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#plus his parallels with yagi
fan-dot · 2 years
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darkcircles4lyfe · 3 years
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Death to All Might, Rebirth to Yagi Toshinori
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So about All Might. I’ve been extremely wary of talking about what could happen to him because straight up saying “I don’t think he’s gonna die” is asking the universe to spite me. Plus it also feels like a room full of people turning to stare at me as if I said the Sun isn’t a star. Man has death flags everywhere, I know. 
But, okay, *Bill Nye voice* consider the following:
Mr. Yagi here, if he overheard everything, just received the final nail in the coffin on his career. His time as the symbol of peace is not only over, it was in fact partially responsible for the current state of things, since he once did so much on his own that his absence now makes heroes and civilians alike ill-prepared to cope. I think it was very apt for that one guy to be wearing an All Might shirt--he was acting as a mouthpiece for the latent societal problems embedded in All Might’s legacy. 
We know already that he’s been feeling useless. I love this scene and although I’m not gonna talk about it right this second, remember what Aizawa says about just “being here” being enough:
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And we know from conversations with Inko that Toshinori is also reframed his purpose around looking after Izuku. But in the end, Izuku rejected his help, and it was his classmates instead who were able to save him. Now the very progress of humanity is rejecting him too. You may me wondering how on Earth I don’t see the logical conclusion of all this being his death. Hold on. It actually has a lot to do with the fact that we’re all expecting it. Nighteye himself saw it, and despite any contrary convictions anyone might have, the plot doesn’t seem to be veering away from that end. All Might Is Gonna Die, says absolutely everything. 
It’s occurring to me that I have previous experience with this kind of plotline that probably little to no one else in this fandom shares, being that I’ve read a certain book series in which the main character is told in no uncertain terms that he will die (no, I’m not talking about hp). The series in question is T*e Und*rland Chronicl*s (censoring so it doesn’t get put in their side of tumblr) and I’m sorry but I’m about to go on a shameless tangent about it and spoil the ending for you.
So in this series there is a prophecy in every book, each one having something to do with war and conflict, and so far all of them have been right. In the last book [mc] finds out that it’s prophesied that he will be killed. Lots of the things in the prophecies are convoluted and metaphorical, but no, this one literally says “when the [mc’s title] has been killed.” He spends the whole book coming to terms with this, and he gives into it, only to find himself waking up in the hospital instead. “Wow, plot twist. /s” you may be thinking, and yeah sure, the mc in a kids book survived, big shocker. But it doesn't end there. After the war, there are peace talks, but they escalate until the two sides are on the verge of declaring war again. And [mc], bless him, has just been caught in the middle of all of this the entire time. He’s sick as shit of fighting, of watching the suffering and death of people he cares about. He draws his sword against both of them angrily, gives a speech saying he won’t take a side, and then promptly breaks his sword across his knee: “There. [mc’s title in the prophecies] is dead. I killed him.” He’s giving a huge middle finger to everyone there, to the man who wrote the prophecies, to the entire fucked up culture of it all. And so something that was taken literally turns out to be metaphorical. That is, if you still believe in the prophecies at all.
Hopefully you’re catching my drift here. What I’m saying is, even though this other series has nothing to do with bnha, it goes to show sometimes it’s the most absolute certainties that are red herrings, and a “death” can consequently be a symbolic one. In All Might’s case, it could be the death of hero society and a rejection of his own past. In other words, character development for Toshinori himself that reflects on the way the world is changing, too. Also there’s the fact that the mc from that other series I’m trying not to name has an honorary title, and I’m imagining that role he occupied “dying” could correspond to something that amounts to, “All Might is dead. I (Yagi Toshinori) killed him.” 
And here’s another thing: we also have to ask ourselves what good a dead Toshinori is to Izuku, narratively speaking. Yes, Izuku has spent his whole life idolizing even the more toxic parts of All Might, and his idealized vision of his hero does need to “die.” But how about Toshinori as a father figure?  Izuku regretting that his last interaction with Toshinori was to reject his help may drive home the fact that he shouldn’t go off on his own, but at this point it’s kinda redundant. If anything it would negate some of the progress that was just made because it’d make him extra paranoid about losing other people too. To be honest, the whole “Uncle Ben” trope, the mentor/father figure who dies and gives the mc a reason to do better, is so tired. Experiencing the death of a loved one really doesn’t deserve to be romanticized like that. I might as well admit that I’m speaking from experience, and let me tell you, losing someone you love suddenly, when you weren’t around, and with unfinished business--it makes you paranoid as hell that it will happen again. It literally gives me nightmares. Y’all, I cannot stress enough that trauma does not equal character development. Granted, just because I know this doesn’t mean Horikoshi does, but in general he does seem to lead his characters toward healing.
Okay, back to the present. Toshinori is turning away from UA. He likely feels useless and rejected. We can infer that what happens next will involve Stain, and we have a couple of extra clues to go with it: Stain considers All Might a true hero, and has stated that he would let All Might kill him. And since Horikoshi loves his parallels, we also have this fight between Endeavor and this random villain who admires him so much that he wants to die by Endeavor’s hand:
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This suggests a confrontation in which Stain challenges All Might to live up to himself as he once was, so that as a hero he can vanquish Stain and symbolically overcome society's perversion of that role. But based on what All Might has learned about the system he upheld, Stain is wrong. All Might is not a “true hero” in the sense that the societal issues Stain witnessed exist not in spite of All Might, but (in part) because of him, because he took too much of the responsibility for himself.
Stain probably had no idea about the personal cost of All Might’s lonely burden until after the fact. Maybe he’s seeing it now. So then perhaps the confrontation would be more about Stain claiming he’s just as fake as the rest. Either way, Toshinori has the opportunity to denounce himself and be rid of “All Might,”  to stop living in his own shadow. Nighteye’s vision has been defied before, and I honestly wouldn’t be surprised if the combination of society shifting + Toshinori’s own conviction is enough to do it again and work fate in his favor.
He is not All Might. He is Yagi Toshinori: quirkless, worn down, and directionless except for his dedication to Izuku. If he survives his interaction with Stain, he can resolve his imperfect mentorship by confessing about his shortcomings and simply supporting Izuku as a part of his family, not as his teacher (as Aizawa said, just “being there”). And that’s how you really get character development, for both of them. I mean, shit, imagine Toshinori straight up telling Izuku to stop calling him All Might.
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rarepears · 3 years
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Cloud Strife as All Might's (adoptive) father.
Cloud Strife as All Might's (adoptive) father.
There's a lot of parallels between Cloud Strife and All Might. Bother super weak people who wanted to become heroes and save people. (SOLDIERs were effectively heroes.) Even when everyone thought it was impossible, they still tried - Cloud Strife, the tiny babyface kid who got thrown into the army while he continued trying for the SOLDIER exam, and Yagi who got rejected from UA Hero Course and attended General Studies as a quirkless teen.
(Yagi would have to attend General Studies as otherwise people would have been able to attach his civilian name to his hero name. If he was just one of the hundreds General Studies kids whose quirks weren't being flashed around every year with the Sports Festival, then people wouldn't know of his civilian name. Plus it's a great selling point for when All Might says "Anyone can you a hero, even if people think you can't. Because I didn't get into UA's hero course and attended the general studies but I still made it.")
Then both Yagi and Cloud got powers (from outside interference) and became some of the most powerful people around.
Anyways, back to my idea:
Toshinori Yagi was an orphan. And he wanted to be a hero despite being quirkless. Cloud kept seeing the same scrawny blonde hair kid trying to do martial arts at the park but failing. Cloud gives a could tips to keep the kid from hurting himself from doing the moves incorrectly. Yagi attaches himself onto Cloud like a duckling.
Cloud, being reminded of his younger self prior to Hojo's experiments, ends up unofficially adopting the kid. It becomes official later.
Course, since they are both blondes... people think they are actually biologically father son. No one bothers correcting it. Mainly cause both are oblivious blondes.
And as All Might, Yagi keeps quiet about the fact he has a dad. Cloud wants the privacy - he doesn't like fame. But Yagi also has the mistaken assumption that Cloud needs to protected from any and all threats. Like AFO. Cloud knows that Yagi could handed a quirk from someone, but he's left in the dark about AFO.
So that's fun.
And AFO somehow manages to found out about Cloud. Cue Cloud curbstomping the villain without breaking into a sweat and All Might's shocked face.
The whole fight is filmed and released to the public. Hello Cloud's international debut into worldwide fame.
Oh and the world is like, with a dad like that, no wonder All Might turned out the way he did.
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redrobin-detective · 7 years
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Toshinori and Nana and One for All
So I??? Invented a backstory for All Might, how he grew up, developed his ideals, met Nana and turned into the hero we all know and love. It's like, 100% made up but I adhered to canon events as best I could. I'm so stoked to hear more about Nana, Torino and young Toshi but until then, here's my dumb thoughts
- Toshinori Yagi was born in the United States, as American as Apple Pie. I personally am liking him being from the American Mid-west, I'm thinking like Kansas (like Clark Kent). I want him to be from a decently sized city but still with that Heartland feel. Toshinori is half Japanese on his father's side (hence his surname, Yagi) but takes after his American mother more with his blond hair and blue eyes. Despite the name and some Asian features, he's not involved with his culture at all. I'm playing with the idea that Toshinori wasn't his birth name growing up in American. Not sure yet but I'm liking the idea of a similar sounding name that people in Japan had problems pronouncing so they just started calling him Toshi which stuck. Once he was more settled in Japan, he changed it to Toshinori. Still working on that.
- Anyway, Toshinori had a good, nice American childhood with loving if maybe distant parents. He grew up on a small farm with his parents, which he both loved and hated because well farm but also he enjoyed the atmosphere and freedom. I see him as being a good, smiley kid with a strong sense of right and wrong. The hero situation is different back when he was a kid, less structured and more like vigilantism. I feel like Toshi would like the idea of heroes as a kid but it's never a big passion. The organized hero biz is still in it's infancy so it's not as big a deal. He, like Izuku, receives trouble for his quirklessness but it's not a big issue for him, he's ok with it as it's a little more common. Anyway, he's happy until, suddenly and tragically, he's orphaned at a young age maybe like 8
- Yeah, typical hero origin. He's got no other family and is shipped off to a city orphanage that just isn't cutting it for him. He takes to the streets, making his own way and learning how to survive on his own. But Toshinori has a heart of gold, he's always helping out others street kids, defending them from bullies, giving out his meager supplies. It's here he really sees how weak and defenseless he is without a quirk and works twice as hard to compensate. He is angry about what happened to him, feeling disillusioned about the state of the world and wanting to better it but he never lets it dim his inner goodness. Despite being a good kid, he becomes bitter about his situation and the so called heroes who aren't doing anything to help these kids. He hates the state of the world but wonders what a quirkless orphan like him can do.
- Years pass and Toshi is now like 10-11 when his life changes forever. Like another quirkless boy will do in the future, there's an incident (I'm feeling a fire in the abandoned building Toshi and his street kids have been squatting in?) where Toshinori rushes in without thinking while cops and heroes stand outside and make no moves to help for some reason. He's trying to save these kids and it seems they'll all die right there when a woman bursts in and tells them it's alright because she is here. She saves all of the kids and smiles down with admiration at the awestruck blond boy. Toshi hasn't liked heroes for a while, but after his first meeting with Nana he is amazed. He's not the only one, Nana saw so much raw potential in Toshinori. When she hears of his situation she can't leave him be. She's a mother as well as a hero and she's already a little smitten with a smart-ass street kid with a heart of gold. She offers to train him and he accepts. She vaguely thinks he might be a candidate for One for All but, at this stage, she's not thinking of a successor.
- Nana is native Japanese but she's a travelling hero. She believes a hero is supposed to be more than someone who punches bad guys, they should be someone who smiles and makes the world a happier place. Despite her incredibly power, she's not much of a fighter. She'd much rather rescue and inspire than exchange blows as she's such an open pacifist. She loves her husband as they work together to make the world a better place. She returns home frequently to see her husband and child and they have a good relationship despite her being gone so much. Also for some reason I hc her husband as a quirkless hero because I do. It's during one of these trips she finds Toshinori and basically adopts him.
- She and Toshi travel for a few months during this time they grow incredibly close. He calls her master but it's clear to everyone they're developing a mother/son bond. Her family and friends are taken aback that she's taken this reckless, not-powered kid under her wing. They all ask if she intends to give him One for All and she laughs it off that she's just helping Toshi out. Toshi himself, while very respectful of Nana, is a little bit of a delinquent. He's used to being completely independent and hasn't had the best education since being on the streets, he can be rude and surly, getting into fights with people he think are in the wrong and generally being kind of a brat. Nana mostly lets him work his issues out but she does stop him when he's gone too far or is in danger.
- After travelling a bit of the US and Europe, Nana gets the news that her husband has died in battle with All for One trying to get to her. She is devastated and tells Toshi she needs to return to Japan and probably stay there for a while, Toshi agrees to go with her. Once home, she puts her child into foster care out of desire to protect them. It nearly breaks her but one thing that holds her together is Toshi. Having him there, with his spirit and big heart, keeps her going. She feels incredibly guilty, as if she's trading one child for another. For the first time she properly considers Toshi as an heir for OFA which she'd kind of ignored out of desire to protect him from that fate. But now she feels she can't justify keeping him around (since she gave up her child to "protect them") unless she's planning on passing her power. She's torn but decides to tell Toshi about OFA, he's surprised but takes to it. He agrees to take the power when the time comes, she delays the transfer as she's not "ready to retire" but also to try and give him more time in case he changes his mind. She knows she's sentencing him to a hard life of brutal fights, that'll most likely kill him.
- Toshi is enrolled in Japanese Middle School while his training increases to prepare him for OFA. It's during this time he meets Gran Torino who is initially very antagonistic towards Toshi and thinks he isn't worthy. Toshi has trouble adjusting to Japanese life, not to mention not knowing the language and culture. He gets into lots of fights and really gains a perspective on how the world is. He comes up with the idea that the world needs a hero to serve as a pillar, an example that heroes and citizens can rally behind. Hearing this, Torino begins to change his mind on Toshi and starts working more with Nana to train him. Like his friend, he begins to develop a soft spot for the cheeky American. Nana meanwhile has put some distance between herself and Toshi, trying to be more of the mentor than the mother. She doesn't deserve to have another chance with a child and, besides, it'll only hurt more when he takes OFA.
- He graduates middle school after about a year. He has a bit of record and not the best grades but he finally has a clear vision of what he wants to be as a hero and has adjusted to living in Japan. Nana wants him to go to UA, the best hero school in the country. Toshi and Torino think it's time to pass on OFA so he get into the hero class and begin working towards his dream. Nana is still unhappy about putting this boy she cares for deeply in that kind of danger (since AFO is still out there waiting for her) and proclaims he's not ready yet. He's admitted to the UA General Department on Nana's recommendation, since his grades weren't the best. This puts him at odds with a lot of the other students, especially once it gets out that he's a quirkless student aiming for the hero department.
- Nana isn't quite a teacher at UA but works out of the school to do her hero work but she stops travelling and operates solely in Japan. She and Torino continue to train Toshi hard in both fighting and smarts and he becomes quite the force to reckoned with. He doesn't have a lot of friends, due to his intense, slightly abrasive personality but he still has Nana and Torino and that's enough. He does become friends with Naomasa Tsukauchi who remains a lifelong friend and grows up to be a detective. As his first term at UA concludes, he begins to wonder if Nana will ever give him OFA. He begins to doubt himself, doubt all the praise and assurances Nana has given him. He believes she doesn't think he's worthy but really she's not ready to put him in danger. This slowly starts to put a wedge in their relationship.
- All for One starts to move again and Nana is out for blood. This man killed her husband and made her give up her biological child. She tries to keep Toshi out of it and search for AFO on her own. This upsets Toshi who, again is feeling worthless and like Nana doesn't think he's good enough. This builds up until finally everything explodes out, they're both yelling and screaming and nothing really gets resolved because neither is willing to open up about what's really bothering them (Toshi and his insecurities, Nana and her protectiveness). The fight has upset Nana and it's during this time she finds AFO who approaches her seeing how off kilter she is. A huge fight ensues and Nana takes serious hits. AFO breaks her with his powers and with his words, breaking her will slowly but surely. She fights valiantly, trying to stay alive long enough to get back to the others and apologize and pass on OFA. But AFO is trying to end her now, knowing she hasn't passed on her quirk yet. He mortally wounds her and walks away knowing she doesn't have much time left.
- Toshi and Torino hear the commotion of this fight and know Nana has to be involved. Toshi, against Torino's warnings, rushes in trying to find Nana. He is so concerned for his mentor and angry that their last words had been an argument. He comes and finds her barely alive in the wreckage. He's trying to help, crying and doing all she can to save her. She's too wounded to say the things she wants to say, instead she uses her dwindling strength to try and put her blood into his mouth. Toshi is too upset at the time note the significance of the action when she dies shortly afterwards. Torino comes across Toshi crying over his mentor's body.
- They take away Nana's body and bury her in a private ceremony. She wasn't a well known hero at all, partially because she travelled so much and also because she wanted to keep a low profile. It's only later does Torino consider if Nana had been able to pass on OFA, but it's unclear if Toshi has actually swallowed enough of her blood. Toshi falls into a depression having lost someone he had been immensely close to, he takes a leave of absence from school and seems lost. It's only when he activates OFA on accident that he realizes that his teacher and his dream aren't gone yet. He's still broken up over her death, always will be, but if he stops now then her death and her faith in him will be wasted. He and Torino train hard for the next few months and come next term, he's easily able to register for the hero course. Torino becomes a teacher  and trains the hell out of Toshi, he's fired for being too tough but by that point Toshi has immense control of his power and can move forward on his own.
- So Toshi was taken in by Nana around 10-11, travelled then came to Japan around 12, went through Japanese middle school and started at UA as a General student around 13-14. Nana died/passed OFA onto him around 15 or so
- To most people, All Might just came out of nowhere. UA seems to heavily emphasize the hero classes with not a lot of attention on the other sections. I feel like our Toshi would have been rather infamous in the General Department (maybe even going under a different name) but none of the other sections really knew about him so they didn't make the connection to the troublemaking, quirkless General student to the strong, powerful prodigy. Once he rose through the ranks in UA, he really developed his hero persona. A lot of his personality is an act, but not all. He does genuinely care for people and wants to save everyone but he puts on a big, blustery show to make people smile and reigns in his more reckless and ideological impulses in order to try and set a good example. He'll mostly deny it, but much of All Might's personality is faked with only the core elements truly belonging to Toshi. 
- Toshinori decides to use all of his experiences to become the kind of hero he wants to see in the world: he thinks of his American upbringing, he thinks of the anger he felt at indifferent heroes only in it for the money and power, he thinks of how sad he was at the loss of so many people and how important a life is, he thinks about how the world needs a symbol to look up to, he thinks of Torino's tough love training that made him strong, he thinks of how Nana thought it was so important to smile and present a strong but reassuring front to the world. He chooses the name All Might because he swears to protect the people of the world with "All of his Might". He puts on a bright costume and an even brighter smile and he makes his debut and swears that he will achieve his goal for Nana and he will avenge her murder if it's the last thing he does. At this time, AFO does not know that Toshi has OFA (and he doesn't learn until much Toshi has grown in power and is able to deal a devastating blow to AFO)
- Years and years later, after many tragedies and triumphs, Toshi runs across a quirkless boy who loves heroes but doesn't have the power to be one himself. He smiles at the boy's spirit, at his astounding amount of compassion and perseverance, and offers his power to him. He has no way of knowing that, many years ago, Nana had looked at him with the same loving eyes. He doesn't quite understand that the pride and warmth he feels for Izuku is close to the feelings that Nana once held for him. Only when he furthers his training, and his bond, with Izuku does he start to properly understand his mentor and why she did what she did. It makes her seem close to him again and that alone is worth everything he has endured. He still hasn't told Izuku because he doesn't want to scare the boy with all that death talk and Toshi is very guarded and not one to open up on something so very personal. Maybe someday he'll tell his student about his wonderful teacher and how she made him into a hero.
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prince-liest · 4 years
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@fffinger-guns replied to your post “I get increasingly more concerned as I see Horikoshi convieniently...”
I really really don't want to see Hawks lose his wings BUT if he do, I'm very curious to see how Horikoshi would handle writing a character going through such a tragedy as this. People in real life do experience debilitating injuries, which would make Hawks a character for them to relate to. Losing something like that is tragic, but seeing someone go through it and come back from it is inspiring. There's two directions Hawk's story could go and I'm sooo curious
Plus the only other character to lose his quirk so far is Mirio, and while it is tragic, I feel like it wasn’t quite as tragic, especially because it’s hinted that eventually Eri could give mirio his quirk back. If Hawks lost his quirk, he would also lose his career, which at this point is basically his identity
I enjoy the way that Horikoshi has handled All Might losing his quirk to a debilitating injury, and I think there’s a lot of parallels to be made there. Being All Might was Toshinori Yagi’s entire identity for years and years, and we see him being not that great at handling his inability to be All Might anymore! He gets stressed out at being unable to help, has a rough time adjusting to doing literally anything else other than pro-heroing, and has to learn how to be his own person rather than just a symbol of peace. I really loved Horikoshi’s take on ‘removing’ the obligatory Main Character Mentor Figure from his position of power without actually offing him, and I really enjoy seeing All Might reconcile himself with no longer being All Might.
That said, I think that this is an arc that makes a lot of sense for All Might, but it’s not one that I’d personally enjoy for Hawks. Hawks isn’t just someone that put his all into his identity as a hero, he’s also a child soldier and a child abuse victim. I really want to see him find freedom and person-hood without having to sacrifice and suffer even more in the process.
As a side note: A lot of folks with disabilities stand solidly on the ‘dnw’ side of the line with regards to being seen as an inspiration for living with a disability. I know a character like that can very well be inspiring for a kid facing something similar, and it’s not my place to say either way, but I wanted to at least bring it up as food for thought.
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greyjackwatcher · 2 years
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Me going apeshit about the current leaks as many of my predictions are turning out to be correct
I WAS GONNA MAKE A POST A POST AFTER MY MIDDAY NAP ABOUT AFO BUT GODDAMN THESE LEAKS JUST COMPLETELY SLAPPED ME IN MY HEAD. My prediction about something missing in this fight was right because while many people were pointing the parallels between Endeavor’s current fight with AFO with the AFO vs AM in Kamino, no one as far as i remember pointed out that afo was calling him out on being a shit teacher and mentor with yagi ending up to agree with him and then promising to become better. Surprisingly or most likely unsurprisingly, Endeavor does NOT do that. Afo called him out on being a bad father and neglecting and abusing Touya and Enji’s response wasn’t: ‘’yes you are right i will try to become a better father’’(just like what AM did and didn’t just win over him but tried to rise above it), but it was ‘‘yes i am doggedly stubborn and that is a flaw i have that ruined me, my life and my family but i am still gonna continue being stubborn and focus on ending this fight as is my duty(that is not to say that he shouldn’t, it’s his job after all but he could just continue fighting and saying that he will try to become a better father at the same time). So as far as things go, for choosing and focusing once again in being a hero instead of being a father, he gets slapped by narrative consequences and AFO starts healing up to his prime and going onto phase 2. This is literally what i was expecting and that is a +1 for me.
I also have been waiting for some enemies to lovers wih afo and enji just for the chaos. So another +1 for me. AND the sexualization of AFO(so another +1 for me
Now we may get to my next prediction which is Shouto and Touya coming to the rescue of their father, with him having some sort of open mouth and a funny weird face, would be quite funny. Big plus if Touya had his quirk awakening and is far more proficient with his quirk than before thus showing to endeavor that he was wrong for throwing him out and then fight together as family(this is a shonen manga after all)
For my third prediction, maybe AFO just tries to use psychological warfare to hawks and then he just has flashbacks with Jin and we see him saw some guilt and regret for killing him.
Anyways this is such a great chapter and i loved it.
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by lovesickdays
Sawada Tsunayoshi was a firm believer that kids should be kids. Having his childhood plagued with the legacy of a blood-laced crime organisation was enough. However, as he arrived in a parallel universe, he realised that as opposed to having just one insignificant kid suffering through trials and tribulations meant for those much older. There was a school dedicated just for that purpose.
Although he knew he couldn't change how an entire society operated for decades. What Tsuna decided to do was to be a comforting and nurturing presence in these students' life, hoping they wouldn't have the same nightmares he experiences even till now. Nor would their bodies be littered with scars where they most certainly don't belong.
It's just a roundabout way of saying Tsuna is there to give everyone a big hug and tell them sometimes 'Plus Ultra' isn't the solution.
Words: 782, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
Fandoms: 僕のヒーローアカデミア | Boku no Hero Academia | My Hero Academia, Katekyou Hitman Reborn!
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: Gen
Characters: Ten Years Later Sawada Tsunayoshi, Sawada Tsunayoshi, Midoriya Izuku, Bakugou Katsuki, Aoyama Yuuga, Ashido Mina, Asui Tsuyu, Iida Tenya, Uraraka Ochako, Ojiro Mashirao, Kaminari Denki, Kirishima Eijirou, Satou Rikidou, Shouji Mezou, Kouda Kouji, Jirou Kyouka, Sero Hanta, Tokoyami Fumikage, Todoroki Shouto, Hagakure Tooru, Mineta Minoru, Yaoyorozu Momo, Aizawa Shouta | Eraserhead, Yagi Toshinori | All Might, Shigaraki Tomura | Shimura Tenko, League of Villains (My Hero Academia), Vongola Tenth Generation Guardians
Additional Tags: Parallel Universes, Teacher Sawada Tsunayoshi, Vongola Decimo Sawada Tsunayoshi, Lambo causing havoc again, Hurt/Comfort, Class 1-A Shenanigans (My Hero Academia), Class 1-A Needs a Hug (My Hero Academia), Protective Sawada Tsunayoshi, they are just kids, Slice of Life
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