lil rant while i watch mha
I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS I HATE HAWKS
I AM SO HEARTBROKEN EVERYTIME I WATCH THIS ARC AND HAWKS KILLS TWICE 💔💔💔💔 GAHHHHHHH TWICE DIDNT DESERVE THIS GAHH 💔💔 curses upon ye hawks this is why you’re quirkiness and bitchless in the end
Michael A Davenport, 3,090 Degrees Fahrenheit (Oil on canvas, 2025)
30in x 48in
I have no excuse for this other than it was 3am and I had a fever of 101 and hadn’t drawn in days.
what is up with your teeth, man…Â
I got an interesting ask about the way that Dabi relates to his limitations and how the manga repeatedly calls attention to the fact that he is weak, and I think this whole issue is fascinating, so I’m going to try to break down some thoughts on it. If Horikoshi carries through on even half the promise these tendrils of plot could hold, it would be a very refreshing take on villains, which types of characters are allowed to qualify as “threatening,” and what it really means to be a marginalized person in a “super” society.
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Some of you guys have never burned a CD and it shows
Any time the League of Villains go through a drive thru they make Dabi hold all the bags to keep the food warm until they get back to the hideout.
just the purest heros being friends :^3
u ever think abt how bnha has two characters who have been confirmed, canonly, to hurt children for their causes, and since one is a hero he gets to have a redemption arc but because the other is a villain, he has his arms mercilessly torn off and his whole life’s work stolen. i mean he deserves it lmao but it’s wildly a double standard in a rly meta way. like, sure, you could say the message is that “one is inherently a good person, thus he chooses to redeem himself, and that’s what makes him deserving of being a hero,” but that ultimately cannot be separated from the fact that he was introduced first and foremost as (1) a hero, and (2) a domestic abuser, and we can’t pretend that there is no personal code of ethics associated with being a hero in bnha that isn’t imposed by its own author. essentially what i’m saying is that there is a good moral judgment placed on being a hero and a bad moral judgment placed on being a villain by the narrative itself, and we can’t ignore that it influences the way these two stories are written. because heroes are good and there’s moral goodness associated with heroism, all faults of heroes no matter how heinous must be shown as worthy of redemption, because they deserve it by being heroes. it’s not because of who he is as a person that the narrative decides to give him this chance, it’s because of what his job is. villains, on the other hand, are forever tainted by their villainy and are not worthy of second chances, they should be immediately and soundly punished. and u kno what that just sounds super real for a sec🤔🤔