4 Answers2026-06-30 09:55:36
I've always been fascinated by the messed-up potential between these two. A lot of writers lean heavily into the 'forced proximity' trope, like capture scenarios where Himiko holds Izuku somewhere secluded. It creates this intense pressure cooker for dialogue and psychological games.
Another big one is villain Deku AUs, where he either joins the League or strikes out on his own, and Himiko becomes his chaotic partner-in-crime. Those stories often explore a shared sense of being outcasts, but from wildly different angles. I've also seen a few soulmate AUs where their marks are linked in a creepy or bloody way, which feels oddly fitting.
Honestly, the themes usually circle back to obsession and twisted salvation. She sees his blood as beautiful, he sees her life as tragic and worth saving—it's a perfect storm for dark romance. Sometimes it works, sometimes it feels forced, but the dynamic never gets boring.
3 Answers2026-07-03 11:25:18
While 'hurt/comfort' is a huge umbrella for Deku and Toga, I'm always drawn to the fics that dig into their shared history with All For One. That man looms over both their lives in such different ways, and stories that explore that—maybe Deku being the one who understands her connection to her 'sensei' because he was groomed by the same evil, or Toga being the only person who can see the ghost of All For One clinging to Izuku after the war—those hit harder for me than the usual 'villain redemption' arcs. They're messier.
There's also a niche but growing trend of post-canon 'lost decade' stories, where they're both adults who've stepped away from hero and villain life, crossing paths by chance in some mundane town. The tension isn't about saving or killing anymore; it's about two people with too much shared trauma recognizing each other in a grocery store aisle. It's less about romance and more about a bleak, quiet kind of recognition.
I avoid the 'Toga gets captured by UA' trope, honestly. It often feels like an excuse to put her in a school uniform and soften her edges until she's just a quirky girlfriend. She's a serial killer who drinks blood; the fun is in not sanding that down.
4 Answers2026-07-06 00:53:30
Something interesting happens when you throw those two characters together. It's rarely about straightforward romance; it's more about exploring two sides of the same coin. Both Izuku and Himiko are obsessed, just channeled in polar opposite directions. He's got this all-consuming drive to be a hero, to save people, to live up to a legacy. She's got an all-consuming drive to... well, consume, to possess beauty through blood, to follow her whims. Fics often use that parallel obsession as a starting point.
You get a lot of 'what if' scenarios where one of them cracks or shifts. Maybe a story where Toga's fixation becomes something purer, a twisted form of admiration that Midoriya, with his relentless empathy, tries to understand and redirect. Or darker ones where his hero complex gets corrupted by her worldview, leading him down a path where saving someone means embracing their monstrous side. The 'hero/villain' dynamic is always there, but it gets bent into something more intimate and personal than, say, Deku versus Shigaraki.
There's also this recurring theme of acceptance versus reform. Does Toga need to be 'fixed' to be loved, or can she be loved as she is, with all her sharp edges and bloody desires? Does Deku's compassion have limits, and what happens when it's tested not by violence, but by a genuine, disturbing affection? The best stories I've read don't shy away from the inherent creepiness; they lean into it to ask uncomfortable questions about love, morality, and the nature of obsession.
5 Answers2026-07-11 12:46:36
I've spent way too much time scrolling through Deku x Bakugo tags, and the sheer volume of angst with a happy ending is staggering. It's basically the bedrock of this ship for a lot of us. They start from that brutal, painful childhood dynamic, so writers have this rich, hurtful history to mine. You'll see a ton of fics that are just a slow, painful crawl towards forgiveness, where Bakugo's guilt eats him alive and Deku is trying so hard to move past the pain but can't. The comfort part is what everyone's waiting for—that moment Bakugo finally voices his regret, or when Izuku lets himself accept the apology. It's cathartic.
Another huge one is the 'idiots in love' or mutual pining trope, where everyone except them knows they're together. I love the versions where Class 1-A has a betting pool on when they'll finally figure it out. The tension comes from them being so competitive and emotionally constipated that they can't admit their feelings, leading to hilarious misunderstandings and jealous outbursts. It plays right into their canon rivalry, twisting it into something secretly affectionate.
Then you've got the 'pro-hero eras' fics, which are a whole mood. Established relationship but they have to keep it secret from the public or the media, leading to secret meetings and undercover comfort. There's also a weirdly specific but popular niche of 'quirk marriage' or arranged marriage AUs, where society or their families force them together, and the initial hostility slowly melts into genuine love. The appeal is watching two fiercely independent characters navigate a bond they didn't choose but eventually wouldn't give up.