4 Answers2026-06-30 17:24:49
I find a lot of the Deku/Toga fics circle around this core idea of corrupted innocence. Izuku's defining trait is this pure-hearted desire to save everyone, right? So writers love putting that against Himiko's warped, blood-based 'love'. It’s not just 'good boy likes bad girl'. The conflict digs into whether his compassion can actually reach someone whose expression of love is literally violent. Can he 'save' her without compromising his own ideals? And from her side, does she actually want to be 'saved' into a normal life, or does she just want to consume him, to make his heroic spirit a part of her forever? That push-pull between redemption and obsession is the engine.
A specific plot I see a lot is a captured or undercover scenario. Maybe after the Paranormal Liberation War, she's in custody and he's the only one who visits. Or he gets hit with a quirk that forces some kind of bond. The tension comes from him trying to understand her broken logic while fighting his own, very human, fascination with someone so utterly different. The best ones don't have easy answers; he might make 'progress' but then she'll do something terrifyingly Himiko, and you're left wondering if any happy ending is even possible for them. It's a tragedy in the making, and that's what keeps me reading.
3 Answers2026-06-20 07:53:34
Man, where do you even start with that? The appeal's always been about the sheer narrative weight of two sides of the same broken coin. It's not your typical rivals-to-lovers trope. It's the ultimate 'what if' of 'My Hero Academia'—what if the symbol of peace had saved Tenko Shimura? That foundational trauma Shigaraki carries versus Midoriya's obsessive need to save everyone, even his villains, creates this unbearable tension.
Fics I gravitate towards dig into the horror of that shared connection through One For All. The vestiges whispering, the forced empathy, the literal ghost of All Might's legacy haunting them both. It's less about romance and more about a brutal, intimate dissection of hero society's failures. The best plots have Deku so morally compromised, questioning if saving Shigaraki means destroying himself, while Shigaraki is faced with the one person whose 'save you' reflex might actually be sincere. That push-pull between annihilation and salvation is exhausting to read, in the best way.
I stumbled on one recently where Deku, after the war arc, starts having Shigaraki's decay nightmares. That specific flavor of psychological horror, where the power you wield starts to feel like the villain's, really nails the core conflict for me.
4 Answers2026-06-28 09:57:12
The foundation of that ship's drama always goes back to their shared history for me. It's not just rivals-to-lovers, it's the whole mess of childhood betrayal, mutual guilt, and the bone-deep knowledge they have of each other's worst moments.
A lot of the tension in the fics I gravitate towards comes from Bakugo's internal struggle with acknowledging his past bullying while also feeling a possessive, intense need to protect Izuku now. The emotional conflict isn't just 'I like him but I was mean', it's 'I have to become someone worthy of standing beside the person I tried to destroy'. Izuku's side is often this agonizing forgiveness—he understands Bakugo's drive and pain so completely it almost hurts him more.
You see it in the angsty ones where they have to talk it out after a fight, or in the quieter fics where a simple touch feels like an apology decades in the making. The raw material is all there in canon, so fanfic just turns up the volume on those unresolved feelings.
3 Answers2026-06-28 23:33:33
Ever since I read that fic where Bakugou breaks Denki's favorite headphones in a rage, I’ve been hung up on how these two handle accidental damage versus intentional hurt. The conflicts aren't always about big, heroic sacrifices. Sometimes it's Bakugou realizing his explosive training left a burn on Denki's wrist, and Denki trying to laugh it off like it's nothing.
That dynamic—where Bakugou's intensity physically or emotionally scars someone who radiates light—creates such a raw tension. Denki's not a doormat, though. The good fics have him pushing back, not with matching anger but with a disappointed silence that Bakugou can't stand. The emotional core often revolves around Bakugou learning that 'sorry' isn't a weakness, and Denki learning that setting boundaries isn't betrayal.
The resolution never feels clean, which I appreciate. Bakugou's apology might be gruff, mumbled into Denki's shoulder during a hug he initiated but can't sustain. Denki's forgiveness might be quiet, shown by trusting Bakugou to hold his hand, the one with the faint scar.