< Homosexual Reproduction

Homosexual Reproduction/Playing With

Basic Trope: A child conceived through some means whose two genetic donors are the same gender.

  • Straight: Leslie and Sharon have become a couple and want a child of their own, so they use SCIENCE!
  • Exaggerated: In the future, same-sex couples with children of their own become the norm thanks to SCIENCE marching on.
    • Magic causes homosexuality to be the only form of reproduction.
  • Justified: Leslie is a Mad Scientist willing to go to any lengths to obtain a child with her one true love, physical limitations be damned.
  • Inverted: Alice and Bob have a kid by straight reproduction despite the vast majority of reproduction being through homosexual couples.
    • Kurt and Mike just decided to adopt a kid even when offered a chance of a baby of they own.
  • Subverted: Leslie and Sharon appear in the next season with a child who looks a lot like both of them. It's later revealed that the she was adopted.
    • Leslie and Sharon go through all sorts of hoops to get one of them pregnant THROUGH SCIENCE! Leslie gets pregnant, only to eventually reveal she cheated on Sharon with her brother.
      • Or they merely got Sharon's brother to donate his sperm and artificially inseminate Leslie.
  • Double Subverted: From a villain's lab who tried to create a super-soldier with both their powers.
    • Sharon's brother is infertile. He doesn't know it, but both women do - they just let him believe that the child is secretly his.
  • Parodied: Leslie, Sharon and all their friends get a glimpse of their Babies Ever After future; this includes Leslie and Sharon, and they get it confirmed that the child is genetically theirs, though no straight answers as to HOW that happened.
  • Deconstructed: Children with two genetic donors of the same gender face the same sort of prejudice that their parents have dealt with, labeled "freaks of nature" by self-appointed Moral Guardians. Leslie and Sharon's family become a target for violence due to their "unnatural" union.
    • The children are created via a failure-prone process and end up with a muddle of genetic conditions.
  • Reconstructed: Despite this, Leslie and Sharon work tirelessly to give their children the best life possible, and the kids manage to make some friends at school. It's implied that future generations will be more accepting, and a Where Are They Now? Epilogue confirms this, showing homosexual couples enjoying equal rights.
  • Zig Zagged: After long and tireless work giving their children the best life possible, it's revealed that the process leads to child psychopaths or massive health problems.
    • Except that it's then revealed that it might have just been the one facility screwing with the orders that caused the problem.
  • Averted: Any same-gender couples with children have adopted their kids, retained them from a divorce, used surrogate parents, etc.
  • Enforced: A sci-fi show is doing a 'children of the original characters' spin-off series. Except one of the characters is quite staunchly gay. A special sort of phlebotinum is invented by the writers to explain how the gay character had a baby with their partner.
  • Lampshaded: Leslie and Sharon have a child which is genetically both of theirs. Sharon's brother isn't sure how they managed this, and is frequently found wondering about it, but never gets more than a hand-wave by way of response.
  • Invoked: Leslie, being a big fan of slash fanfics, proceeds to volunteer for strange alien rituals at the drop of a hat, invokes bizarre magical genies/demi-gods, drags Sharon to any remotely magical/mysterious fertility temple she can find, and wishes really, really hard on her birthday candles in the hopes that she will 'unexpectedly' get knocked up by her same-sex significant other.
  • Defied: When they get to the ninety billionth magical fertility temple, Leslie finally gives up. Sharon realizes that this makes their last attempt much more likely to work and, having only gone along with the whole thing because she believed it was genuinely impossible for Leslie to succeed, she quickly swaps herself out for her brother. Who promptly gets knocked up by Leslie via magic ritual.
  • Discussed: Leslie and Sharon considered trying to genetically produce a child of their own in the past, but gave up that idea due to the unstable and dangerous complications involved. When their adopted son has a mild crisis of self, they tell him about their decision and explain that in the end they decided that genetics were less important than having a healthy, happy baby to raise together.
  • Conversed: Sharon's brother worries aloud to her that Leslie might knock her up, because even though she's a woman she's also a sorceress, and who knows what a sorceress can do?
  • Played For Laughs: Bob ends up getting Alexander pregnant accidentally despite the two of them explicitly being normal males, and no high technology or magic was used for it. Both complain that it shouldn't have been possible.
    • Bob only thinks he got Alexander pregnant on account of their bizarre and adventurous lifestyles and one small, misheard conversation between Alexander and their doctor.
  • Played For Drama: The method used to produce these special children is difficult and dangerous, and Leslie and Sharon argue about the risks. They also face opposition from so-called Moral Guardians seeking to shut down such projects, red tape from uncaring bureaucrats, and pressure from their family to give up this insane idea and settle down with "normal" significant others.

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