Alpha Uke x Beta Seme. Former childhood friends, best friends who fell in love as kids but misunderstandings did their wicked work and now I get angst and good art. And the art is gorgeous.
Childhood friends who were in love as kids, but now meet again as college students. Driven apart by misunderstandings and angst, but still in love no matter how they try to deny it.
This is actually very similar to Mind The Gap! And it’s by one of my favorite authors. But this won’t be updated until the author gets the rights back from their previous company and from what I remember, it’s on a cliff hanger full of tension
Former childhood friends, best friends who fell in love as kids, but misunderstandings (and evil family members) drove them apart. Now they meet as adults, one a struggling worker, and the other a poorly behaved celebrity with a desire for revenge. Or, that’s what he tells himself.
Hard to believe him when he looks at him as though he hung the sun.
Omegaverse and sports.
Once, the MC was a promising swimmer who had to quit because he simply wouldn’t be able to do what he loved much longer. Little did he know, the underclassman whose gaze followed him everywhere was in love with him. Now, back as a famous Athlete, that underclassman is determined to get what he wants—him.
Sports.
This is actually very similar to Dash! MC was raised by a father obsessed with hockey, but no matter how hard he tried, he couldn’t beat the prodigy that his father took under his wing—even when his father died. Years pass and he’s quit hockey, and the MC isn’t happy at all that he runs into his former underclassman. But the famous Athlete won’t stop until he’s bewitched his sunbae like he was himself.
This is the least serious story on here, it does follow the “childhood friends who misunderstand and separate for years” pipeline. The MC is dense—so dense he can’t admit his feelings even to himself.
This is actually different from the others, and I love the art. ML loved the older MC since he was a teen and confessed, but was turned down—now as adults, he came back, but nothing is the same as it was before, Not him, nor the man he loved.
Mind the Gap