Citations:genfic

Noun: "(uncountable, fandom slang) fan fiction that does not focus specifically on romance or sex"

 * 2002, Will Brooker, Using the Force: Creativity, Community and Star Wars Fans, Continuum (2002), ISBN 0826452876, page 136:
 * Fee Folay writes, "I do read a lot of genfic, but I find the slash is more likely to explore a deeper, more intense relationship between the male protagonists, and that beguiles me."
 * 2004, Science Fiction Studies, Volume 31, Issue 3, November 2004, page 499:
 * Section three, on forms and genres, might consider such fan genres as slash, het/ship, genfic, alternate universes and realities, mpreg, BDSM, kinkfic, elves, and wingfic.
 * 2008, Steve Abrams and Smaragd Grün, "Mundanes at the Gate … and Perverts Within: Managing Internal and External Threats to Community Online", in Electronic Tribes: The Virtual Worlds of Geeks, Gamers, Shamans, and Scammers (eds. Tyrone L. Adams & Stephen A. Smith), University of Texas Press (2008), ISBN 9780292717732, page 210:
 * Genfic and hetfic typically extend the source material along lines consistent with the producers' intentions, albeit sometimes more explicitly than the broadcast market would allow.
 * 2013, Mark Duffett, Understanding Fandom: An Introduction to the Study of Media Fan Culture, page 170:
 * Genfic, RPF and slash offer three examples of different fanfic genres.
 * 2013, Maria Lindgren Leavenworth & Malin Isaksson, Fanged Fan Fiction: Variations on Twilight, True Blood and the Vampire Diaries, page 46:
 * Stories in the gen genre typically do not focus on romantic or erotic relationships and significantly, genfic based on our three canons is rare,
 * 2017, Jessica E. Tomkins, "Heart Breakers and Life Takers: Negotiated Readings of Military Masculinities in Modern Warefare's Fanfiction", in Responding to Call of Duty: Critical Essays on the Game Franchise (Matthew Wilhelm Kapell & Nate Garrelts), page 199:
 * Indeed, fanfiction authors have written MW and COD genfic which lacks romantic/sexual themes.
 * Genfic, RPF and slash offer three examples of different fanfic genres.
 * 2013, Maria Lindgren Leavenworth & Malin Isaksson, Fanged Fan Fiction: Variations on Twilight, True Blood and the Vampire Diaries, page 46:
 * Stories in the gen genre typically do not focus on romantic or erotic relationships and significantly, genfic based on our three canons is rare,
 * 2017, Jessica E. Tomkins, "Heart Breakers and Life Takers: Negotiated Readings of Military Masculinities in Modern Warefare's Fanfiction", in Responding to Call of Duty: Critical Essays on the Game Franchise (Matthew Wilhelm Kapell & Nate Garrelts), page 199:
 * Indeed, fanfiction authors have written MW and COD genfic which lacks romantic/sexual themes.