XaiJu
laurareactions
laurareactions

patreon


MY HERO ACADEMIA 1X11 EXTENDED REACTION

EXTENDED REACTION PART +7MIN, THREE EPISODES OF ADVANCE, NO ADDS

LINK : https://e.pcloud.link/publink/show?code=XZ8hkjZHw7OOn4XjTfs5pEMuocipu13NB7V

Hello !

The beginning of this episode totally shocked me. For sure, these League of Villains could attack our guys badly, but for us to see them beating the two teachers, Aizawa and Thirteen, so brutally… It was unexpected for me. Thirteen, we are seeing her being so weak, being destroyed, almost killed. And Aizawa is on the floor, bones broken, with someone who can smash his head in one second… It looked so bad.

But I was surprised to hear them say they will give up, just like that, "game over" because Iida went to reach for help. For sure, superheroes would come quickly and you know you can't win against them, but after all of what they did to organize this attack, it seemed to be a quick and easy decision. For me, the Anti-All Might is like Aizawa, but only for All Might : he's strong and can erase his power by contact. But it makes things really bad for Dekku, they saw his own power being blocked here.

I'm still french, so I'm still sorry if my english hurts you.

My Tip Page : https://streamlabs.com/laurareactions

My Patreon : https://www.patreon.com/laurareactions

My Twitter : https://twitter.com/ReactionsLaura

My Tiktok : https://www.tiktok.com/@laurareactions

MY HERO ACADEMIA 1X11 EXTENDED REACTION

Comments

I used to watch more anime and I feel that I'm "in tune" with how they write stories and characters. They often "mean more" than what they actually say. They'll say something briefly but it's supposed to mean an ocean of words and feelings, let me think of an example... When they say something that translates to "without fail" for example this means that they will do it to their utmost ability to the point that they are willing to die trying to succeed at it. This is shorthand for code of honor. In the story it doesn't mean that they will succeed and it doesn't mean that they will die in the process but that is the meaning being conveyed. Also the character could be lying when they say this and that makes them even more heinous and it's absolutely shocking that a character should be so undermining of trust! (lol villains be villainous). They also sometimes emphasize the value of common folk and they champion that cause - for example the good guy uncovers the corruption of a group and he is going to execute them (the hero is the leader of an assassin ninja clan) but because of the grey area nature of this action he will say something like this, because of your disorderly activities and careless nature you've cause harm to these hard working servants and you've killed their family members. For this you will not be forgiven. The bad guys first say harrumph! but then they see that he's serious and that there's no repenting and that blood is about to be spilled and so they panic. Then the killing begins, not because they're an organized crime group doing their corrupt things, but because they were careless enough to have caused harm to ordinary citizens, they've disrupted the peace, they thought too highly of themselves and now they will be killed for it, their group eradicated. You might notice that a series will have an episode about fishermen or fishing, then there's an episode about the bath house, that they'll introduce a character that is an independent manga artist/writer and they'll do a whole episode where they help them set up their table at the local convention. And they'll have a young adult character that is going to be the next head of a powerful organization and they are trying to live a carefree life before they take responsibility as the gang boss (in the distant future but not too distant). In fact they often will have a young child that is being groomed for responsibility and the child will have wisdom as a prince might have and the voice actor will have a noble voice despite their young age (this is a contradiction) - in dubbed versions they will not get this nuance and they'll just have a young voice and they don't convey that this child is supposed to understand the weight of life and death responsibility for their people. Perhaps a young child makes a pact with a demon or is imbued with a demon's power and that they have to grapple with this within themselves. And then there's the comedy trope of the young teacher barely making enough money to buy food and so they make bets on the side, and the hungry student living alone chopping a cake of ramen noodles in half to have two separate meals... then into quarters lol.

Mannygogou

I'm pretty sure in this episode they're explaining Aizawa's quirk. I believe he can only "nullify" your quirk when he's looking at you, it's like an active nullification. It's possible that he likes to keep secret how it works so that villains cannot know how to counter it. That bad guy with hands he figured it out and he was even able to time it when Aizawa's quirk would pause and that's how he was able to get his elbow when the nullification paused. That bad guy likes to make fun of Aizawa's personality by calling him cool and stuff. He was about to kill Tsu but the hero that Aizawa is, even restrained by Nomu he could still "erase" crumble-guy's quirk to save Tsu from being killed. It was only for a few seconds before Numo smashed his face into the pavement in that horrifying scene. Until the end against all odds Eraserhead is a cool hero, in his last act he was still saving his students. Deku on the other hand his "smash" was so powerful it caused turbulent waves on the water and the shock broke lights all around. Mysteriously his arm wasn't broken, what happened there? Why is Nomu in front of him? What happened, it was so fast? Is Nomu really as strong as All-Might even when his quirk was erased? (To clarify it sounds like "erase" is permanent but it's not, it only when he's looking at you and he probably has to actively will it, that's why I referred to it as nullify instead. It's supposed to be mysterious, I think his goggles are like that so no one can tell what he's doing and so that you can't see his eyes - this is all conjecture from looking at his multi-windowed goggles in this episode.) I only talk about the current episode 🙂 and I hope you don't get spoiled.

Mannygogou

Eraser didn't erase midoriya's quirk during the punch, he just managed to succesfully control his power for the first time. Eraser was busy staring at Shigaraki with his crumbling quirk since Aizawa thought Shigaraki was going to crumble Deku after the punch (until the big creature blocked it).

Buxton

Hello ! I don't think that Bakugo is stupid, not at all, he's really clever, but for now he let his nerves guiding him most of the time when he should appreciate more some situations before intervening. But I said it, I have good hope for Kachan to be able to change at some point, little by little, maybe it can begin with one of his friends helping/saving him and for once, he would recognize it, accept it.

Laura Reactions

I feel like this is one of the small moments that you get to see that Bakugo isn't just all anger and charging forward; that he actually thinks about his actions, but because he's always angry, it just looks like he's headstrong and impulsive. If you go back to the scene with him and Kirishima, he disagreed with Kirishima on helping their classmates and instead fighting the warp guy because 1) he felt the enemies were weak and *knew* that his classmates were strong enough to defeat them, so he didn't feel the need to rescue them, and 2) because he knew that the warp guy had the ability to either call for villain reinforcements or help the villains escape, which was why he wanted to focus on him instead. His personality and how he relates to other people is still terrible and yes he needs to improve on that, but he's actually smarter than most people give him credit for. Shigaraki. If there is a name you must remember from this episode, it's that. Man, his quirk is terrifying.

Ferdinand Villafuerte


More Creators