Kindle Unlimited is honestly one of the best places to find romantasy that is written for specific niches perfect for the eclectic reader who is trying to find something for them. The problem is that KU is also a complete swamp of writers who are inexperienced. For every actually satisfying indie fantasy romance with sharp trope work and proper chemistry, there are ten books that sound amazing, have a dragon on the cover, and then proceed to ruin your evening.
So this list is for the readers who want underrated romantasy books on Kindle Unlimited that people are talking about. I’ve focused on indie and self published KU books with strong reader ratings, relatively modest review counts, and clear romance appeal, especially fated mates, reverse harem, monster romance, paranormal chaos, and weird little niche premises that trad publishing would absolutely never touch.
That is, frankly, part of the fun.
These are genuinely underrated romance books and underrated fantasy romance books that deserve more readers than they currently have. Some are dark. Some are funny. Some are deeply horny. One is basically a queer werewolf meta comedy, which, welp, that’s par for the course. The point is this… if your TBR is crying out for Kindle Unlimited romantasy books that are still under the radar, these are the ones worth poking first.
For a broader look at the best romantasy books on Kindle Unlimited including more mainstream picks, that list has you covered. And if you want to explore the wider romantasy genre beyond KU, there’s a full guide to that too.
Takeaways
- These underrated Kindle Unlimited romances are mostly indie titles with strong average ratings and far fewer ratings than the usual BookTok giants.
- The strongest cluster here is paranormal and fantasy romance with fated mates, omegaverse, reverse harem, monsters, and shifters.
- If you want high emotion and grovelling, start with Pack Darling. If you want funny fantasy chaos, start with Signs of Cupidity. If you want queer omegaverse nonsense in the best way, start with Bro and the Beast.
- For readers chasing very low review count hidden gems, Dream Girl, Daeos, and The Orc’s Innocent Plaything are the real under the radar picks here.
- Don’t want to read a whole bunch? Here’s the scan table.
Underrated Kindle Unlimited Romantasy Books at a Glance
| Book & Author | Spice | Key Tropes | Tone |
| Pack Darling: Part One – Lola Rock | 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ | Omegaverse, reverse harem, enemies to lovers, forced proximity, fated mates | Raw, angsty, pack drama chaos |
| Run Riot – Colette Rhodes | 🌶️🌶️🌶️ | Demons, fated mates, reverse harem, forbidden love, slow burn | Dark paranormal, emotionally messy |
| Bro and the Beast 1 – L.C. Davis & Joel Abernathy | 🌶️🌶️🌶️ | Queer omegaverse, werewolves, forced proximity, fated mates, meta humour | Addictive, chaotic, genuinely funny |
| Dream Girl – Jane Handler | 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ | Portal fantasy, why choose, amnesia, queer rep, fated mates | Softly bonkers, emotional, spicy |
| A Twist of Luck – Jaymin Eve | 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ | Shifters, why choose, scent matched mates, alpha heroes, slow build | Big, possessive, dramatic romantasy |
| Daeos – Hattie Jacks | 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ | Alien prison, dragon shifters, fated mates, sunshine and grump | Pacy, pulpy, surprisingly tender |
| The Orc’s Innocent Plaything – Veronika Kane | 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ | Orc romance, enemies to lovers, virgin heroine, fated mates | Very spicy, playful, monster romance comfort |
| Signs of Cupidity – Raven Kennedy | 🌶️🌶️ | Fae, humour, reverse harem, fantasy chaos, fated mates | Snarky, light, actually fun |
What Counts as an “Underrated Kindle Unlimited Romantasy” Here?
For this list, I’m looking at books that tick most of these boxes:
- Available through Kindle Unlimited at the time of research
- Strong reader satisfaction on romance.io, generally around the 4 star mark or higher
- Lower rating counts than the usual massive romantasy names, which is usually a decent clue that a book is still flying under the radar
- A proper fantasy, paranormal, monster, or speculative romance hook, not just contemporary romance wearing a decorative dagger on the cover
I’m also leaning toward books with clear trope identity because KU readers are not wandering around asking for “a good story.” We are asking for things like “fated mates but make it painful,” or “orc romance, but tender,” or “why choose with actual plot, are you crazy?” Specificity matters.
Fated Mates KU Romantasy That Deserve More Attention

Protected by Outcasts by Traci Lovelot
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ (very high)
Tropes
Fated mates, reverse harem, werewolves, forced proximity, enemies to lovers, possessive heroes
Tone
Angsty, spicy, pack chaotic, a bit savage in places
What It’s About
Freya gets pulled into the orbit of a wolf pack that is all danger, tension, and deeply inconvenient mate bond chaos. Romance.io tags it with fated mates, reverse harem, forced proximity, enemies to lovers, and werewolves, with a 5/5 explicit and plentiful steam rating. It’s currently available through Kindle Unlimited on Amazon and still has a pretty modest review count.
Why It’s on The Gilt List
This has the same “pack trouble first, emotional safety later” appeal that makes readers inhale messy fated mates books in one sitting. It is very much for people who want alpha chaos, tension, and a heroine thrown into a dangerous bond situation that does not resolve politely.
Read This If You
- Want rejected mate pain with serious spice
- Like werewolf pack dynamics, forced proximity, and heroes who come in hot and problematic
Skip This If You
- Need low angst or gentle romance from page one
- Do not want explicit content, dubious consent flags, or emotionally rougher paranormal dynamics
What readers are saying
- A few readers also wanted more from the wider story, especially worldbuilding and pack politics, because the romance and mating dynamics clearly take priority over a bigger external plot.
- Readers who loved this one were completely in for the outcast pack dynamic and said the reverse harem relationships were the main draw from the start.
- A lot of positive reviews mention that each of the three alphas feels distinct, which helps the pack chemistry work instead of blending into one giant possessive blur.
- Freya gets praised for having backbone. Even readers who liked the darker setup said she does not just fold under pressure and that made her easier to root for.
- Fans of spicy paranormal romance said the book delivers exactly what it promises: emotional tension, fated mate chaos, and a lot of high heat pack energy.
- The biggest criticism is the bullying and rejection angle early on. Some readers found Freya’s treatment too harsh and felt the emotional tone leaned more painful than enjoyable at the beginning.

Run Riot by Colette Rhodes
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️ (medium high)
Tropes
Demons, reverse harem, fated mates, slow burn, forbidden love
Tone
Dark paranormal, wounded heroine, bond drama
What It’s About
The heroine is supposed to have formed soul bonds by adulthood and has not, which makes her an outcast before the story even gets going. Then she meets Riot, darkness gets involved, and the series starts building toward a paranormal reverse harem setup. Romance.io tags it with fated mates, demons, fantasy, forbidden love, and slow burn, and it sits around 4.08 stars with just over 100 ratings.
Why It’s on The Gilt List
This is exactly the kind of KU paranormal romance that readers hunting bond based fantasy romance should know about. It has that “I have been emotionally wronged by destiny” energy, which is catnip for the right audience. It is less glossy than the viral stuff, but that is partly why it works.
Read This If You
- Love fated mate setups that start from lack, shame, or social rejection
- Want a slow build reverse harem with some darkness in the room
Skip This If You
- Prefer standalones, because this is absolutely a series investment
- Need immediate payoff with all romantic dynamics visible early
What Readers Are Saying
- Readers who clicked with this one loved the darker paranormal setup and said the mythology felt more interesting than a lot of standard bond romance worlds.
- Riot gets a lot of attention as a morally grey love interest who is actually compelling rather than just generically broody.
- Several reviews praise the fact that the relationship drama does not lean too heavily on pointless miscommunication, which honestly is always a relief.
- Fans of the series setup say this book does a good job planting intrigue and making you want to keep going with the rest of the bonds and wider story.
- The most common complaint is pacing early on. A few readers felt it took a while to properly grab them and that the opening moved more slowly than expected.
- Grace also seems a bit divisive. Some readers found her sympathetic as an outsider, while others thought she came off naïve or frustrating before the story really found its footing.
Funny and Chaotic Kindle Unlimited Romantasy Picks
Bro and the Beast 1 by L.C. Davis and Joel Abernathy
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️ (medium high)
Tropes
Queer omegaverse, werewolves, forced proximity, meta fantasy, fated mates
Tone
Campy, self aware, ridiculous in a controlled way
What It’s About
A frat boy wakes up inside his twin brother’s werewolf romance novel and has to deal with the fact that the terrifying hot wolf hero of that book now seems very interested in him. Romance.io and Amazon both support the core setup here, and Amazon lists it as KU. Romance.io also tags it as omegaverse, werewolves, humour, and fated mates, with a rating just above 4 stars from around 160 ratings.

Why It’s on The Gilt List
Because it is really fun. There, I said it. A lot of “funny romantasy” is not actually funny, just quirky in a desperate way. This one understands the genre enough to parody it and still deliver romance. That balance is weirdly rare.
Read This If You
- Want queer paranormal romance with actual banter
- Enjoy books that know exactly how silly some romance conventions are and love them anyway
Skip This If You
- Need your werewolf books serious, brooding
- Do not enjoy meta humour or exaggerated character energy
What Readers Are Saying
- A lot of readers adored the ridiculous meta premise and said the whole “stuck inside a romance novel” setup was exactly the right kind of chaotic.
- The humour lands really well for fans of campy, self aware paranormal romance. People kept mentioning the sarcastic energy of the main character as a highlight.
- Reviewers also liked that beneath the comedy there is an actual emotional thread, so it does not feel like one long joke with abs.
- The queer omegaverse angle got a lot of praise for feeling playful and fresh rather than like a tired copy of the usual pack dynamics.
- On the other side, some readers thought the humour was too much and tipped into absurd for absurd’s sake. This definitely seems to be a taste thing.
- A few reviewers also felt the pacing could get messy because the parody elements sometimes pull focus from the romance and plot progression.

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Signs of Cupidity by Raven Kennedy
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️ (low medium)
Tropes
Fantasy reverse harem, fae princes, humour, fated mates
Tone
Snarky, light, playful, chaotic cupid nonsense
What It’s About
A very self satisfied cupid gets exiled to the human realm and ends up tangled with multiple fae princes in a fantasy reverse harem setup. Romance.io currently places it around 4.15 to 4.16 stars with just under 200 ratings and a lower steam score, which makes it a decent pick for readers who want fantasy romance energy without going straight into explicit territory.

Why It’s on The Gilt List
This one is for readers who are tired of every romantasy heroine sounding traumatised, breathless, and permanently one argument away from being “claimed.” Sometimes you want a lighter fantasy romance with a smart mouth and a bit of silliness. This scratches that itch.
Read This If You
- Want a palate cleanser after heavier dark romance
- Like reverse harem, but would rather laugh than spiral
Skip This If You
- Prefer your fantasy worlds solemn and beautifully miserable
- Need high spice from the jump
What Readers Are Saying
- Readers consistently praise the heroine’s voice here. The sarcastic narration is the thing people seem to remember first and recommend most.
- A lot of fans liked that the tone is lighter and sillier than many reverse harem fantasy romances, which makes it a good palate cleanser after darker books.
- The fae prince setup also seems to hook readers quickly, especially those who enjoy chaotic group dynamics and fantasy nonsense with a wink.
- People who clicked with the humour found it genuinely funny, not just quirky on paper, which is rarer than it should be.
- The main downside for some readers is the lower spice level. A few went in expecting more heat and felt a bit short changed on that front.
- Others found the humour repetitive or too juvenile, so this one really does come down to whether the heroine’s comedic voice works for you or makes you want to fling your Kindle.
Why Choose and Omegaverse KU Books That Are Still Under the Radar

Dream Girl by Jane Handler
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ (high)
Tropes
Portal fantasy, why choose, amnesia, second chance elements, queer rep, fated mates
Tone
Dreamy, emotionally soft, then suddenly wild
What It’s About
A mathematician wakes up in a parallel omegaverse and discovers that the alpha from her dreams may be real. Romance.io lists it at 4.05 stars with 28 ratings, explicit open door steam, and a queer multi partner relationship structure. Amazon also shows it in KU.
Why It’s on The Gilt List
Twenty eight ratings is basically nothing in KU terms, which makes this one the sort of hidden gem people say they want and then never actually click. The portal angle helps it stand out from more standard omegaverse premises, and the emotional setup has more softness than the cover copy might make you expect.
Read This If You
- Want why choose with a fantasy hook beyond “there are lots of hot men in the room”
- Like fated mates, but want memory gaps, dream logic, and slightly weirder worldbuilding
Skip This If You
- Need a fully settled consensus pick, because this one is still early and niche
- Do not enjoy omegaverse mechanics or multi partner romance
What Readers Are Saying
- Readers who loved this one were really into how odd the premise is. Portal fantasy plus omegaverse plus soulmate chaos is not exactly subtle, but apparently it works.
- The multiple love interests and queer relationship structure got a lot of positive attention from readers who wanted something more expansive than a standard pair bond romance.
- Several reviews mention that the mystery around the heroine’s past helps keep the story moving, so it is not just there for the spice and vibes.
- Readers also seemed happy that the spicy scenes feel satisfying without completely swallowing the emotional arc and world setup.
- The most common criticism is confusion. Between the memory loss, the parallel world setup, and the layered relationships, some readers felt like they were trying to catch up for too long.
- A few readers also said the larger pack dynamic could feel crowded, especially early on, so this is probably better for readers who enjoy multi partner romance and do not need a tiny, tightly focused cast.
A Twist of Luck by Jaymin Eve
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ (high)
Tropes
Shifters, why choose, scent matched mates, possessive alphas, slow build
Tone
Large scale, possessive, dramatic, proper KU romantasy mode
What It’s About
A heroine who has spent years running from the packs gets dragged into shifter city life and discovers the four alphas around her are scent matched mates. Romance.io currently places it at about 4.09 stars with roughly 100 ratings, explicit steam, 420 pages, and tags including shapeshifters and reverse harem. Amazon lists the series in KU.

Why It’s on The Gilt List
This is the pick for readers who want a more expansive why choose romantasy, something with length, pack politics, and enough room for trust to build rather than instantly combust. It feels bigger than some of the tighter, more niche KU monster books on this list.
Read This If You
- Want long, dominant alpha chaos with more worldbuilding
- Like shifter romance that leans protective and possessive without pretending it is subtle
Skip This If You
- Need lean plotting over big immersive page count
- Dislike reverse harem structure
What Readers Are Saying
- Readers who were in the mood for protective alpha chaos had a very good time with this one. The pack dynamic is one of the biggest selling points in review after review.
- The romantasy setting and shifter politics seem to work well for readers who want something bigger and more immersive than a purely romance first why choose book.
- A lot of readers liked the found family angle and the way trust builds over time rather than instantly appearing because destiny said so.
- The heroine’s emotional journey also gets mentioned a lot, especially by readers who liked seeing her work through fear, resistance, and loyalty in stages.
- Some reviewers thought it was a bit much in the drama department. If you are allergic to possessive mates, trope heavy setups, or heightened emotional energy, this may test your patience.
- A few readers also felt the pacing dragged in places because of the longer conversations and worldbuilding, so this seems to work best if you enjoy a bigger, more indulgent KU read.
Monster and Alien Romantasy on KU That Are Weirdly Underrated

Daeos by Hattie Jacks
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ (high)
Tropes
Alien prison world, dragon shifters, fated mates, grump and sunshine
Tone
Fast, pulpy, escapist, tender under the scales
What It’s About
Human women are thrown into an alien prison maze where dragon shifter warriors claim their fated mates. Daeos pairs a sunshine leaning human heroine with a damaged dragon warrior who believes she is his mate. Romance.io has it at 4.44 stars with only 16 ratings, which is tiny, and Amazon shows the wider series in KU.
Why It’s on The Gilt List
Because this is exactly what KU is for. A dragon alien fated mates prison romance with a stupidly low rating count and a very high average score? That is prime hidden gem territory. No big machine behind it. Just readers quietly having a good time.
Read This If You
- Like your romance weird, fast moving, and unapologetically niche
- Want dragon shifter energy without needing epic fantasy homework
Skip This If You
- Do not enjoy sci fi romance crossover setups
- Need polished, mainstream romantasy aesthetics
What Readers Are Saying
- Some readers also wanted deeper worldbuilding, so if you need meticulous lore over quick momentum and chemistry, this one may feel a bit light.
- Readers seem to really enjoy the alien prison setting, mostly because it throws everyone straight into danger and gives the romance a survival edge.
- Daeos himself gets a lot of love as a grumpy dragon shifter hero, which honestly feels correct. That man was built in a lab for readers who like damaged monsters with feelings.
- The heroine’s sunnier energy also seems to balance the darker setup nicely, and several readers said that contrast made the romance sweeter than they expected.
- A common positive note is that the story feels pulpy and fast in a good way. It knows what sort of book it is and gets on with it.
- The main criticism is that the plot can feel predictable if you read a lot of monster or alien romance and know the beats already.

The Orc’s Innocent Plaything by Veronika Kane
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ (very high)
Tropes
Orcs, enemies to lovers, virgin heroine, fated mates
Tone
Playful, spicy, surprisingly warm under the filth
What It’s About
Set around an orc village in a Scotland flavoured fantasy world, this follows a human midwife and an orc chieftain whose bargain turns into something more emotionally sincere than the title might suggest. Romance.io tags include orcs, fated mates, virgin heroine, medieval and angst, while Amazon confirms the Bloodfire Orcs series is in KU. It is currently sitting at 4.41 stars from just 11 ratings.
Why It’s on The Gilt List
Look, sometimes you want high art and sometimes you want an orc book that is filthy, competent, and oddly sweet. That’s stupid in theory and actually good in practice. Monster romance lives or dies on whether the emotional dynamic works underneath the novelty, and this one seems to be landing with the exact readers it is written for.
Read This If You
- Want high heat monster romance with a proper fantasy wrapper
- Are specifically hunting overlooked orc romance on KU, which is frankly a noble mission
Skip This If You
- Need low spice or subtle sensuality
- Prefer your monster romance more serious and less knowingly indulgent
What Readers Are Saying
- A few also thought the enemies to lovers tension resolved a bit too easily, so if you want prolonged conflict and loads of push pull, this may feel softer than expected.
- Readers who loved this one keep talking about the playful tone. It sounds like the sort of monster romance that knows it is here to entertain and absolutely commits.
- The orc hero gets a lot of praise for being flirtatious, charming, and funny rather than just aggressively dominant for the sake of it.
- The spice is another huge selling point. Reviewers seem very happy with how frequent and well written the intimate scenes are.
- Quite a few readers also appreciated that there is still a genuine romantic thread under all the heat, so it does not feel completely hollow.
- The biggest complaint is that the plot is thin, which, to be fair, is not exactly shocking for a book with this title. Some readers wanted more story around the relationship.

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Other KU Hidden Works of Art Worth a Look
A few other titles are worth keeping on your radar even if they sit just outside the cleanest version of this list.
My Orc Contract Husband by Veronika Kane
Romance.io lists this at 4.46 stars with only 11 ratings, and Amazon shows it in KU. It leans more cosy monster rom com than classic romantasy, but for readers who want marriage of convenience and warm orc energy, it looks like a strong niche pick.
Trickery by Jaymin Eve and Jane Washington
This one is more established than some of the others, but it still feels under discussed in wider romantasy recommendation posts. Romance.io places it around 4.04 stars with about 236 ratings and very low spice in book one. Amazon lists it in KU.
Power of Five by Alex Lidell
This one falls below the stricter rating threshold, sitting around 3.76 stars on romance.io, but it remains relevant for readers wanting fae reverse harem and magical bond dynamics on KU. Amazon supports KU availability for the series and omnibus.
Why These Underrated KU Romantasy Books Matter
Kindle Unlimited keeps doing the thing trad publishing still cannot do very well, which is giving readers niche fantasy romance at scale. That means fated mates, queer omegaverse, dragon shifters, orc heroes, demon bonds, and completely bananas premises all get room to exist and find their people. The downside is discoverability. Books with very happy readers can still sit at under 30, under 100, or under 200 ratings because no one has shoved a massive marketing campaign behind them.
If you pay for KU, you may as well use it to find books that are actually tailored to your weird little trope cravings instead of scrolling for forty minutes and then rereading something safe.
And because these books are in KU, the risk is lower. You can try the unhinged dragon prison romance. You can try the orc midwife bargain book. You can try the queer werewolf meta one that sounds like nonsense until suddenly it is 2 a.m. and you are fully invested. That is the entire point.If you want even more options, the full guide to the best romantasy books on Kindle Unlimited covers both hidden gems and the bigger mainstream titles worth your time. And for readers who want to go deeper into the romantasy genre beyond KU, there’s a whole world of recommendations waiting.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Underrated Kindle Unlimited Romantasy
Usually, it means strong reader ratings with relatively low visibility. On this list, several books sit around 4 stars or higher while still having only a few dozen to a couple hundred ratings, which suggests good reader satisfaction without mainstream saturation.
Not all, but many are. Pack Darling, Run Riot, Bro and the Beast 1, Dream Girl, A Twist of Luck, Daeos, The Orc’s Innocent Plaything, and Signs of Cupidity all carry fated mates or mate bond style tagging on romance.io.
The Orc’s Innocent Plaything, Pack Darling: Part One, Dream Girl, A Twist of Luck, and Daeos are among the hotter picks here. Signs of Cupidity is the lightest on page.
Start with Signs of Cupidity for lighter fantasy chaos, or Bro and the Beast 1 for queer meta werewolf nonsense with actual banter. Both are rated well and both are available through KU.
Go for Pack Darling: Part One if you want high angst and pack drama, or Run Riot if you want darker paranormal fated mates with a more wounded emotional core.
Every book on this list is written for adult readers, but the best underrated romantasy books on Kindle Unlimited for adults who want high heat and mature themes specifically are The Orc’s Innocent Plaything, Pack Darling: Part One, and Daeos. All three lean into explicit steam, emotionally complex dynamics, and fantasy setups that are very much not YA.
Yes. Signs of Cupidity is a fae reverse harem with humour and low spice, Run Riot is a darker demon bond fantasy, and Dream Girl takes a portal fantasy angle. If you want underrated fantasy romance books that sit outside the monster and pack romance lane, those three are the strongest alternatives on this list.
They were verified as KU at the time of research through current Amazon listings, but KU availability can change, so it is always worth checking the live product page before promising your entire weekend to an orc.
If you want one shortlist, the strongest picks on this list based on rating quality versus visibility are Daeos by Hattie Jacks, The Orc’s Innocent Plaything by Veronika Kane, and Pack Darling: Part One by Lola Rock. All three sit at or above 4.2 stars with very low rating counts, which is the clearest signal that a book is genuinely underrated rather than just obscure for a reason.
Yes. Signs of Cupidity is a fae reverse harem with humour and low spice, Run Riot is a darker demon bond fantasy, and Dream Girl takes a portal fantasy angle. If you want underrated fantasy romance books that sit outside the monster and pack romance lane, those three are the strongest alternatives on this list.
If you’ve already worked through Fourth Wing, ACOTAR, From Blood and Ash, and the other viral giants, this list is built specifically for that next step. The books here are mostly indie KU titles that never got the BookTok push, which means the tropes are just as strong but the reading experience feels less over-discussed. Start with Run Riot for darker paranormal romance, Bro and the Beast for something genuinely different, or A Twist of Luck if you want a bigger shifter why choose that feels like it should be more famous than it is. For more KU titles in the romantasy vein check out my blog on The Best Romantasy KU Titles of 2026.
Fated mates is by far the most common trope across this list, appearing in almost every title in some form. After that, reverse harem and why choose setups dominate, followed by forced proximity, enemies to lovers, and grump and sunshine pairings. Monster romance — specifically orcs, dragon shifters, and alien hybrids — is its own strong current through KU indie romantasy that mainstream publishing barely touches. If any of those tropes are your thing, KU indie is genuinely one of the best places to find them done well.
If you read more than two or three books a month and lean toward indie fantasy romance, reverse harem, omegaverse, or monster romance, yes, KU is very likely worth the subscription cost. A huge proportion of the best underrated romantasy books on Kindle Unlimited are indie titles that are either only available through KU or significantly cheaper to access through it. Trad published titles come and go on the platform, but the indie romantasy catalogue is deep, consistently updated, and genuinely tailored to the trope specific reader in a way that bookshop shelves simply are not.

