Completely Accurate Undertale Fanwork Summaries
Soul Dichromatism: A prince who looks like a goat has the hots for a species-swapped prisoner of war, and his buddies discuss ethics and are sad. (?)
A goatlike magical being has the hots for a transformed captive human that resembles his long-dead adoptive sibling, and he wonders whether he has some weird human-attraction problem. There’s also a bloody decades-long war in which the equivalent of long-range missiles are used on civilians.
People must repeatedly avoid calling an amnesiac person a human in front of said person.
A lost child insecure about not having fur and horns seeks out their mother’s ex-husband. Their new friends keep distracting them from finding this beloved pushover of an ex-husband.
A talking flower and talking skeleton are improvised therapists for a very androgynous child, who is sort of two children but also not.
Seven really old people must deal with a flirtatious twentysomething with the godlike ability to rewind time.
A flirtatious twentysomething frees countless weird-looking people from many years of imprisonment and is unknowingly a thorn in the side of seven really old people, who are also recluses and roommates.
Handplates: A single, male scientist in a labcoat with a basement lab singlehandedly creates children through artificial means, whose exceptional traits surprise him, but it’s practically the opposite of The Powerpuff Girls.
Broken-Knife-Frisk: A tale of enemies turned friends as a skeleton transports a mass murderer to court.
Entity Neo: A timid ghost possesses his cousin’s mechanical corpse and gets sad.
Caretaker of the Ruins: An androgynous child learns the lesson of stranger danger the hard way, and then gets an even stranger stranger to delay child murder.
Inverted Fate: A technically undead flower turns back into a goatlike boy, then into a god, then torments a child and rewrites reality with zero experience. Their latest victim finds the new reality oddly familiar.
A technically undead flower turns into a terrifying god, rewrites reality, and then inadvertently gives some powerful people new jobs.
Fallen Flowers:A kid turns into another kind of kid, but with head-flowers, and must face a magic-zombie dystopia.
DeeperDown: Some weird-looking people leave their homes, face xenophobia, and experience environmentally-based declines in health.
Cost of Living: A kid tries to stop a horrible war but gets stuck in the past, where they’re almost constantly under watch by two skeletons and a lizard.
The Six Who Fell Before You:
Six kids die. The fun part is learning how.
A mother has a terrible track record: only one out the nine kids she took care of survive leaving her house and geographic area.