] episode the [[Anime]] did that attempted to pad out Jaken's background. The original manga doesn't explore Jaken's background at all and never explains why he serves Sesshoumaru.
* Inuyasha's parents are never named in the anime or manga, but the third movie specifically names his mother "Izayoi," and this is almost universally accepted. His father is often called "Inutaisho," a corruption of "inu-no-taisho" which is his title, not his name, and translates roughly as "The Dog General." Less accepted but still present is the idea that his father is named "Toga." This comes from the third movie too and was a name that the production team gave to him just for the sake of referring to him by name while the movie was being made. In the finished film he's never addressed by name.
* Inuyasha is popularly cited as being 200 years old. This comes from the third film adaptation and not from the original manga.
== ''[[Pokémon (anime)|Pokémon]]'' ==
* Due to the fact that there was never much backstory given in the first place, many ''[[Pokémon (anime)|Pokémon]]'' anime fans have taken to creating their own theories, which can go in just about any direction. They range from the logical (Misty and Brock's surnames, the fate of Jessie's mother, [[MacGuffin|the GS Ball]]) to the utterly insane ([[Luke, I Am Your Father|Professor Oak or Giovanni or even Lugia being Ash's father]], to name one). And, mixed in with those are a crapload of loosely related fringe theories, that attempt to work in forgotten elements from the games (like Brendan from Ruby/Sapphire/Emerald being May's [[Forgotten Childhood Friend|long-lost childhood friend]], for example) or are based entirely on circumstantial evidence. It's about every bit as messy as it sounds. And don't even get started on [[shipping]]...
* As for the surnames of half the cast, there seems to be a frequent consensus for a few:
** Misty's pops up most often as ''Waterflower''. While not explicitly canon, it can at least be traced back to a specific [http://bulbapedia.bulbagarden.net/wiki/EP007 episode] whose title resulted in fans putting two and ''[[Epileptic Trees|x]]'' together and getting a generally accepted four.
** May and Max are most frequently surnamed ''Maple''.<ref>This is due to the fact that it plays off of the alliteration of the neglected protagonist: Brendan. If May and Max are the children of Norman, then Brendan is the son of Professor Birch. Hence, to play off the tree naming convention ''and'' the alliteration, May Maple.</ref>
** Additionally, many fanworks designate Giovanni's surname as ''Rocketto'', from the Japanese pronunciation of Team Rocket (Roketto-dan).
** Brock tends to run with the [[Meaningful Name|Meaningful and]] [[Punny Name]] theme for Gym Leaders, as ''Slate''.
** However, [[Word of St Paul|Eric Stuart]] was quoted in 2006 as claiming Brock's last name was Harrison in K-Zone magazine.
** Dawn ''Berlitz'' comes up a lot as well, since her ''[[Pokémon Special]]'' counterpart is actually given that surname.
* Giovanni being Ash's father is given evidence in ''[[Pokémon Live]]'', but it's a loose adaptation of the anime and not considered canon.
* The fandom seems to believe the ''[[Pokémon Special]]'' protagonists all have eye colors that match their names. However, that's not true. Yellow has a [[Green Eyes]]-Yellow Eyes mix, maybe even a stylized form of [[Brown Eyes]] depending on who you ask. None of the Sinnoh cast have eyes matching their names, simply because their gems have no color. Black has [[Brown Eyes]] while White has [[Blue Eyes]], much like their game counterparts.
== ''[[Puella Magi Madoka Magica]]'' ==
* Fans were quick to latch onto Poorfag-chan, a nameless and dialogueless classmate of Madoka whose only distinguishing feature is that she can be seen taking notes with a pen and paper while the rest of the class uses laptops. The Internet quickly decided that she was an orphan who lives in a cardboard box and has to scavenge though dumpsters to find school supplies; despite this, she is [[The Pollyanna|always cheerful]] and never gives in to despair ( {{spoiler|which explains why Kyubey hasn't approached her about becoming a magical girl}}). She also writes letters to her dead mother that always begin "Dear Mother in Heaven."
* As a lesser example, there's also Clip-girl, another nameless background classmate who is seen looking at Homura while sitting at her desk. Fans have proceeded to take this as evidence of a romantic crush.
* End of series spoilers: The entire concept of a {{spoiler|magical girl Valhalla}}, is ''likely'' but unconfirmed. [[Word of God]] refers to {{spoiler|Madoka taking magical girls to}} a "different universe" which could mean anything. There's also the manga ending, but that's just {{spoiler|a scene of Madoka and Homura in white}}, which could also be anything. Oh, and the monsters {{spoiler|that appear at the end of the series are called ''majuu'' in the original Japanese, which means "magical beast". "Demon" was a [[Woolseyism]] made-up by fansubs.}}
* The words ''mahou shojou'' being translated as "Puella Magi" - even the American version is going with "magical girl". In fact, the words "Puella Magi" are never spoken in the series. They only appear once at the very end... as part of the series's title written in [[Cypher Language]].
* [[The Stinger]]. Oh boy, [[The Stinger]]. Here's what [[Word of God]] has said about it: It wasn't intended to be a [[Sequel Hook]], it's supposedly set outside Japan, and {{spoiler|it's an [[Homage]] to [[Blade]]}}. Anything else - such as {{spoiler|being set in the far future, Homura dying afterwards or even Homura transforming into something else}} is pure speculation.
** Note that the writer has invoked [[Death of the Author]] and stated all of these interpretations can be considered correct. Additionally [[Shrug of God|even he has no idea where]] {{spoiler|the wings}} came from; they were added by the animation staff.
* Homura's family situation, or lack thereof. There is no indication in the series that Homura has any sort of family - even her residence only has her name on the nameplate (much like Mami's apartment). In episode 10 {{spoiler|she's implied to be filling out school transfer forms while still in the hospital, all by herself.}} The vast majority of fans have decided that she's [[Conveniently an Orphan]]. On the other hand, in [[All There in the Manual|the first Drama CD]] she offhandedly mentions that her family won't mind if she stays out late...
* Anything about {{spoiler|the witches'}} [[Backstory|Backstories]]. ''Anything.'' The one universally accepted by the fandom is {{spoiler|Charlotte being a cancer patient who wished to cure her illness so she could eat the food she liked}}.
* Kyoko's wish-derived powers. Fans pegged it as some kind of [[Mind Control]] until [[Word of God]] said that it was never seen in the series and revolved around light and illusions. [[All There in the Manual|The third Drama CD]] revealed it was actually a [[Doppelganger Attack]].
* For the longest time, fans thought Mami's wish was "I don't want to die alone" {{spoiler|mostly for the sake of irony}}. [[Word of God]] later said it was "to connect to life" (i.e. "I want to stay alive"). This then became [[God Never Said That]] when some people (on this wiki, even) read it as "to connect to ''lives''", which has a different meaning altogether.
== Other Anime and Manga ==
* ''[[Dragonball Z]]'' fanfiction is almost universally permeated with the notion that Saiyans undergo some sort of physiological/psychic connection when they fall in love, that Saiyans mate for life, refer to their love interests specifically as mates, and that the connection is formed in a process called "bonding" which involves one or both partners biting the other on the neck vampire-style. People may have originally gotten the idea for the psychic connection thing from a scene in the anime where Bulma gets a horrible feeling as Vegeta dies against Majin Buu. However, this is the only scene even close to suggesting this, appearing to show that numerous writers have blown it out of proportion.
** It could also be said for when Videl senses that Gohan is alive despite everyone thinking he's dead.
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** Another widely accepted theory is Vegeta was raped/abused by Frieza some point during his time working with him, and the abuse/rapes were what fueled his treachery.
* The idea that Amestris tricked the Ishvalans into attacking them, so that Amestris could invade and conquer them in ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist]]''. Actually Ishval was just an area of Amestris that the government tricked into rebelling so that they could crush and massacre them. This is made clear in the manga when several scenes from the Ishval Massacre contradict this such as the fact that the Amestrian army still had Ishvalan soldiers up until the 7th year of the rebellion, they only killed the pure blood Ishvalans (and possibly the half blood Ishvalans) when they needed souls for a Philosopher's stone. Scar's brother also tells Scar that Amestris allows the Ishvalans to worship Ishvala. In addition, the Amestrian government is currently at war with 4 other nations, and is a military dictatorship, like they would need a [[Batman Gambit]] just to invade a 5th.
** Also it is generally accepted that Edward's pants are leather, despite the fact that they would be, as Vic Mignogna points out, [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXU5zhF3-HA "hard to fight in. Ed's gotta be smarter than that."] Conversely, as Vic does not write or draw for the series, it is hard to determine the exact material of Ed's pants lest Arakawa-sensei decides to enlighten us for herself.
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*** In fact, Osaka was very distraught that she had apparently been kicked out of Miss Yukari's homeroom, as she couldn't find her name on the classroom chart. Turns out, she was looking for her ''birth'' name, not ''Osaka,'' as she was listed down as.
** Another common one is the Nyamo/Yukari pairing. Or, rather, that there WAS one. This appears to have most basis in the fact that [[Heterosexual Life Partners|they are still single]] and that Nyamo still puts up with [[Jerkass|Yukari]]. Quite a bit of fanon also revolves around the content of the [[Noodle Incident|"love letter" and Nyamo's drunken lecture in episode 14,]] mostly dealing with the aforementioned relationship. See the WMG page and the Headscratchers page for more information.
* Similar to [[Metal Gear Solid|Decoy Octopus]], Matt from ''[[Death Note]]'' received almost no characterization in canon; despite this, he is almost universally portrayed in fanworks as a [[Deadpan Snarker|snarky]] gamer and [[Only Sane Man]] to L, Near and Mello.
** Depending on the writer Mello might be German, Russian, or Prussian and he almost always was born with ties to the mafia.
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** The relationship between the spirit of the Ring and his host body, Bakura Ryou (in fanon the spirit takes the name Bakura or Yami Bakura and the host takes the name Ryou), is grossly exaggerated in many ways, the most prominent of which is the spirit being heavily abusive and Bakura being weak and frightful of him. First off, Bakura is hardly even aware of the fact that the spirit is there, considering him as more of a voice in his head. Secondly, the spirit can't form his own solid body, so if he were to abuse Bakura, he would have to damage his own host body, which doesn't serve him in any way, so he'd never do it.
*** The spirit ''does'' injure Bakura's body in the manga, but only to stop Bakura from interfering with the spirit's attempt to gain the Millennium Puzzle.
* Like ''[[Naruto]]'' and the Kyuubi, Kurama from ''[[Yu Yu Hakusho]]'' is believed to be in constant telepathic communication with "Youko", his demon self. Futhermore, "Youko" is very bored with being stuck inside a fifteen-year-old virgin and would very much like it to be sexy tiems nao. This one you can blame on the dub: the very first time Kurama transforms back, Youko Kurama's voice tells him "it's up to you now", and calls him Suichi, his dub human name; he answers back in his normal voice. In the Japanese version, Youko Kurama's voice begins the line, and normal-Kurama's voice finishes it as he transforms, implying one consciousness. Also, "Jaganshi" and "Youko" are thought to be Hiei and Kurama's names—they're technically titles, referring to what type of [[Youkai]] they are, and the word "Jaganshi" ("[[Evil Eye]] Master") is only used in one episode title.
* In the ''[[Guyver]]'' fandom, it's generally accepted that Edward Caerleon, late of the [[The Omniscient Council of Vagueness|Zoalord Council]] is Welsh.
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** There's a wide-spread view that the manga has proven that Orihime is a fullbringer because fullbring is activated with a mystical light and Orihime's powers also activate with a light. Not only are many different kinds of powers activated with a light of some kind, but the manga doesn't make any conscious attempt to connect Orihime's abilities to fullbring. That making a connection is an example of [[Fanon]] and not [[Canon]] seems to have escaped much of the fandom's notice.
** It's almost universally believed that Aizen's lecture on how the Hougyoku "gave" the [[True Companions]] their powers is a [[Retcon]] since Urahara once stated Orihime and Sado were born with powers they couldn't access until they came into contact with Ichigo's vast, uncontrolled reiatsu when he was in shinigami form. Aizen later says the Hougyoku made this possible and mentions that the moment their powers manifested was the moment their hearts were desperately cursing their own powerlessness. This threw into chaos all the [[Fanon]] assumptions that were built on top of Urahara's words (such as the major assumption that Ichigo's reiatsu didn't need any help to affect Sado and Orihime and fans ignoring the fact that Urahara didn't explain why there was a time-lag between the moment they were exposed to Ichigo's reiatsu and the moment when their powers actually manifested). In fact, the whole subject of how the Hougyoku actually works is mostly [[Fanon]] with the most common belief that it can make any wish come true. Aizen explicitly stated, however, that the Hougyoku is only capable of affecting desires ''that are possible to achieve without it''.
* ''[[Digimon]]'''s [[Canon Immigrant]] Ryo Akiyama's Wonderswan games were never released in English and only one saw a fan translation. However, one fan extrapolated from his and Ken Ichijouji's friendship in the games that Ryo also knew Ken's older brother. Over the years this extrapolation and its getting picked up by other fans has quietly snowballed into the odd ''[[Digimon Adventure 02]]'' fan with an interest in pre-series Ken believing the three of them are friends is canon.
** Also the name "Masaharu" was used by fans for Yamato and Takeru's father for a long while. Later on, it was revealed that his real name is "Hiroaki." [[They Just Didn't Care|A lot of people still like "Masaharu" better]].
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** Tasuki doesn't like women because of his four older sisters always giving him a hard time, fanfics usually write him as being gay, even if they're not yaoi fics.
*** Not helped by [[Yuu Watase]] giving a [[Word of Gay]] in regards to him. [[Teasing Creator|LOL]].
* There is no Dr. Hikari in ''[[Love Hina]]''. The character was created by a fairly popular fanfic writer and has led some to believe that such a character actually exists in canon.
* The ''[[Tiger and Bunny]]'' fandom has concluded that [[Show Within a Show|HeroTV]] has a forum filled with dirty fanfic... that some of the heroes (mostly [[Otaku|Ivan/Origami Cyclone]]) participate in writing.
* The ''[[Arashi no Yoru ni]]'' fandom strictly believes the film is romance based. The characters however never refer to each other as anything other then friends, though other series have used that term as a substitute for romantic ones. It helps that in the origin books Mei is gender neutral, though [[Word of God]] is he saw him as male.
* Though ''[[Gun X Sword]]'' fans are divided as to which member of his harem would have been best for Van, most of the existing romantic fanfics pair him off with Wendy {{spoiler|especially the continuation fics that are set after the show's [[Maybe Ever After]] ending, when a Van X Wendy relationship wouldn't be lolicon}}. Interestingly, several different pieces of continuation fic also assume that
* ''[[Pani Poni Dash!]]'' may not have one big fanbase like other examples, but if [http://www.twitter.com/KurumiMomose Kurumi Momose] and [http://www.twitter.com.6SayakaSuzuki Sayaka "#6" Suzuki]{{Dead link}} are married to each other accourding to their Twitter pages, some people definately must have been quite dedicated on this. It hasn't spreaded through many more fans yet, but it's likely they might get quite some attention.
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