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The phrase "a kind of obsession" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a strong preoccupation or fixation on something, often in a way that suggests it is not entirely healthy or balanced.
Example: "Her fascination with collecting vintage dolls has turned into a kind of obsession that consumes her free time."
Alternatives: "a sort of fixation" or "a type of preoccupation."
Exact(24)
It's a kind of obsession.
It's become a kind of obsession.
The same urge, a kind of obsession.
But finding the right image becomes a kind of obsession.
It has clearly become a kind of obsession.
"Just like murder is a kind of obsession, society is a kind of obsession," she said -- often an obsession with the shallow.
Similar(35)
"I have a kind of sacred obsession to create.
Over the years, coverage has gone from adulatory to exploitative to a kind of morbid obsession.
"There is a kind of an obsession with bags," the designer Miuccia Prada told me.
I knew they were just a minority of One Direction fans and all very young - it's a kind of fanatical obsession.
"The Wunderkammer is a kind of shared obsession … There's nothing esoteric about it – it's the foundation of, in some ways, collecting practices and museum practice.
More suggestions(17)
a story of obsession
a kind of zoo
a kind of revolution
a kind of treachery
a kind of magic
a type of obsession
a kind of injunction
a clutch of obsession
a state of obsession
a kind of poetry
a kind of stampede
a kind of denial
a kind of routine
a kind of product
a kind of ecstasy
a kind of revenge
a kind of freakshow
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com