5 Jawaban2026-07-06 06:40:20
The nomu as a concept always felt under-explored in 'My Hero Academia' proper, which is probably why the nomu x deku tag pulls me in. It's not just villain/hero stuff; it's body horror meeting desperate empathy. Deku's whole thing is seeing the person behind the power, even when there's barely a person left. I've read fics that frame the nomu as a former hero or a victim of All For One, and Deku trying to reach that sliver of consciousness. The angst potential is astronomical. You get this tragic, gothic almost, where the monster might recognize its savior but can't communicate beyond growls. Protective Aizawa watching this unfold adds another layer. It's less about romance and more about a horrifying, one-sided caretaking that bends into something else. I keep going back to one where Deku used his analysis quirk to learn the nomu's original identity, and the slow realization destroyed him.
Then you've got the more out-there AUs, where Deku himself gets nomu-fied, either by force or some twisted sacrifice. Those are pure tragedy porn, but when done right, the exploration of lost humanity and the vestiges of One For All fighting the corruption is compelling. Bakugou's reaction in those is always a highlight—guilt, rage, the works. The top tropes really circle this core of tragic connection and monstrous transformation.
5 Jawaban2026-07-06 15:24:48
The classic conflict is agency versus trauma. Nomu are essentially puppets, stripped of will, while Izuku's entire arc is about claiming agency and power. Fics that explore a Nomu somehow regaining slivers of memory or consciousness, only to be used against the person they might have cared for, hit hardest. It's not just hero vs. villain; it's a tragedy of recognition. Does the Nomu remember green hair, a smile? Does Izuku see a flicker of a person behind the monster while he's forced to fight it? That push-pull between hope and horror is brutal.
I've read a few where a Nomu is created from someone Izuku knew—a former classmate, even a relative. The emotional drive there is guilt and a desperate, maybe misguided, need to save or redeem what's left. Izuku's compassion becomes his own torture. He can't simply defeat the threat; he has to navigate the moral wreckage of what was done to a person. The conflict expands from a physical fight to a psychological one, questioning what 'saving' even means when someone's mind is so fractured.
Those stories often falter if they go too soft too fast. The most compelling ones keep the tension alive. Maybe the Nomu can never truly be saved, and Izuku has to learn to grieve for someone who is both gone and still physically present. It's a specific kind of heartbreak that really only works in this messed-up dynamic.
3 Jawaban2026-07-06 01:12:26
Honestly, the nomu angle is super underused, but I've seen a few directions. One is Deku getting captured and experimented on by All For One, turning into a high-intelligence nomu while keeping his core personality locked away. The drama isn't just the body horror, but Katsuki having to confront what his childhood bullying helped create. Saw a long one that did this, but the writer dropped it after the first nomufication scene, which was a bummer.
Another plot I kinda like is a reversed dynamic, where a nomu develops a weird protective fixation on Deku after a battle, maybe because of One For All's energy. It becomes this relentless, misunderstood guardian that the heroes keep trying to put down, while Deku is the only one arguing it's not purely a monster. The tension comes from whether it's just instinct or something approaching sentience.
4 Jawaban2026-07-11 05:15:16
I've spent more hours than I'd care to admit in the 'My Hero Academia' fic trenches, and Deku-centric selfcest fics always have this fascinating undercurrent. The dominant theme is definitely intense self-reflection—what would I say to myself? Would I like me? That kind of thing. It's less romantic and more psychological, exploring his own doubts and admiration from a meta perspective. You'll see a lot of 'two halves of a whole' imagery, where one Izuku represents his heroic, self-sacrificing side and the other embodies the quirkless kid he used to be.
Another huge one is the theme of validation. It's Izuku giving himself the acceptance and belief All Might eventually gave him, but from the inside out. The fics often use the pairing to craft these intricate internal monologues disguised as dialogue, which can be surprisingly healing to read. They also play with the loneliness of carrying One For All's secret; having another version of yourself means finally having someone who understands everything without explanation.
The angst potential is off the charts, naturally. Guilt over past failures, fear for the future, the weight of a legacy—it all gets doubled when there are two of him to worry about each other. But weirdly, the fluff can be super soft too. It's the ultimate comfort in a universe where he's constantly pushing himself, a narrative where Izuku Midoriya finally gets to be his own supportive friend.