# My Little Pony Character Fandom

> My Little Pony Character Fandom is the adult creative subculture spawned by Lauren Faust's 2010 animated series Friendship Is Magic, featuring fan art, fan fiction, original characters, and a unique dialect called bronyspeak.

My Little Pony Character Fandom refers to the massive creative subculture built around the cast of *My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic* (2010-2019), driven largely by adult fans known as bronies. The show's characters, designed by Lauren Faust to subvert shallow "girly" stereotypes[4], became the foundation for one of the internet's most prolific fan communities, spawning fan art, fan fiction, ask blogs, original characters, shipping culture, and an entire fan-created dialect called bronyspeak[3]. The character-driven fandom peaked between 2011 and 2014 but left a lasting mark on internet fan culture.

## Origin
The characters of *Friendship Is Magic* were conceived when Hasbro hired animator Lauren Faust to develop a new iteration of the My Little Pony franchise. Faust, who described herself as "extremely skeptical" about the job, set out to prove that "cartoons for girls don't have to be a puddle of smooshy, cutesy-wootsy, goody-two-shoeness"[5]. She drew on her childhood imagination and the action cartoons her brothers watched, like *Transformers* and *G.I. Joe*, to create characters with distinct personalities, real flaws, and personality disorders rather than the one-dimensional archetypes of earlier MLP generations[4].

Each of the six core ponies was designed to represent a positive aspect of friendship: honesty (Applejack), kindness (Fluttershy), laughter (Pinkie Pie), generosity (Rarity), loyalty (Rainbow Dash), and magic (Twilight Sparkle)[5]. This depth caught the attention of adult viewers on 4chan in late 2010, and the character-specific fandom exploded from there.

In a 2011 retrospective interview with Equestria Daily, Faust revealed she had originally planned for more adventure-focused storylines and greater roles for characters like Luna and Zecora, but network restrictions on "dark" themes for young girls limited some of these plans[16]. She also admitted to lurking on Equestria Daily and even dropping spoilers anonymously in comment sections[16].

- **Platform:** 4chan (initial discovery), DeviantArt / Equestria Daily / Tumblr (creative output)
- **Creator:** Lauren Faust (show creator/character designer), Hasbro (franchise owner)
- **Date:** 2010

## Overview
The MLP Character Fandom centers on the "Mane Six" core cast of *Friendship Is Magic*: Twilight Sparkle, Rainbow Dash, Pinkie Pie, Rarity, Applejack, and Fluttershy, each representing a different element of friendship[4]. What set this fandom apart was the sheer volume and variety of character-driven creative output. Fans didn't just watch the show. They drew thousands of pieces of fan art, wrote novel-length crossover fiction, ran character ask blogs on Tumblr, designed original pony characters (OCs), debated shipping pairings, and built an entire vocabulary around equine wordplay[3].

The fandom's character obsession extended well beyond the main cast. Background ponies like Derpy Hooves, Doctor Whooves, Lyra, and Bon Bon received elaborate fan-created backstories and personalities based on brief screen appearances[6]. Villains like Queen Chrysalis generated immediate waves of fan art upon their debut[13]. Even Lauren Faust herself got a fan-designed alicorn pony persona[16].

## How It Spread
The character fandom spread rapidly across multiple platforms in 2011. DeviantArt became the primary hub for fan art, with artists like johnjoseco (who listed Rainbow Dash as his favorite pony)[12], WillDrawForFood1[2], and Trotsworth (known for genderbent MLP comics)[9] building large followings around character-specific artwork.

Equestria Daily, founded by Shaun Scotellaro (known as "Seth"), served as the central news and content aggregation site for the fandom[6]. The blog published fan fiction, organized "Drawfriend" art showcases, and relayed information from show staffers[14]. When Queen Chrysalis debuted in the Season 2 finale in April 2012, the site ran a dedicated "Chrysalis Edition" Drawfriend featuring 60 fan drawings of the new villain, with show staffer Nayuki confirming the character's official name on Allspark forums[14]. Music composer Daniel Ingram also used the community to announce official song titles for the finale: "B.B.B.F.F.", "This Day Aria", and "Love is In Bloom"[14].

Tumblr became home to a thriving ask blog subculture where fans ran character-specific accounts. Users could submit questions to blogs like Ask Surprise[8], Ask Velvet[10], and Ask Garbage Ponies[7], with blog runners responding in character through drawn comic panels. These blogs often featured elaborate storylines and crossovers between different ask blog "universes."

Fan fiction was another major channel for character exploration. Stories like *Fallout: Equestria* (a massive crossover with the Fallout game series) drew hundreds of enthusiastic comments on Equestria Daily, with readers debating pony equivalents for in-game factions ("Colthood of Iron" for the Brotherhood of Steel, "Bronyhood of Steel" as a joke alternative)[1]. *Past Sins*, featuring an OC filly named Nyx based on the Greek goddess of night, attracted intense discussion about its custom artwork and dark-adjacent themes[15]. *Creeping Darkness*, an Alan Wake crossover, earned praise for capturing both the game's atmosphere and the show's character voices[11].

Hasbro officially acknowledged the fandom on May 27, 2011, when The Hub released a promotional video called "Equestria Girls" parodying Katy Perry's "California Gurls" with lyrics referencing bronies directly[3]. Scotellaro received an email from The Hub calling it a "tribute to our favorite Pony fans"[3]. In July 2011, fans published the "Mareiam-Websteed Dictionary," a 26-page bronyspeak dictionary on Equestria Daily that was covered by the *New York Daily News*[3].

The fan-created language itself drew heavily from the show's character-specific dialogue. Terms like "everypony" and "anypony" came directly from the scripts, while fans coined portmanteaus like "brony" (bro + pony), "pegasister" (pegasus + sister), "ponysona" (pony + persona), and "dubtrot" (dubstep + trot)[3]. Common snowclones riffed on character catchphrases: Rainbow Dash's "20% cooler" became a template for "[X]% cooler," and "Dear Princess Celestia" became "Dear Princess [X]"[3].

The character fandom also extended to fan-created poster recreations. When fans attempted to recreate the 2011 San Diego Comic-Con MLP poster at absurd resolution (10,800 pixels on the vertical side), the project sparked community drama when the artist inserted their own OC ponies into the hot air balloon where the original characters were too small to identify[6]. Commenters noted careful details proving community awareness: "Lyra and Bonbon are standing together and looking at each other," "Colgate is showing off her teeth," and "Derpy's eyes are derped"[6].

## Cultural Impact
Academic researchers took notice of the character-driven fandom early on. A study from the University of Brighton examined how the "Brony phenomenon" related to gender, cult spectator practices, and participatory culture, arguing that brony practices "reproduce many male-centered aspects of fan media consumption in a manner that recuperates the femininity of the brand according to masculine values and cultures"[17]. The paper noted that the show's emphasis on female friendship, what it called "gynocentric" qualities, may have been eroded by increasing address to the online fandom, "an audience employing channels of fandom from which young people are effectively excluded"[17].

Linguistic researchers studied bronyspeak as an example of internet-enabled folk culture. Bill Ellis termed the broader creative output "bronylore," identifying it as web-based verbal and visual art that functioned as community gatekeeping, requiring new members to learn the vocabulary for full membership[3]. A 2021 study found that the majority of female fans disliked the term "pegasister" and preferred to identify simply as bronies[3].

The fandom's character obsession pushed creative boundaries in ways that influenced later internet fandoms. The volume of fan art on DeviantArt, the ask blog format on Tumblr, the massive crossover fan fiction tradition, and the culture of giving elaborate backstories to minor background characters all became templates that other fandoms would follow.

## Fun Facts
- Lauren Faust drew a custom alicorn self-portrait pony for her Season 1 retrospective interview with Equestria Daily. Fans immediately began calling for more fan art of her pony persona[16].
- The Season 2 finale villain Queen Chrysalis generated so much immediate fan art that Equestria Daily ran a 60-piece dedicated art gallery the same weekend she debuted[13].
- Faust's original vision for the show was partly inspired by wanting to match the depth of *Transformers* and *G.I. Joe*, cartoons she watched with her brothers growing up[4].
- The suffix "-creature" was introduced in Season 8 (2018) as a more inclusive replacement for "-pony" (e.g., "everycreature" instead of "everypony") to reflect the show's expanding cast of non-pony characters[3].
- johnjoseco, one of the fandom's most prominent DeviantArt artists, was a Filipino-American digital illustrator who worked exclusively in Photoshop 7 with a Cintiq 12WX tablet[12].

## Frequently Asked Questions
### What is My Little Pony Character Fandom?
It's the massive creative subculture built around the characters of *My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic* (2010-2019), including fan art, fan fiction, ask blogs, original characters, and the fan-created language bronyspeak[3][4].

### Where did My Little Pony Character Fandom come from?
The fandom originated when adult fans on 4chan discovered the show in late 2010, drawn by Lauren Faust's character designs that intentionally subverted shallow stereotypes of girls' cartoons[5].

### What does My Little Pony Character Fandom mean?
It refers to the character-driven creative output of MLP:FiM fans (bronies), who built entire sub-communities around specific characters from the Mane Six to obscure background ponies[6].

### How do you use My Little Pony Character Fandom?
Participation ranged from creating fan art and fiction to running Tumblr ask blogs, designing OC ponies ("ponysonas"), using bronyspeak vocabulary, and discussing character shipping[3][8].

### Is My Little Pony Character Fandom still popular?
The fandom peaked between 2011 and 2014, and while it shrank after the show ended in 2019, fan communities on DeviantArt and dedicated sites like Equestria Daily still maintain activity[16].

### Who created the MLP:FiM characters?
Lauren Faust designed the core cast, aiming to create characters with "diverse personalities, character flaws and personality disorders" to prove girls' cartoons could have real depth[4].

### What are the Mane Six?
The six core ponies of the show: Twilight Sparkle (magic), Rainbow Dash (loyalty), Pinkie Pie (laughter), Rarity (generosity), Applejack (honesty), and Fluttershy (kindness)[5].

### What is bronyspeak?
A fan-created vocabulary blending equine terminology with internet slang, including terms like "brony," "brohoof," "everypony," and "ponysona." A full dictionary was published in July 2011[3].

### When did Hasbro acknowledge the brony fandom?
On May 27, 2011, The Hub released a promotional video called "Equestria Girls" with lyrics explicitly referencing bronies, described as a "tribute to our favorite Pony fans"[3].

### What is Fallout: Equestria?
A massive crossover fan fiction combining MLP characters with the Fallout video game universe, published on Equestria Daily starting in 2011, which spawned its own sub-fandom[1].

### Who is Nyx in the MLP fandom?
Nyx is an original character from the popular fan fiction *Past Sins* by Pen Stroke, a filly based on the Greek goddess of night, who became one of the fandom's most recognized OCs[15].

### What were MLP ask blogs?
Interactive Tumblr accounts where fans ran character-specific blogs, responding to submitted questions with drawn comic panels, often developing elaborate storylines[8][10].

### Did academics study the MLP fandom?
Yes. Researchers examined bronyspeak as internet-enabled folk culture and studied how the fandom's participatory culture related to gender, identity, and the show's original young-girl audience[17][3].

## References
1. [Equestria Daily - MLP Stuff!: Story: Fallout: Equestria (Updated 100% Complete!!)](<https://www.equestriadaily.com/2011/04/story-fallout-equestria.html>)
2. [Interview for Equestria Daily by fyre-flye on DeviantArt](<https://www.deviantart.com/fyre-flye/journal/Interview-for-Equestria-Daily-258677794>)
3. [WillDrawForFood1 - Hobbyist, Digital Artist | DeviantArt](<https://www.deviantart.com/willdrawforfood1>)
4. [Slang of the My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic fandom](<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slang_of_the_My_Little_Pony%3A_Friendship_Is_Magic_fandom>)
5. [List of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic characters](<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_My_Little_Pony%3A_Friendship_Is_Magic_characters>)
6. [List of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic characters - Wikipedia](<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_My_Little_Pony:_Friendship_Is_Magic_characters>)
7. [Equestria Daily - MLP Stuff!: Absurd Resolution Comic Con Pony Poster](<https://www.equestriadaily.com/2011/08/absurd-resolution-comic-con-pony-poster.html>)
8. [, Merry Christmas.](<https://web.archive.org/web/20120125001344/https://askgarbageponies.tumblr.com/post/14728615863/merry-christmas>)
9. [Ask Surprise!](<https://web.archive.org/web/20120111111814/http://asksurprise.tumblr.com/>)
10. [Official Couple - TV Tropes](<https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/OfficialCouple>)
11. [Trotsworth User Profile | DeviantArt](<https://www.deviantart.com/trotsworth>)
12. [Ask Velvet, ((cteno belongs to (nsfw) slugbox))](<https://web.archive.org/web/20181210153111/http://askvelvet.tumblr.com/post/13136611192/cteno-belongs-to-nsfw-slugbox>)
13. [Equestria Daily - MLP Stuff!: Story: Creeping Darkness (Update Complete!!)](<https://www.equestriadaily.com/2011/06/story-creeping-darkness.html>)
14. [johnjoseco - Professional, Digital Artist | DeviantArt](<https://www.deviantart.com/johnjoseco>)
15. [Equestria Daily - MLP Stuff!: Drawfriend Stuff #402 - Chrysalis Edition](<https://www.equestriadaily.com/2012/04/drawfriend-stuff-402-chrysalis-edition.html>)
16. [Equestria Daily - MLP Stuff!: Season Finale Information from Staffers (Spoilers after the break!)](<https://www.equestriadaily.com/2012/04/season-finale-information-from-staffers.html#more>)
17. [Equestria Daily - MLP Stuff!: Story: Past Sins (Update Side Story Complete!)](<https://www.equestriadaily.com/2011/07/story-past-sins.html>)
18. [Equestria Daily - MLP Stuff!: Exclusive Season 1 Retrospective Interview with Lauren Faust](<https://www.equestriadaily.com/2011/09/exclusive-season-1-retrospective.html>)
19. ["Little girls and the things that they love": My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, Audience, Identity, and the Privilege of Contemporary Fan Culture
      -  The University of Brighton](<https://research.brighton.ac.uk/en/publications/little-girls-and-the-things-that-they-love-my-little-pony-friends/>)

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