Ratings2
Average rating3.5
A socially anxious college student discovers she has superpowers—and they need babysitting—in the first book of an original superhero series.
Power Day occurs every year on September 15. Across the world, formerly regular people awaken with superhuman abilities—and labels to go with them. They become the next generation of Heroes . . . and Villains.
September 15 is also Emily Wright’s first day on campus. While everyone else is out celebrating the start of their college career, Emily’s hiding in her dorm room. She wonders if it’s possible to earn a degree while completely avoiding eye contact with anyone.
All she wants is to learn a little and maybe get over her anxiety. Instead, she’s granted a superpower and categorized as villainous. So, Emily panics—and inadvertently conjures up a pint-size supervillain sidekick.
Emily has no intention of doing anything—evil or otherwise—with her powers. And if she has to babysit an increasing number of “little sisters” in order to stay under the radar, so be it.
But can Emily gain control of her life, or will she drown in a sea of supervillainy and cuddles?
Featured Series
2 primary booksFluff is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2022 with contributions by RavensDagger.
Reviews with the most likes.
Emily randomly gets super powers and loses all control over her life. The system decided she's a villain, which means every hero will want to capture her for easy skill points. Her power creates other sentient beings, “little sisters” who want to help her become the bestest villain ever. She never clearly explains to them she doesn't want to be a villain.
There's a mechanic to the morality system to move up or down the hero-villain scale but no indication that Emily or her sisters are making progress in either direction. She passes herself off as a hero among the local heroes, while local villains think she's an evil mastermind.
The sisters feel like the cast of a moe anime. They're preteens and their smallness is emphasized. The word “tummy” is used a lot and there's lots of cuddling and head pats. Teddy, the werebear sister, talks about poop a lot.