
“Since ‘mukatoshi’ (lack of individuality) has no role”
Because there was no role.
It’s not that those who are different are discriminated against…
Although Tsuyu-chan was popular, she didn’t appear very much.
If it’s 1 in 5 people, that’s quite a lot…
If you take the Rock Lee approach where individuality is trained and strengthened, the initial Deku will become hopeless…
Isn’t almost 20% from the older generation?
On the surface, it’s a society where you can’t use your individuality without permission, so there’s no need to keep track of anything other than government offices, hospitals, and employers…
In the first place, most of the individuals with no distinct personality are the elderly from the previous generation.
I wonder if it was okay to introduce a knuckle duster that’s super strong but completely lacking in individuality…
Twenty percent is quite a lot, isn’t it?
It’s probably filled with people who are secretly using their individuality to cheat, making it an unfair life.
It’s probably better than receiving a personality that doesn’t match your unique traits or body type.
Deku is from the quirkless Last Generation, while everyone else is mostly from the adult or elderly generation.
Even if you lack individuality, if you train, you should be able to fight at least like Lumillion.
I thought that only those with personality traits have something like a wall that prevents them from improving, even if they train.
There was quite a bit of personality that would be better off not existing at all.
Deku: “Can I become a hero even without a quirk?”
Knuckle Duster: “If you train hard, you can become stronger than me (smiles).”
Wasn’t it quite rare in Deku’s generation?
There are probably quite a few elderly people and middle-aged generations, right?
The dark old lady might also be uncharacteristic.
I think there must have been many individuals who were born with traits that didn’t match their ability to live.
Personality seems to be self-reported, and it also seems that those diagnosing it don’t have a perfect grasp of it, so could it be that there are people considered to have no personality because it hasn’t been discovered?
It’s really amazing that in this world, having the ability to extract energy from a different world is a normal physical function.
Even though they say they have individuality, most of them are just pretty lame, and many are close to being completely non-individualistic.
If anything, all the combat techniques before Sir can be handled with no personality at all…
Isn’t it a bit off to forget the setting of the explanation and say something?
There are probably a lot of guys who haven’t self-reported.
If you use it secretly and stay quiet, you won’t get caught.
They fight without using their individuality in battle, relying instead on experience and physical ability.
There may be various discriminatory issues, but…
If I were to focus on aspects like roles,
It seems that there are fewer people who can utilize their individuality in their work.
It’s mostly the elderly with no personality, right?
I’m glad there is a rule against using personalities.
The more you use it, the more your personality grows.
Clearly, there are some individuals with abnormal physical abilities, and I wonder if there’s a setting where those with quirks that aren’t self-enhancement have better physical capabilities than those without quirks.
It seems that the protagonist of Vigilante was misidentified in terms of personality.
Even without a Quirk, according to the rules, you can still become a hero, but it’s also Deku who lost his Quirk and temporarily quit being a hero.
Using one’s individuality in silence is something that ordinary citizens do normally in the story as well.
I think it’s difficult to not declare one’s individuality in urban areas.
Since it’s already lacking personality, they would probably examine the finger joints.
If there are proper joints but individuality doesn’t come out, it will be suspected.
Basically, individuality is genetic, so most of the people who lack individuality are probably in the older age group, right?
If he’s that strong just with something like Eraser Head or hand-to-hand combat, he can manage even without a quirk.
If presents like the microphone existed in reality, my mother would be dead.
It’s tough that someone with a personality like Kokorosu-kun has to report it…
There are too many patterns where the mother will die.
It would have been better if they had died by self-harm, huh.
In movies, children’s lack of individuality is present, so they probably won’t completely disappear.
I think Mineta is amazing for passing U.A. High School just because his hair sticks so much.
My Hero Academia is a school-themed story from start to finish, so it was fine for only the protagonist to be quirkless.
I thought there was a setting where having no individuality also meant having a handicap in physical abilities.
There was none.
I think there are many children besides Eri-chan who can’t live with their families because of their individuality, but I wonder how they’re doing.
Deku’s father has a quirk that breathes fire, and his mother has a quirk that attracts objects, right?
Everyone moves in a way that’s almost inhuman, regardless of their individuality, so it doesn’t really seem to be a problem if they’re not unique, does it?
Naming superpowers as “individuality” is too malicious in that world.
The perspective of a world where I don’t want to be born is top class.
Well, there are physical superhumans, but there are almost none who are non-personal and physical superhumans from the era when the hero system was established…
Isn’t it a crazy world where you can only learn how to control your powers if you’re not in the Hero Course?
Even if two individuals with personalities get married, as long as there are ancestors without individuality, the possibility will never be completely zero.
The early Bakugo telling Deku to die in the next life is a symbol of the intolerance and lack of education in a society of quirks.
Die, Bakugo.
Because there are people who are being heroes based on their physical abilities, regardless of their individuality.
The idea that you can’t become a hero without a personality immediately died.
By the way, Mai’s muscle form changes her weight, yet it’s not considered a quirk.
I wonder how the Iida family gets married.
Most personalities are just useless and if they’re not suited for a one-chance trait, they’ll either die or head straight down the villain path, and those with unusual traits are treated like monsters, I really don’t want to be born.
Every time I see it, it’s a pathetic personal theory, isn’t it, thread image?
Even if we talk about discrimination against individuality, the model case is Deku, right?
Seeing Shigaraki physically change without regard to his Quirk makes me wonder if just having a Quirk might enhance one’s physical capabilities.
But there’s the Dark Grandma…
Talking about the sir will make things a complete mess from the root, so let’s exclude it.
People initially said that Deku’s childhood doctor looked just like a doctor, so maybe his personality was copied from there.
It seems that the physical abilities don’t change much since the individuality is activated by the individual factors.
It’s nice that the world’s level of civilization has improved, but the idea that individuality inflates with each generation is terrifying. All I can do is hope that some forms of individuality will manifest that can keep it in check and manage it well.
There are two individuals with the ability to erase individuality, even just in Japan, and there are also individuals with the ability to steal individuality.
If there are a few people like that scattered throughout the world, things might just work out somehow.
The master is a former hero after all… I wonder what kind of training the one who throws stamps has done.
Just because an old lady helped a child doesn’t mean a professional hero can do nothing.
Even if they say that being unremarkable gets you bullied.
Because only Deku is being bullied.
Despite having transformation abilities, Toga-chan has exceptionally high physical abilities in her normal state.
I simply think that Deku just doesn’t have any talent.
There is also a lack of awareness in the person to train themselves.
Knuckle Duster is somewhat unfair because he was a professional with a strong personality who just kept training even after losing his abilities.
The technology that analyzes and inflates individuality is crazy.
Stronger than a poor personality even in its current state.
Speaking of which, Aoyama-kun is also so bland.
Kill me.
The uncle who punches villains is too strong and refreshing.
I think the setting where OFA cannot survive without a personality and dies early is a bit too convenient for me.
I think the initial concept was probably a manga where Deku trains to become muscular and makes others understand his abilities with his fists.
I think that Kacchan’s uniqueness, where his sweat becomes nitroglycerin, would be a major flop if he were living a normal life.
I… the last heir… felt a great sense of discomfort.
Even Father Pucci from JoJo, if AFO had been used for peaceful purposes, it could have truly been a savior…
I mean, it seems like there are definitely drugs being developed to suppress quirks that are obviously unsuitable for one’s physique or that have gone out of control.
In a world where the protagonist abandons a young girl, there’s nothing that will improve public safety.
In the first place, it’s a societal setting where only basic heroes can use their quirks.
Even if you have a personality, you know…
Well, that’s probably why there are many people who want to become heroes.
In the end, I think it’s enough to depict that being qualified to become a hero with Dark Baba has nothing to do with individuality.
It’s a damn useless ability! And yet, that hardworking guy kept awakening multiple times throughout the story, your quirk is basically a cheat!
Most of the aspiring heroes in that world have the motivation of wanting to beat up villains using their powers, just like they saw on TV! It’s strangely raw and immature, which is chilling.
Instead of just grumbling about wanting to be a hero and writing in my notebook, why didn’t I just become an unnoticed Kindness Man?
Hitting a villain feels refreshing, you know…
When I beat someone with my unique traits granted by the heavens, the pleasure is unmatched.
There was the personality disappearance bullet in the story.
It seems really difficult to publicly use in terms of distribution, usage qualifications, and human rights.
Being non-individualistic is just rare for Kacchan, and rather it seems like they might get bullied by those who have subtle individual traits or unusual characteristics.
I want to do this manga with this kind of setting.
It’s tragic for Deku, and the depiction of wanting to comfort him is critically mismatched.
The protagonist has become someone who is surprisingly cared for by those around them.
I think Okurokku has a rather offbeat personality.
If you can master it, it’s powerful.
OFA having the wills of its past successors was really creepy.
For some reason, even All Might didn’t know, and it’s too unfathomable.
The annoying part is that there tends to be a consistency in a negative sense.
My classmates in middle school all had unneeded personalities.
The ordinary people that appear afterward tend to have quite strong personalities.
What these guys want as their ideal hero image is a superficial one where they defeat villains in a cool way, which is why it’s shallow.
The struggling man has a special ability that is unrelated to personality, so even if one lacks individuality, with training, they can fight to some extent.
But honestly, what are we going to do if it collapses when this quirk manifests?
I want to be sucked by AFO…
Kuro-man, despite not being able to become a hero, has been doing what he can, which is just a bit too heroic.
At the very least, if that old woman hadn’t reached out to her, that girl would have either died or become a villain.
Hand jobs were targeted by AFO even before they were born, so it’s impossible.
Because their personalities are fundamentally like that, it’s impossible for Dabi and Toga-chan.
The scarred man was going in the wrong direction, but he was making an effort.
The scar man in the main story didn’t even try…
Isn’t it questionable to compare yourself to people who are completely different in age or circumstances?
Koichi is crazy before we even talk about personality.
Don’t risk your life as an extension of kindness.
It’s like All Might is treating people with no quirks as worthless.
It’s often said, but individuality is too strong with searches and such.
So it was taken for meta reasons as well.
There are some guys who can’t be helped unless they get beaten up by a hero.
There are some guys who can do something about it before going off track.
If it’s not useful, there are probably quite a few people who would prefer not to have any individuality.
The reason I can’t come to like Vigilante is that there are many people who lift up Koichi while putting down Deku.
In that world, even if you commit mass murder as a villain, you only get thrown in prison, but if you deny a child’s dream, a grim fate awaits you, as you’ll be beaten up from all sides—by family, by the townspeople, and from every direction.
Koichi has been somewhat fully formed as a hero from the very beginning.
The expression of personality varies from person to person, so as long as it doesn’t ignite at the moment of birth, it should be fine.
Parents also have their own personalities.
In the story, despite being treated as the best hero throughout, Toshinori has not reached out to the villain at all.
It’s definitely strange to act like reaching out to an old woman is the first step to peace.
Well, All Might himself couldn’t do much without a quirk, and he must be aware that he jumped to success after receiving one.
In Deku’s case, he starts as a gloomy and introverted bullied kid, so it’s understandable that he was stuck in place for a while.
I feel that the movie tended to come across as more generic than the original work.
Because of the way it’s written that even the most lackluster personality, or even no personality at all, can help others in Vigilante, the main story is being stabbed in the back…