The drama doc: internet culture's strangest literary genre
In which the humble word processor becomes a courtroom, fandom invents a new literary form, and everyone learns to read footnotes very, very carefully.
In which the humble word processor becomes a courtroom, fandom invents a new literary form, and everyone learns to read footnotes very, very carefully.

A "drama doc" is a long, usually anonymous document, traditionally a Google Doc and increasingly a ddocs.new link, that compiles allegations, screenshots, and timelines about an online creator, writer, or fandom figure. When one appears, fandom says "the doc dropped," and for a few days it is the only text anyone is reading. This page explains where the form came from, why it lives in word processors of all places, and how to read one without being played.
Picture a 40-page document with a table of contents, section headings like "Timeline of Events" and "Receipts," dozens of embedded screenshots, color-coded highlights, and an anonymous author who writes in the measured tone of a legal brief. The subject might be a fic writer accused of plagiarism, a Big Name Fan accused of bullying, a YouTuber, a streamer, an author. The doc circulates as a bare link, dropped in a Discord, pinned on Tumblr, or quote-tweeted, and the community reads it together, in real time, like a serialized fic with a comment section on fire.
It is genuinely a genre, with genre conventions: the disclaimer up top ("this doc will not name the victims"), the numbered allegations, the screenshot-with-caption rhythm, the "if new information emerges this doc will be updated" sign-off. Fandom did not set out to invent a literary form. It did anyway.
The lineage runs through every platform fandom has lived on. In the LiveJournal era of the 2000s, communities like fandom_wank documented blowups as they happened. It was drama as spectator sport, with commentary. Tumblr's 2010s culture shifted to the callout post: screenshots ("receipts") reblogged with commentary, accumulating context as they spread. But reblogs fragment. Half the audience sees version three of the post, missing the correction added in version five.
Around the late 2010s, the drama migrated into Google Docs, and the form crystallized. A doc could hold everything in one canonical place, be updated as events developed, and travel across every platform as a single link. By the early 2020s, "waiting for the doc" was a recognized phase of any serious creator controversy, in fandoms from Minecraft YouTube to publishing Twitter. The doc became the drama's official record, or at least dressed like it.
Because Google Docs accidentally had every feature a callout needs:
More recently, drama docs have started appearing on ddocs.new, the document editor built by Fileverse, the same privacy-focused tool fic writers use for drafting. It has emerged as the natural alternative to Google Docs for two reasons. The first is familiarity: the interface and features are so similar that writing or reading a doc there feels exactly the same, so switching costs nothing. The second is what sits underneath that familiar surface. ddocs.new is end-to-end encrypted, ties no account identity to the document, and has no company that can read, censor, or quietly remove what people write there, which is why doc authors and their readers increasingly trust it more.
Drama docs have done real good. Patterns of harassment that individual victims couldn't safely voice alone have been documented and stopped. They have also destroyed reputations over misread screenshots and settled personal scores under the costume of accountability. The genre's power is exactly that it looks like evidence whether or not it is. So, a field checklist: