Ever since she's caught my eye, Rainbow Dash has been the only pony I've tried to kill. These urges to murder, the need to feel alive, they've all been directed toward her—and somehow, she's survived all my attempts and remained totally unaware.
Spike is her number-one assistant and that will never change. Even in her becoming a greater princess he has not failed in that role. Isn't it odd how a dragon can compensate for a castle? Twilight discovers his secret... and must save him from it.
Spike is drunk. Twilight is high. Rainbow is sober. This sort of trio has never happened before. And it's up to the sober to get the others home.
Some friends are always there.
Spike goes on a journey.
Cupid's arrow makes ponies fall in love? No problem! Twilight Sparkle makes a love potion with the same result? Oh, hello moral ambiguity! Things only got worse when Rainbow drank the potion... then gazed at me... smiling... oh no...
Spike and Starlight discuss when they were once villains.
Ponies are only scary until they are snuggled. A baby dragon learns this first-handly.
Spike endures five trials to understand what intimacy with a mare is really like.
Spike goes to the bar at night, every night, to drink by himself. Rainbow Dash sits in the stool next to him. In each passing moment, the gap between them becomes smaller and smaller. Until there is nothing separating them.
What if Celestia was able to hatch Spike's egg thousand of years before the show? And trained him in everything he needed to know just in time to meet Twilight. Well then, let me tell you a tale.
Princess Twilight Sparkle is celebrating her first Gala without her friends, though her first-friend ever makes a sudden return...
Spike has survived the strain of daily life to find himself empty inside. Proven a worker, a friend, and a proper dragon—that search for 'something' never ends. Finally, on being led by a feeling, he winds up before Princess Celestia without reason.
Spike's dating life, though uneventful, takes a blow after saving Fluttershy's life. Why? Because she's threatening every mare he comes into contact with! The issue is Spike doesn't like her back, and Rarity's becoming concerned.
Claws can be dangerous; claw can be gentle. It's the way they're used that dictates the game. Will Spike be able to see past what ponies think of his claws, all to be able to show them what they're missing out on?