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Doujinshi, especially fan works, love exaggerating these binaries. In one story, the male lead might be a single dad mistaken for the heroine’s boyfriend. In another, a boyfriend starts acting paternal, killing the romance. The humor or drama comes from crossed wires: when she wants a lover, he offers discipline; when she wants a father for her child, he still acts like a teenage crush.
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What makes platforms like Doujindesu.TV compelling is how they let readers sample these cultural tensions raw—unedited by mainstream magazines. A page from a fan-drawn comic can ask: Why do we conflate "husband material" with "dad energy"? Can a boyfriend ever be too fatherly? Can a dad ever be too much of a boyfriend? The humor or drama comes from crossed wires:
Ultimately, the answer isn't in the title. It's in the panels between: a shared meal, a sleepless night with a crying baby, a hand held during a fight. Doujinshi remind us that roles are costumes we try on—and the best ones let us be both protector and lover, without choosing one over the other. Can a boyfriend ever be too fatherly
The unfinished title "Wanna Become a Dad or a Boyfriend?" (likely a romantic comedy or josei doujinshi) touches on a modern anxiety. Do you choose the stable, protective, slightly boring father figure—or the passionate, unpredictable, emotionally intense partner?