2011, Brittany Dalton, "Away with the Niceties", The Vista (University of Central Oklahoma), 1 September 2011, page 3:
"I secretly ship Dramione!" one boldly asserts, while more serious blogs boast confessions along the lines of, "I moved away to college this year and haven't made any new friends."
2011, Sayantan Deb & Angela Song, "Potter Legacy", The Harvard Independent, Volume 42, Number 25, 15 September 2011, page 10:
This is a haven for writers and readers to converge and show their interest in a variety of genres with any characters, from the typical Dramione (Draco and Hermione) action-adventure to the absurd Filch-Peeves BDSM.
2012, Christine Zhao, "Scene and Heard", The Heights (Boston College), Volume 93, Number 21, 19 April 2012, page B2:
Unfortunately, J.K. Rowling’s latest novel will not be a collection of awesome HP fan fiction pairings (Dramione, anyone? Maybe some Harry/Snape?) come to life.
2012, Krixia Subingsubing, "Date A Girl Who Writes", The Sword (St. Paul College of Makati), Volume 18, Number 1, June 2012-January 2013, page 14:
Ask her about her favorite ships. Does she like Dramione, or Romione? Ask her why, and if she's written fanfics about them.
2013, Anne Jamison, Fic: Why Fanfiction Is Taking Over the World, BenBella Books (2013), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
Dramione shippers apparently feel the same way when too much attention is paid to Drarry.
2019, Beatriz Brito do Nascimento, "No heteros in this heterotopia: Harry Potter slash fanfiction as heterotopian space", dissertation submitted to the University of Porto, page 120:
Therefore, it is logical that the selected trope will more often be used in fics which have a non-normative ship: fandomstats relays that, within the EWE tag, some of the most prolific ships include Drarry, Dramione (Draco/Hermione, not a slash ship but still one that does not conform with Rowling’s normative ideas as it contains Draco, an antagonistic character), and ships involving Snape, including Snamione and Snarry.