Fantasy

The Encyclopedia of Fantasy, by John Clute and John Grant, offers a definition of fantasy as stories about the impossible, that which cannot exist in reality as we know it. When set in the world we know, the tales are about beings, places, and events that cannot be. When placed in a realm not of this earth, the settings themselves are impossible, not functioning according to our world's physical laws. Science fiction, by contrast, describes that which might be possible, though not at the present time or with known technology.

Fantasy in Daria Fanfiction
Fantasy writing may be divided into numerous subgenres, but Daria fanfics have their own peculiar fantasy subgenres that do not always match up with the broader field. Notable subgenres are given below, with examples. Crossovers are included under the appropriate subgenre headings. Almost every category has examples that will spill over into other groups.

Afterlife Fantasy
One or more Daria characters discover the hard way what existence is like after death occurs. This category crosses over into ghost stories and other types of horror fiction, but sometimes horror is not the primary emotion evoked by such tales.

Examples
 * "Always Beside You," by The Angst Guy
 * "Death Rowe," by bgryphon
 * "Unseen Phenomenon," by Wildgoose
 * "What You Reap," by Thea Zara



Comic Fantasy
In comic fantasy, silliness and humor are the rule. These may include bedtime stories told to children that Daria, Jane, or Quinn are babysitting; twisted fairytales; and other off-the-wall fics written purely for the reader's amusement. Squirrel stories in which the squirrels act in fantastic ways go here.

Examples
 * Barely Tales series, by Kemical Reaxion
 * "Cynical Symphonies," by Ranger Thorne
 * "I Never Metamorphosis I Didn't Like," by The Angst Guy
 * "The Idiocy," by Kristen Bealer
 * "The Original Underground Government-Suppressed Version of Brother Grimace's Classic "Daria" Fanfic, "The Sun Will Come Out, Tomorrow"", by The Angst Guy
 * "Quinnderella," by Mike Xeno

Dream Worlds
Dream worlds are exactly what they sound like: dreamlike environments that do not obey the laws of reality. Alice stories are nearly always of this type.

Examples
 * "," by Rey Fox
 * "Air Bed," by Brother Grimace
 * "If You Only Walk Long Enough," by The Angst Guy

Fairytales
Fairytales are stories making use of classic folklore, such as giants, elves, wizards, dragons, and other monsters, taking in fantastic settings that usually resemble Dark Ages Europe. Dungeons & Dragons and other fantasy game crossovers appear here, as do Arthurian pastiches.

Examples
 * "Daria of the Drow," by Dervish
 * "Darialance," by TAG
 * "Le Morte d’Angela," by Decelaraptor

Fantastic Voyages
One or more of the Daria cast discover passage to a new world or universe that operates under magical laws or impossible conditions. Entry into this new realm might gift the travelers with new powers for the duration. (If the means to enter the other universes involves the Good Time Chinese restaurant or Holiday Island, the story goes into the next category below.)

Examples
 * "FBCB," by Wraith
 * "In Dreams," by Scissors MacGillicutty
 * "The Island of Canceled Cartoons," by Shallow 15 (a.k.a. Erin Mills)
 * "Snowball in Hell," by TAG



Holiday Island Stories
Perhaps the most notorious reality-busting episode of all, "Depth Takes a Holiday" spawned a number of later tales about the Good Time Chinese restaurant and various Holiday Island teens, the latter either on their home "island" or in Lawndale. Some stories here are also Fantastic Voyages.

Examples
 * The Adventure of the Chinese Restaurant, by MMan
 * A Day (Un)Like Any Other, by Angelinhel
 * A Hard Days' Night, by The Angst Guy
 * Club Sandwich, by Cypher
 * Crossover, by Nemo Blank
 * Holiday Kombat, by Richard Lobinske
 * Luuuv Story, by The Angst Guy
 * Restrain Jane Lane! or, Stupid Cupid, by Nemo Blank.

Modern Magic
Also called contemporary fantasy, modern magic stories present supernatural beings, devices, wizardry, creatures, and places that turn up in the world of today (or the late-1990s world of the Daria show). Crossovers with novels, movies, TV shows, and so forth are often seen (The Wizard of Oz, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Dresden Files, Resident Evil, Xena the Warrior Princess, every kind of anime movie imaginable, etc.).

Several sub-subgenres of modern magic appear with some frequency in Daria fanfiction.
 * Body switchers, in which one or more pairs of characters trade bodies and discover how the other half lives, per the movie Freaky Friday. Examples: Daria and Quinn Switch Bodies, by Nada Rowls; Eternity, by Richard Lobinske (not entirely body switching as adult Daria and Tom must share their bodies with another couple); Live the Life of Quinn, by Chris Mack; The Switch, by Brett Shearer; The Way Things Ought to Be, by Barry Eshkol Adelman.
 * Faerie fics, in which one or more characters appear as miniature faerie beings and stir things up. Most of these were inspired by fan art showing faerie alter egos of certain characters. Examples: Jane Unchained, by The Angst Guy; Uranium in the Drinking Water, by The Angst Guy.
 * Harry Potter crossovers, in which Daria characters go to wizarding schools like Hogwarts. This is by far the most popular fantasy crossover. Examples: Daria Morgendorffer and the Magic McGuffin, by Ranger Thorne; Daria Morgenpotter & The New Same-Old, Same-Old, by Daniel Callahan; Harry Potter and the Flack-Jacket Mafia, by Canadibrit; My Daria/Harry Potter (Fandom-Based) Crossover, by Brother Grimace; One Year Later, by NightGoblyn; Harry Butt-head, by Deep Metal.
 * Secret supernaturals, in which one or more Daria characters secretly possess vast magical or psychic powers that cannot be explained by science as we know it. Examples: An Adventure of Sandi, a Teenage Witch, by Bacner; Blood and Irony, by J Osako; Crossing Over, by The Angst Guy; Demon Princess Quinn, Book 1: Quinn Anwnn, by CDM; Deus Jane, by The Angst Guy; The Morgendorffer Code, by The Angst Guy; The Other, by The Angst Guy; The Pact, by Richard Lobinske; Shadow of a Cynic, by Ranger Thorne.
 * Suburban legends, twisted "urban legends" told among teenagers, in the same vein as the three stories told in "Legends of the Mall." Examples: Chocolate Girl: The *Other* Legend of the Mall, by MMan; The Girl Who Walked Home All Alone in the Dark, by The Angst Guy.
 * Supernatural intruder tales, in which lone, powerful individuals with magic-like abilities (not superheroes and not the Daria cast) enter Lawndale and interact with the locals. Examples: An Angel Named Mary Sue, by Angelinhel; Anything, by Brandon League; the Chris Series, by MFC; Crossover, by Nemo Blank; Guardian, by Mike Xeno; Identity Crisis, by Yui Daoren; Illusions: The Unswerving Punctuality of--, by CharlieGirl; It's a Wonderful Life, Not, by Thomas Mikkelsen; Kitsune and Last Dance With Mary Jane, by Rey Fox; A Midsummer Nightmare's Daria, by The Angst Guy; Scarlett, by The Angst Guy; Smoking Mirror, by The Angst Guy; Stacy and the Lamp, by The Angst Guy; Visitations series, by Brother Grimace.