The audacity of shippers to call me fetishizer when its so obvious I'm gay lol. Calling a person fetishizer for clocking you all asses. If there is a fetishizer, its definitely the one keep on saying queerbait is gayer than actual gay stuff in pride month and not accepting the fact shipping culture neglect actual gay stuff and bringing harm to the gay community by you all keep on mental gymnastics and calling names for not tolerating delulu
Ok and I'm a lesbian ? Idfc about your opinion your just fucking annoying spamming this everytime when people just want to talk about the fucking manhwa and also any of your opinions aren't valid the moment you have a fucking rapist as a pfp but keep talking bro and spreading hate just because you can you dumb shit
And idk what you're trying to prove and say how it's harmful to ship 2 men and harms the gay community? Genuinely how is it harmful ? If you're talking about straight women who just ship 2 men online but do not care a bit about gay people in real life I would agree that it is harmful but my guy, just because some people comments something about a ship doesn't mean that what they just care about this ship and nothing else ??
Not to mention you have been posting these comments not only here but another manga like witch hat atelier and maybe even more that I don't even know about and and just saying the same bullshit , you talk about how much you care about the gay community and how shipping culture is harmful to this community but you are also hating on other queer people just because they ship something harmless?

Once again, the claim from The S‑Classes That I Raised Hyunjae × Yoojin shippers that this pairing is “gayer than actual queer stories” completely misses the point, and once again it feels especially tone‑deaf right now during Pride Month. This is a time meant to center visibility, respect, and honest, intentional queer storytelling, so it needs to be said clearly: the harm caused by this behavior is very real, and it should never be brushed aside.
The biggest issue is how this trend actively erases and undermines whatever genuine queer representation we already have. Fans pour hundreds of hours, endless creative energy, detailed fanart, paid commissions, official merchandise purchases, event meet‑ups, trending tags, and constant hype into pushing a pairing that was never written as romantic, they are explicitly just friends. Worse, this reduces queer identity to nothing more than a disposable fantasy or a fun headcanon you can tack onto any dynamic.
Even more damaging is how it fuels unfair hostility and harmful stereotypes that stick to all queer people even those of us who are antishippers and only want actual canon representation instead of made‑up interpretations. Outsiders, casual readers, critics, and creators see fans dissecting every single panel, labeling a casual hug or confirmed platonic bond as “romantic coding,” arguing aggressively with anyone who disagrees, spamming comment sections, and even insulting anyone against their ship calling people homophobic or “missing the point” just because they see the relationship exactly as it was written.