Nuance is for critical thinkers and stakes is for competent writers; shonen is for people who are ESL's from latinx regions so that's not going to exist in Shonen.
I don't remember this arc but maybe Kota was disillusioned with heroes because they couldn't protect his parents which means he feels unheard and abandoned while heroes get undeserved glory. Like, the heroes broke their tacit promise to him by failing to save his parents but still gets praised by everyone, hence the hate. Not that Horikoshi was ever going to treat that as a widespread systemic issue instead of localizing it to a couple of unethical hero agencies.
It’s not dead yet. We still have the anime adaptation to give us a more satisfying conclusion and the 60 new chapters that are said to tie up loss ends.
I give you that, at the very least, you could truthfully claim that the anime is better than the manga. Still, the aftertaste of vomit simply isn't going to disappear. What has been seen cannot be unseen: people will remember that the "have a plus ultra day" ending was the one originally intended by Horikoshi. It's unfair, but fans are like that: they will always lump manga and anime together in their mind. Even if they're supposed to be their own beast. That's why I think the damage control measure of Attack on Titan won't work either. Besides, an anime only rework on the conclusion isn't going to fix the structural issues of MHA at all.
MHA in concept it`s the best of worlds for the casual anime viewer a battle shonnen that is themed around western styled superheroes but in execution is ZZZ, don`t take it from Snob take it as a fact. (With ZZZ I meant extremely boring)
@@wendylacey2745 An old friend of mine tried to convince me to like the show with that battle that All Might had against All for One. He`s no longer even an acquaintance not because of that but because of distance and inner low self steem that I noticed he has, also because he had that issue he had a kinda fragile ego when fairly criticized and also he`s kinda woke and atheist despite comming from a God loving household.
The death of such franchise with raw potential is tied to a writing theory concept I call "law of interconnections". MHA being so disjointed, there is no believable network of correlations between characters, institutions, world values and purposes. It's basically why I have a problem against Style over Substance titles. SoS approach makes for very fun and straightforward short series or OAVs, but it exposes the long running ones as poorly cobbled together mess. If you have no internal logic to cement the narrative, you are going to notice what the bizarro fandom did: start ship wars, zone out about irrelevant things or theory craft with the vain hope to think that chaotic writing is order
Those early volume art is awesome but even back then the writing was trash. It really took a dive the moment Horikoshi tried getting serious with Stain, then the story as a whole injured itself the moment AFO was defeated the first time.
Man just watched that Uraraka vs Toga "Fight" and let be tell you. Its horrible and depicts a dangerous message. Uraraka letting herself be stabbed is bad.
@greengem9132 No, but a couple of scabbards and like 3 villagers died in Wano. Also Orochi, I guess. The Beast Pirates are the most dangerous crew in the world by the way.
You can’t be mad at what MHA managed to accomplish in the anime industry. It may not be the most best or most unique anime out there, but it certainly provides a new spin to the superhero genre we all know. Also, can you please stop calling Horikoshi that name. It’s not his fault that his fans are so deranged.
@ It (along with others) brought anime into the mainstream. That might not sound good by today’s standards, but back around 2014 it was a phenomenal achievement.
@@wendylacey2745 But anime has been mainstream for a long time? If you are going to point to an anime that makes anime mainstream, that would be Dragon Ball.
What spin? If you mean a Superhero School, that idea has been done many times long before MHA did it. The thing that MHA achieve with this idea was that they did it when the Superhero genre has become really popular and become the wellknown and recognized example of the trope. If yiu mean other things, could you specify?
'Sex comedy' & 'Highschool' in the same sentence
Japan is one helluva drug
Thank the lord they're going extinct
People have sex in high school in the west too. Not that I'd know....
Nuance is for critical thinkers and stakes is for competent writers; shonen is for people who are ESL's from latinx regions so that's not going to exist in Shonen.
LOL I didn’t get the thumbnail of the video until I remembered that terrible ending. Well played Snob
foreshadowing of the finest
I don't remember this arc but maybe Kota was disillusioned with heroes because they couldn't protect his parents which means he feels unheard and abandoned while heroes get undeserved glory. Like, the heroes broke their tacit promise to him by failing to save his parents but still gets praised by everyone, hence the hate.
Not that Horikoshi was ever going to treat that as a widespread systemic issue instead of localizing it to a couple of unethical hero agencies.
@@loliH9 Ah, like the Incredibles 2 antagonist
It’s not dead yet. We still have the anime adaptation to give us a more satisfying conclusion and the 60 new chapters that are said to tie up loss ends.
I give you that, at the very least, you could truthfully claim that the anime is better than the manga. Still, the aftertaste of vomit simply isn't going to disappear. What has been seen cannot be unseen: people will remember that the "have a plus ultra day" ending was the one originally intended by Horikoshi. It's unfair, but fans are like that: they will always lump manga and anime together in their mind. Even if they're supposed to be their own beast.
That's why I think the damage control measure of Attack on Titan won't work either. Besides, an anime only rework on the conclusion isn't going to fix the structural issues of MHA at all.
@ Perhaps, but even the taste of vomit goes away eventually. Let’s hope the anime adaptation puts something sweeter in our mouths.
MHA in concept it`s the best of worlds for the casual anime viewer a battle shonnen that is themed around western styled superheroes but in execution is ZZZ, don`t take it from Snob take it as a fact. (With ZZZ I meant extremely boring)
@@hamlet1055 MHA is a lot of things, but boring is not one of them.
@@wendylacey2745 I see you`re an All Might fan.
@@hamlet1055 What’s wrong with that?
@@wendylacey2745 An old friend of mine tried to convince me to like the show with that battle that All Might had against All for One. He`s no longer even an acquaintance not because of that but because of distance and inner low self steem that I noticed he has, also because he had that issue he had a kinda fragile ego when fairly criticized and also he`s kinda woke and atheist despite comming from a God loving household.
@@hamlet1055 I’m sorry about your friend, but I still don’t see the downside in liking MHA.
The death of such franchise with raw potential is tied to a writing theory concept I call "law of interconnections".
MHA being so disjointed, there is no believable network of correlations between characters, institutions, world values and purposes. It's basically why I have a problem against Style over Substance titles. SoS approach makes for very fun and straightforward short series or OAVs, but it exposes the long running ones as poorly cobbled together mess. If you have no internal logic to cement the narrative, you are going to notice what the bizarro fandom did: start ship wars, zone out about irrelevant things or theory craft with the vain hope to think that chaotic writing is order
Those early volume art is awesome but even back then the writing was trash. It really took a dive the moment Horikoshi tried getting serious with Stain, then the story as a whole injured itself the moment AFO was defeated the first time.
7:05 hello kaido😂😂😂
man, Kaido sure was a disappointment...
Hackda is a weirdo on how he handled the so called “strongest creature alive” Crydo joke of a villain.
Man just watched that Uraraka vs Toga "Fight" and let be tell you. Its horrible and depicts a dangerous message. Uraraka letting herself be stabbed is bad.
8:20 do you think the same about the Arkham Asylum? I mean it is a common theme on hero stories to not kill the villains.
it's an excuse to have recurring villains, it's otherwise stupid if the villains can't reform
@@ThatAnimeSnob Agree.
Batman could at least have something like an activist judge who plays by the book to keep the Joker off the electric chair.
That's not what nepotism means
Video on moral panic cause that's what Snob does. Wrong!
Snob are you participating in National Writers Month?
no
Do people even die in this manga? I don't think even One Piece was this bad in that regard
Yes. A couple do.
Only the people that don't matter...
One Piece is in fact worse in that regard
@@smtandearthboundsuck8400 oh yeah I haven't watch one piece in a long time I know the main cast don't die but do some of the antagonists die or not ?
@greengem9132 No, but a couple of scabbards and like 3 villagers died in Wano. Also Orochi, I guess.
The Beast Pirates are the most dangerous crew in the world by the way.
Arcane > all anime and manga
you have exactly 0 taste and brains.
intelligence level: zero
@ arcane > you
@@guesta9822
pipe down latinx.
are you the new tariq?
You can’t be mad at what MHA managed to accomplish in the anime industry. It may not be the most best or most unique anime out there, but it certainly provides a new spin to the superhero genre we all know. Also, can you please stop calling Horikoshi that name. It’s not his fault that his fans are so deranged.
the only thing mha accomplish is showing that seasonal anime of long runners are viable...
@ It (along with others) brought anime into the mainstream. That might not sound good by today’s standards, but back around 2014 it was a phenomenal achievement.
@@wendylacey2745 But anime has been mainstream for a long time? If you are going to point to an anime that makes anime mainstream, that would be Dragon Ball.
@@rosverlegaspo6752 Even then people were barely talking about it.
What spin? If you mean a Superhero School, that idea has been done many times long before MHA did it. The thing that MHA achieve with this idea was that they did it when the Superhero genre has become really popular and become the wellknown and recognized example of the trope.
If yiu mean other things, could you specify?