Anime Spotlight #50: My Hero Academia (2025 Update)
Article by Sean Wilkinson,
a.k.a. the Quirky Animeister
This review has been through a lot over the past half-year, Ticketholders! When I originally began this update in late January, the fourth My Hero Academia film had not been made available to stream anywhere, so I was content to merely continue where my thoughts on Season Six left off originally and wrap up this post with Season Seven. Then, I realized that I was too far removed from those seasons for my review to sound or feel like anything but a Wikipedia summary, so I pushed things back to May so I could rewatch them, except that I was already working on my Fishman Island and Punk Hazard reviews, so I didn't have time to do that, and there was all that stress surrounding my phone, and Vigilantes started airing...so I pushed things back again, deciding that I would set a hard deadline of August once I knew Vigilantes had ended and the fourth movie was available on streaming. And after many sleepless nights of awesomeness, here we are.
When I posted the original review, Deku had just had a Death Battle against Asta from Black Clover (series, movie), and at the time of this writing, Deku has recently returned to Death Battle for a clash with Miles Morales.
And since this is the 50th installment of the Anime Spotlight and I can do whatever I want, I thought I'd start by giving my thoughts on them.
The battle of the powerless protagonists sports better fight choreography despite relying mainly on low-res sprite animation. The "Asta wins because he can sneeze hard enough to make his body FTL in his sleep and his anti-magic scales to kingdom-level magic even though hax and magic aren't the same thing" logic is kind of bullshit, but I like how the fight looks and the writers and voice actor capture early Deku's personality incredibly well. That Mr. Satan cameo at the end was pretty fun, too.The latest Death Battle (assuming Hulk vs. Godzilla hasn't come out by now) is infinitely better in terms of production value than the Asta episode from TWO YEARS AGO, using anime- and movie-accurate animation to pit Deku against his Spider-Man inspiration, all backed by an incredible fight track. Unfortunately, it was so Spectacular and Plus Ultra that even though this is Death Battle and Deku was still standing at the end of it, I Ultimately didn't understand who won until halfway through the ending breakdown...and I watched both of these Twice! I don't get into reaction content very often, and I try not to engage with fandom toxicity, so I'm not up on who "the right winner should be" or whether "Death Battle was never good" or "Death Battle lost its spark when they went independent" or any crap like that. But the crowd-funded budget has been showing lately for better and for worse, particularly in the uninteresting choreography and confusing or anticlimactic endings, even if the animation is as peak as it is here. I acknowledge how cool this newer fight looks by comparison, but I find the older one more fun to watch and easier to comprehend despite the win justification being more entertaining than logical.Also, strong recommendation for the Rouga Rabid channel. He does "survival challenge" content that takes characterization and environment into account as well as combat feats while being entertaining and keeping it real. He gets a bit "that didn't age well" for the sake of entertainment value, but his content is solid when it comes to power scaling-type videos.
Now, in the spirit of Rouga, let's get started with an edited reprint of my coverage as it appeared in Anime Spotlight #19: My Hero Academia (FROM December 5, 2022):
Just like with my Made In Abyss review and a few others, I will be giving my opinion on every season of the show thus far, as well as all four movies and the Vigilantes spin-off, because the motto of the day is to "go beyond; Plus Ultra!" for the 50th Anime Spotlight.
Also, remember to comment down below and Smash those social media appreciation buttons with the state, country, or footie club of your choice. Sorry if the Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood & Honey II review turned me a little British.
Despite my initial misgivings about the art style, this is one of my favorite modern shōnen series. It’s your basic underdog setup with a normal high school boy in a world full of people with super powers (termed “Quirks” in the series to keep with the whole “different is special” line we were all feeding each other while Trump authorized child concentration camps on the Mexican border) who wants to be the greatest Hero in the world. Midorya (alias: Deku—Japanese shorthand for both "good-for-nothing" and "can do anything") gets the opportunity he’s been waiting for when his idol, All-Might, passes his power (an overpowered amplifcation Quirk called One-For-All) to him. The bulk of the series focuses on Deku and his fellow Heroes-in-training learning to use their Quirks in your typical shōnen arc situations like gaining entry (Bleach had the Soul Society, MHA has Ultra Academy High School), rescue missions (point again to Bleach’s Soul Society and Arrancar arcs), fighting tournaments (the Dragon Ball franchise has many examples of this), and training camps (again see Bleach and Dragon Ball for examples), each of which is usually interrupted by an engaging trial by fire battle against the League Of Villains. This all sounds very predictable and mechanical, but My Hero has some real heart to it, and manages to cram what would be hours of boring filler and exposition in any other shōnen into a single look, line, or episode without making the series feel thin or dismissive of who its characters are. The linchpin of the series’ success is (I might get tired of saying this eventually) the main protagonist. Deku isn’t your basic, knuckle-headed, battle-thirsty, morality-blinded hero whose solution to everything is “yell louder, punch harder” (though ironically, his power involves yelling “[insert American State or City here] Smash!” and punching things really hard—until he switches to kicking things really hard and using British soccer clubs like Manchester United in his attack names). As a Quirkless child, his obsession with becoming a Hero led him to study every known Hero and Villain, analyzing everything from Quirk strengths and weaknesses to individual fighting styles. Essentially, Deku is the shōnen world’s answer to Batman, except that he could probably also punch out the Hulk if he wanted to. Spoilers, but Deku pretty much did that already when he pushed One-For-All to one million percent power (because math works) and dusted a Hulk-like supervillain with a single punch, so, yeah. My Hero Academia is worth investing your time in if you like shōnen series (and even if you don’t, give it a try) because it’s awesome and damned near perfect. For the first three seasons.

My Hero Academia: Two Heroes is a canon, feature-length film that takes place between the second and third seasons. It focuses on All-Might (voiced by Piccolo and Vegeta dub actor Chris Sabat, who is also the voice of Yami in Black Clover) and Deku (the titular Two Heroes) and their relationships with members of the Shields family, who work as Supporters (usually Quirkless people and tech experts who design costumes and Quirk-augmenting accessories) for Heroes (though not stated until later seasons, it's obvious pretty early in the series that Villains have Supporters, too). They and the main cast of the series receive invitations to a festival on I-Island, a high-security, mobile island used for research and development and extracurricular Hero training. But as often happens when MHA's cast are enjoying down-time, a group of Villains infiltrate the island to steal a Quirk-enhancing MacGuffin. The many twists work well, the action is plentiful and varied—the latter helped by the multiple Villains and large supporting cast—with visuals that match or exceed the quality of the series, and the dynamic between Deku and Melissa Shields (friendship bordering on a propriety-repressed youth romance) is one of the film's highlights. I still ship Deku X Uravity, though.
Then, after three seasons of setup and thrilling battles, the golden era of MHA ends with All-Might finally defeating the villainous mastermind that ended his career, and passing the torch to Deku and a flame-powered "Hero" named Endeavor (who went all Friday Night Lights crazy and used eugenics, physical abuse, and psychological trauma to render his cold-Quirked wife into a catatonic state and mold their son into a "perfect" Hero with equal control over both of their Quirks). Endeavor does get a chance to redeem himself and earn his spot as the new "Number One Hero," but when mangaka write screwed-up father characters, there are some things that fans just can't forgive.
Not only is Endeavor an inadequate stand-in for All-Might, but the main Villains from Season 4 onward don't match up to the Darth Vader-esque supervillain, All-For-One (the figurehead of the League Of Villains, who can take other people's Quirks for himself or give them to other Villains). He was the peak when it came to evil in the series. Not even the fourth season's Villain, Overhaul (a mafia boss who can deconstruct and re-form anything and anyone he touches, often with graphic—for the series—body horror results) can hope to equal his gravitas and writing quality. The suspense and mystery are still good, Deku's big brother chemistry with Eri (a girl whom Overhaul kidnapped and used as a blood bank for Quirk-suppression ammunition) is sweet, and the fights between Deku and Overhaul are spectacular.
My Hero Academia: Heroes Rising is set after Season Three or Four, in the aftermath of All-For-One's defeat. The focal members of the League of Villains have unleashed a new Villain called Nine, and Endeavor and a bird-powered Hero named Hawks fail to stop them. Good setup, and Nine has sympathetic motivations despite his "survival of the fittest" philosophy. Unfortunately, the plot from there is that Deku and his class are invited to an island for training, where they befriend some local children and are forced to defend a dangerous MacGuffin from Nine and his team of Villains. Where have I heard this before? They even do the All-For-One connection from Two Heroes by having Nine be an All-For-One weilder with multiple Quirks (nine of them, duh). The beats are just Two Heroes again, but with the "gain the jerky kids' trust" trope in place of Deku and Melissa's much sweeter and more thematically rich exchanges, and the final double-team punch features Deku teaming up with his rival, Bakugo, instead of All-Might. This was meant to be the My Hero Academia finale, but it and the series did so well that it reminded Toho, animation Studio Bones, and author Kōhei Horikoshi how much they like money. In hindsight, the one-off feature of the One For All Quirk that was written to make Heroes Rising into a "here we go again" nostalgia sequel for its much better predecessor, the status quo reset that the film ends with (amnesia!), and the fact that said reset makes no sense with how the series itself resumes (Bakugo still remembers that Deku has All-Might's Quirk when the fifth season starts), all make Heroes Rising feel like a short filler arc. Granted, we haven't seen Melissa Shields since Two Heroes, either (probably because Deku X Uravity is a cuter ship with more development and comedy potential), but that film at least felt like it mattered, rather than just being "what worked before, but with the index finger crooked slightly different." Also, didn't Marvel use the "Heroes Rising" branding for some web shorts a few years back? Don't mess with The Mouse, Japan!
Season five...is a training season. The students from Class 1A and their rivals in Class 1B fight each other in ridiculous, "practically aplicable" competitions (sort of like if Daniel-san thought he was learning karate, but instead of the tournament, he's competing in a charity carwash at the end of The Karate Kid). We get some cool, new information about how One For All works (that will actually matter in the series' bright future), and there are hints that a new Villain group might be emerging. I even enjoyed the parts where the former members of the League Of Villains just hang out as people, and we get sympathetic backstories for a few of them (Twice—think anime Deadpool, but with cloning powers and even more psychological damage because his life is a Twilight Zone episode—and Shigaraki—who has a literal touch of death—are the most tragic). But to start a new season so long after the previous one, and with three parallel plot threads at minimum (the training tournament, the Villains' hanging out and training, and Hawks—Endeavor's sidekick from the beginning of Heroes Rising—going undercover in the new Villain group, plus the individual Villain-focused episodes and whatever else I forgot to mention), and spend so much time on the Heroes-in-training doing basically nothing plot-significant? My brain was ready to check out. I get that the world of MHA has changed with the power vacuum left behind by All-Might and All-For-One, and there needs to be a thematic representation of that change (putting focus on the next generation, the global politics at play when binary definitions of morality get called into question, giving the Villains their own Academia moment, etc.). I appreciate the writing behind the fifth season, and that it is building to something. But why did the presentation of that have to be so Quirk-damned boring?
Taking place some time after the fifth season's fourteenth episode ("Off to Endeavor's Agency!"), MHA: World Heroes Mission sees the professional and trainee Heroes combine forces against a doomsday cult called Humarise. The cult is a unique threat in the franchise because most of its members are Quirkless, with their scale, networking, and vast resources (not to mention the brainwashed Quirk users among their ranks and the mirror-Quirked incel behind it all) being the source of their threat level. Humarise have ascribed to an as-yet-unsubstantiated theory that, as Quirked genes continue to mix, the results will be too powerful to control, and they will destroy the world. And because religious cult philosophy and conspiracy theories make total sense, what better way to stop overpowered Quirks from destroying the world than to saturate the world with lethal doses of a drug that makes Quirks overpowered and uncontrollable? This is kind of a commentary on population control and ethnic purity philosophies, and would have been a good thematic backdrop for the cult to target Todoroki (Endeavor's hot-and-cold eugenics experiment of a son) and Deku (whose whole arc is learning to control his overpowered legacy Quirk before it destroys his body) specifically. But instead, we get the derivative, "wrong man, wrong briefcase" odd-couple-learning-to-trust-eachother trope salad featured in numerous 80s and 90s action movies, with Deku trying to save a "shady courier with a heart of gold" trope from a Quirked Humarise assassin (totally underutilized, well-designed, and my favorite character in the movie aside from the courier's ninja-bird sidekick—I'm a sucker for cute birds and badass female archers, what can I say?) after he comes into possession of a MacGuffin briefcase.
As safe and by-the-numbers as this is, Deku, the courier, and the bird playing off of each other is my favorite part of the movie. The fights look as good as ever, but suffer from the same problems as Made In Abyss: Dawn of the Deep Soul: they drag on for way too long because someone has to transform or clone themselves, or the Hero keeps trying the same attack again and again even though it didn't work the first twelve times. But in the end, Deku says, "you thought Deku would save the day, but it was me, Dio! ORA! ORA! MUDA! MUDA! UNITED ZA WARUDO SAMASHHUU!!!", the courier who betrayed him several times is now another character who's friends with Deku and we'll probably never see again, the cult gets arrested, and their Quirk Trigger bombs get deactivated offscreen. It was good to see this third film go in a different direction (using Humarise as a testing ground for fan reactions to gage how well the show's new Villain organization could be received, and not having Deku do a double-team Finisher for a third time), but there was so much that World Heroes Mission could have done, that the fifth season's second half (and the sixth and seventh seasons) did much better.
The sixth season is a true return to form for the series. Hawks has ingratiated himself into the new Villain organization (in keeping with the fuzzy morality theme introduced last season, the "Paranormal Liberation Front" accepts "fine people on both sides" who are tired of the rigidness of society, and so do not bat an eye at Heroes joining their ranks). The PLF is gearing up for a violent demonstration, and Hawks leaks the information to the Heroes' Association. What follows is a Season Four-style storming of a PLF facility, but with the sinister stench of All-For-One's influence looming in the background, an army of multi-Quirked body horror genetic experiments (imagine a Jigsaw killer trap, but it's a creature design from the Alien franchise, crossed with Mother Brain from the Metroid games. And there are over a dozen of them. You're welcome! Sleep well!) called Nomu, every Hero and Villain getting some screen time, if not dialogue, and beautifully animated action scenes. It's like the first three seasons turned to eleven, then given the Plus Ultra treatment, and topped with fifty states, Washington, D.C., and all the island territories worth of Smash because good measure just isn't anime enough. There is still thematic weight and palpable stakes to all of this (being a season-long role reversal of the first three seasons' party-crashing finales, for one thing), but with the previous season having painstakingly laid the foundational writing, the viewer can now just ride the edge of their seat of choice as bodies collide, the scenery evaporates, and everything else explodes. The sixth season is well-animated, strategic chaos, but amidst all of the carnage, we also learn that the doctor who tests most people for Quirks (and told Deku that he was Quirkless, and developed the Quirk Doomsday Theory) is the creator of the Nomu and has been using that process to turn Shigaraki (the secret grandson of All-Might's predecessor, and the guy covered in hands who can rot anything he touches) into Tetsuo from Akira. Hawks kills Twice, sending Toga (the shapeshifting, vampiric yandere Villain) on a quest for revenge, belonging, and answers). And in perhaps the biggest reveal moment that we probably should have seen coming, Dabi (the stapled-together Villain with blue flame powers who managed to carry a bottle of hair dye remover through all of the preceding mayhem) reveals to the world (but specifically to Endeavor and Shoto to break their spirits in battle) that he is the presumed dead Toya Todoroki. This reveal makes him feel less like the agent of chaos he professes himself to be, and more like a needy, theatrical, emo man-child with anger issues and superpowers, but also gives the Todoroki family personal stakes in the ongoing battle to preserve or destroy Hero society (and retcons Endeavor's violent behavior into a more sympathetic context that I kind of hate).
But then we get to thinking about Gigantomachia, and the implications of his existence and what would have happened if he succeeded in getting the League where he was commanded to go, and things get crazy. See, on one hand, we have Shigaraki (pun not intended) with All-For-One (who can steal and bestow Quirks) hitching a ride in his enhanced body. On the other hand, we have Gigantomachia, a massive, highly physically adaptable monster who only responds to Shigaraki and All-For-One, and was ordered to bring the members of the League Of Villains directly to the fight between Shigaraki and the Heroes. One might only think of the size and numbers advantage this would bring to an already attrition-heavy battle...but what if, on top of the power he already has, All-For-One used Shigaraki's body to take even Gigantomachia's Quirk(s?), let alone Dabi's fire, the Compress Quirk, or Toga's blood-morphing power (which now lets her use the Quirks of anyone she "loves" whose blood she drinks; save that knowledge for later)? Like, All-For-One wins in that case, right?
Well, thankfully, Shigaraki's willpower is greater than his "Master"'s, and the Heroes manage to kick enough ass before they stop moving that it forces the Villains into a retreat, so the worst case scenario will have to wait until the second half of the season.
With Studio Bones having blown most of their animation budget on the Gunga Villa raid and the Shigaraki fight, Season Six returned with a recap episode and a "tell, don't show" speedrun episode where All-For-One and Shigaraki coordinate multiple prison breaks across Japan, starting with Tartarus (basically MHA's take on The Raft from Marvel Comics with Impel Down nomenclature) where familiar faces like Overhaul from Season Four, the muscle guy Deku went One Million Percent Smash against in Season One, and the big boss himself are held, along with my favorite new minor Villain, the sniper Lady Nagant. She's sexy, she's tragic, and her arm Megatron×Mega Man's into a sniper rifle that fires bullets made of her own hair, which is so cool that I don't care how it actually works.
While Dabi's viral family drama publicity stunt and the mass Villain escapes turn Japan into a paranoid, racist vigilante hellhole that feels eerily contemporary for the season's time of release (the source material for this season was published from 2021 to 2022, a little less than a year before it began airing)—and unfortunately, for the modern day, as well—the gravely injured Heroes are forced to recover from scars both physical and mental, which only stokes more public outrage because selfishness literally Trumps common decency when fear takes control.
Many inconvenient truths come to light for the public and the students at UA High School as Hawks and the Todoroki family face their checkered pasts and Deku goes on a one-man mission to round up the—one moment while I check the exposition dump—ten thousand escaped Villains, pushing his morality and stamina to unprecedented extremes and landing him in Nagant's crosshairs. This anti-hero Deku portion of the season is dripping (literally) with rainy, chaotic atmosphere and an aura farm's worth of mature edginess, and bursting with fluid fight animation as he attempts to sort the redeemable souls from the lost causes, nearly losing himself in the process. It's trial by fire Quirk training and a stress test of his character and how far he's willing to go to save the world from the aspiring Demon Lord (this is what All-For-One calls himself in the dub, but there are other titles that feel more in line with the less supernatural world of MHA, like "great(est) evil" or "true(st) evil;" I don't know spoken Japanese, so correct me if he actually says "Demon Lord" in the original audio). I loved this part of the season and still do...but for one thing: if Shigaraki is just Tetsuo from Akira now, this second half of the season (particularly the amazing Nagant fight) makes it pretty clear that Deku is just Spider-Man with flight, a smokescreen ability, and a few physical amps. I mean, Horikoshi and Studio Bones make no effort to legally distinguish the fact that Deku is web-swinging with the Black Whip Quirk, and his Danger Sense Quirk is just Spider-Sense with the serial number and spiders filed off. It's lazy, derivative, and borderline infringement that's hard to ignore from hereon, but like with the rampant Japravity of Mushoku Tensei, the writing and animation are so good here that it's just as hard to be mad about it. When Deku is at his lonest and wolfiest, and public tensions are at their peak, the literal power of love and friendship brings everyone back to their senses (which isn't nearly as troped out as it sounds), and characters we haven't seen for three seasons or more present unexpected opportunities for victory against All-For-One in the next season.
My Hero Academia: You're Next hit theaters after Season Seven, but seems to take place sometime after Uravity's speech to the civilians near the end of Season Six, as it begins with the Heroes rounding up escaped Villains and everyone knowing about One-For-All. When one of the escapees kidnaps a young woman with an amplifcation Quirk named Anna (who is also being targeted by a cyborg assassin named Giulio), Deku's attempt at rescuing her is interrupted by a mish-mash of video game references and a reality-warping mob boss who has taken on the appearance and voice of All-Might to appropriate his mantle as the Symbol Of Peace for personal gain. Having proven compatible with Anna's Quirk (those who are physically drain her in exchange for a boost to their Quirk, while incompatible people pass out in a spray of rose petals from excruciating pain, so there's a Rapunzel/Sleeping Beauty angle to this as well, and you know I like a good mix of superheroes and fairy tales). So when the All-Might knockoff shows up on Void Kong's airship with Waluigi, Sly Cooper, Lady Dimitrescu, and Chang & Choi in tow to re-kidnap Anna, kidnap everyone in Japan to boost and brainwash into their own private Super-Quirk army, kill the main characters with a combination of a creepypasta JRPG, The Most Dangerous Game, and The Truman Show, and erase UA High from existence, we get such MHA movie tropes as Deku befriending a misunderstood criminal through the power of toxic positivity and exposition (Giulio thinks that killing Anna is the only way to save her from her own power, but he's really just been her Prince Charming all along and True Love was the key to his compatibility) and the final battle going on way too long because the main Villain can regenerate, bend reality to his will, generate an infinite supply of mobs, and transform multiple times, so to win, the Heroes have to do the same attacks they've been doing for the past forty-five minutes again but really, really Plus Ultra harder-ly-er-est until geometric sensory bullshit overload gives you a Porygon seizure and sublimated diarrhea-blood farts out your ears.
I really liked the fairy tale angle, Chris Sabat chewing up the recording booth as Dark Might, the ticking clock foreshadowing of Anna's changing hair color, and Deku's Fifty State Ranbu Smash as a finishing move (until the foreshadowed breaking-loose of all Hell completely undercut how cool it looked in the moment). The OP song ("Homunculus" by Vaundy) even slaps hard. But this is definitively my least favorite of the four movies.
There's a short season of recap episodes called Memories that aired as a lead-up to Season Seven, but I don't like clipshow episodes because if I enjoy something, I'd rather just have the full experience of it over again than watch My Hero Academia: the Cliff's Notes Audiobook Edition, so I skipped it. Who needs memories, am I right?
I remember going into Season Seven with low expectations. The release gap and the end of Season Six being kind of forgettable (the arrival of a new Hero from America) contributed to this feeling, but there was also a lack of focus to the early episodes and a general sense of "here we go again" to this new season.
Picking up where the sixth season left off, the caked-up Heroine Star & Stripe tries to face down Shigaraki (still with All-For-One trying to assimilate his consciousness) in a spectacular battle of attrition that she ultimately loses along with her Quirk (an identity-based reality-warping ability called New Order, so insert "Hulk Hogan joins the NWO" reference here), which runs wild through their shared mind and slaughters most of All-For-One's accumulated Quirks. Then it's a "suddenly there was a spy in UA the entire time and we have retcon flashbacks to prove it" story (there's a short-lived red herring that it was the invisible girl, but it's the annoying French kid with a navel laser and his parents because he was born Quirkless and All-For-One leveraged that to get a few more pawns on the board; maybe those comics All-For-One read were by Zenescope? It would explain his penchant for power-bargaining and wanting to be a Demon Lord), followed by "the kids are going somewhere special to train" (like they have at the beginning of almost every season so far) except that that was a trap to split up the League Of Villains into thematically appropriate battles (Uravity & Froppy vs. Himiko Toga, Todoroki vs. Dabi, Endeavor & Hawks vs. All-For-One, a bunch of fodder battles, and a repeat of the Shigaraki fight with Eraserhead nullifying his Quirks from Season Six, but it's even more of an Akira ripoff than before because he has a giant CGI body horror arm made of mouths and fingers now.
From there, Bakugo and a few supporting Heroes get their moments to shine as they wait for Deku to show up because Toga pulled him into the wrong fight. Which means the Shigaraki fight basically looks like the Nappa/Recoome aftermath with more blood when Deku gets there, and he unveils a new Quirk that lets him sound like Luffy when he punches because Gears. The derivative nature of it all doesn't take away from the fact that Bones make every movement and impact look absolutely Plus Ultra.
With the "final blow" of the "final battle" (there have been at least three of these over the course of the series, and Shigaraki/All-For-One still has more in the tank) struck, focus shifts to an unsubtle Black Lives Matter allegory as Heroes and riot police attempt to hold back a citizen army of "heteromorphs" (people whose Quirks give them animalistic, inhuman, or otherwise extranormative physical features) whom the League, Tartarus escapees, and PLF remnants are manipulating into storming a hospital where a Villain with a portal Quirk is being held. The usual, "prejudice is bad, vengeance is bad, social movements are misguided" messaging is at play here, and while it's a natural extension of something minor that was resolved last season (from one point of view) and gives some of the heteromorphic Heroes their moments to shine, it's blatant and disrupts the flow of the larger narrative so the author can get something off his chest (this includes turning Deku and the Todoroki family into a "Quirks are Global Warming" message that a newswoman literally shouts at the camera—subtle—and making All-For-One the face of global corporate dictatorship).
Things get worse for the Heroes on a numbers and technology front when a disgraced hacker and Toga (using Twice's blood to multiply) disrupt the various fights...but then my favorite stretch of episodes hits and we get to see the effect Deku has had on minor Villains from previous seasons. Nagant makes a surprise return, as do La Brava and Gentle Criminal (a duo from the post-Overhaul material that I honestly thought were filler characters in their debuts). "The Chain Thus Far" is seriously a roller-coaster of emotions and a demonstration of how no character—no person—is unnecessary. Even the movies are given confirmed canonicity with a still shot of the bratty kids from Heroes Rising and a mention of Melissa Shields in the final episode. Unfortunately, this reliance on callbacks and messages and giving everyone a focus results in a season without focus. Sure, we get resolutions to the Todoroki family drama and Uravity's mission to engage Himiko Toga in morally neutral conversation (perhaps the biggest highlights of the season), but there's also a rapidly de-aging All-For-One, the Deku/Shigaraki fight that doesn't get addressed for the last quarter of the season, multiple Heroes dying or losing their Quirks to All-For-One, the unseen public reaction to the Quirk Doomsday Theory from World Heroes Mission playing out on a livestream, and All-Might showing up suddenly to stall All-For-One with an Ironman 3/Age Of Ultron-like Quirk-Buster armor and set up the most anticlimax to ever anticlimax. It felt like there was supposed to be another episode, but that was it; see you in the Final Season for the actual important fights!
But the eighth and final season isn't out yet, so even though I made a minor thing out of release order vs. assumed continuity earlier, I'm now going to wrap things up by talking about the spinoff prequel, Vigilantes (a.k.a. Illegals, because calling undocumented people who perform a public service without compensation "illegals" is totally a culturally sensitive word choice in 2025).
My Hero Academia: Vigilantes is a prequel and spinoff to the main series, based on a finished manga approved by Horikoshi but written by Hideyuki Furuhashi and drawn by Betten Court, so there's a clear difference in character models and a lack of variety and...Quirkiness to the new character designs. Narrated by Deku (or at least, by Justin Briner in the dub) and featuring a banger OP ("Kekka Orai" by Kocchi no Kento), Vigilantes follows the lives and unsanctioned Heroics of Mr. Nice Guy, a.k.a. The Crawler (the series-requisite All-Might fan, whose Quirk lets him slide along any surface in any direction, and whom the public think is a donut because they hear his name wrong), Pop☆Step (a guerilla idol with a bouncing Quirk who probably has a lot of fans because she dresses like a succubus and inadvertently allows crowds of people to look up her short skirt when she performs above them), and Knuckle Duster (a mysterious old man who's basically Batfleck and acts as Crawler's combat mentor; he has no Quirk, but trained himself to have superhuman strength and durability and fights with brass knuckles, so I spent the whole season calling him "The Punch-isher") as they investigate "Instant Villain" incidents caused by the Ideo Trigger drug (the intended weapon of the Humarise cult in World Heroes Mission) and its mysterious, bee-Quirked distributor (who is using the sudden Villain attacks to gather data on the drug for...All-For-One!). Supporting characters include Captain Celebrity (a.k.a. if Donald Trump was a bootleg Superman, including the hair, the need for media attention, and the history of alleged sex crimes that he settled out of court), his lie-detector publicist Makoto Tsukauchi (whose Quirk is literally Robin Hill's handshake Semblance from RWBY), and a couple of bickering Pop☆Step fans who are definitely not Cyclops and Wolverine. As you watch, you'll no doubt notice a severe lack of heteromorphic characters compared to the main series, which can be attributed to the different creative team but also works as some subtle world-building (the attribution of the Villain label to the different-looking, and the strengthening of Quirks as time passes). Other prequel bits include a few brief appearances by peak All-Might, Crawler's complicated friendship with Iida's older brother (the original Enginium), and a one-off origin episode for Hero Killer Stain. Eraserhead, Mount Lady, Miss Midnight, and a few other main series ranked Heroes also have varying levels of involvement in the season. It may not have the recognizable visual style and spectacle of the main series, but Vigilantes still has Bones bringing it with the fight animation, all three main characters are likable and deep enough to want to engage with their individual stories, and the writing has moments of brilliance. A second season has already been announced, and I am glad to hear it.I would also be glad to hear when you please remember to Become A Ticketholder if you haven't already, leave a comment at the bottom of this post and any others you have opinions about because I AM HERE to read them, help out my ad revenue as you read because I may need the money by the time I also turn fifty, and follow me on BlueSky, Tumblr, Reddit, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, YouTube, and LinkedIn to like what you see and receive the latest news and coverage on my content.
Friday, I finally review Akira, and next week, it's time for overpowered guild receptionists and Godzilla (to hopefully redeem myself on the "aquatic lizard monster" front because I'm Minus One there), so Stay Tuned and
Animeister,
Out.
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