I’ve always been fascinated by how anime villains weaponize deception. In 'Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood,' Envy disguises themself as a beloved ally to manipulate the heroes—talk about a gut punch. And remember 'My Hero Academia'? Stain paralyzing his foes by licking their blood is so gross yet effective. It’s not just about flashy power-ups; it’s the mind games that stick with you.
Then there’s 'Bleach,' where Aizen’s entire existence feels like an underhanded move. Dude fakes his death, hypnotizes everyone, and even his 'defeat' might’ve been planned. Anime does this thing where the sneakiest fighters often have the most stylish reveals—like, you hate them but can’t look away. Makes me wonder: if you’re fighting for survival, is anything really off-limits? The moral gray areas are what keep these battles addictive.
Sneaky anime fights are my guilty pleasure. Like in 'One Piece,' where Usopp—the 'weakest' Straw Hat—uses smoke bombs, fake deaths, and psychological tricks to outwit stronger enemies. It’s refreshing because not every win comes from raw power. Or how about Griffith from 'Berserk' sacrificing his entire band for power? That’s not just underhanded; it’s downright monstrous. These moments make fights unforgettable, even when they leave you furious. Sometimes, the dirtiest moves hit harder than any super move.
Nothing gets my blood pumping like a good old-fashioned anime fight, especially when someone pulls a dirty trick! One of my all-time favorites is from 'Hunter x Hunter' when Hisoka uses his Bungee Gum to stick opponents to surfaces mid-battle—totally unpredictable and borderline cruel. And let's not forget Light Yagami in 'Death Note,' who technically isn't throwing punches but outsmarts everyone by writing names in a notebook. That’s cheating on a cosmic level!
Then there’s the classic 'Naruto' moment where Shikamaru shadows his enemy while pretending to surrender. The guy’s IQ is off the charts, but it’s still underhanded as hell. I love how anime makes these moves feel thrilling instead of just cheap—probably because the villains (or antiheroes) selling them have so much charisma. It’s like, yeah, that’s dirty… but also kind of genius?
Underhanded moves in anime are the spice of battle—sometimes you gotta fight dirty to win! Take Joseph Joestar from 'JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure.' The man’s entire strategy is built on bluffing, running away, and tossing random objects (like grenades disguised as coins). It’s hilarious because he’s technically a hero, but his tactics are straight out of a con artist’s playbook. Another sneaky one? Shinobu Sensui in 'Yu Yu Hakusho' faking his death to lure Yusuke into a trap. The emotional whiplash from that scene still stings! What’s cool is how these twists make fights feel less like brute strength contests and more like psychological warfare. You start rooting for the trickster even when they’re bending the rules.
2026-05-25 19:49:33
8
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Power of Obliviousness
Seven Ponds
0
770
I was born with an extraordinary talent for being slow.
In elementary school, my classmates laughed in my face for being an orphan. I proudly said, "That's right. I'm the only orphan in the whole school. That makes me the coolest!"
The principal happened to pass by and thought I had been bullied so badly I had snapped. Furious, he called their parents and they gave them a beating when they got home.
During my freshman year of high school, a boy tried to prank me by confessing to me with a bouquet of white lilies. I accepted them with a smile. "Thank you. How did you know lilies were my favorite?"
After that, every time I saw him at school, I would smile and say, "I really liked the white lilies you gave me."
For the next three years, everyone called him Lily instead.
Later, my wealthy biological parents found me and brought me home.
On my first day there, the fake heiress set me up by pretending I had pushed her down, then cried, "I made a mistake. Please don't hurt me!"
My parents and older brother rushed over in a panic, but before they could accuse me of anything, realization struck. "You're practicing acting, right? I haven't even done my part yet! Let's do it again!"
With that, I pulled her up and shoved her hard to the floor again. When my family saw how calm I was, they nodded in relief.
Later, the whole family went to Harbor City for a banquet for the rich, and the fake heiress pushed me into a dark room.
In front of me stood Harbor City's ruthless ruler.
On the floor lay a man covered in blood, barely alive.
I covered my mouth in surprise.
The man narrowed his eyes dangerously and walked toward me.
I said excitedly, "This is my first time seeing a movie set. Can I be in it too?"
I transmigrated into the role of a gorgeous villainess, tasked with tormenting my childhood buddies.
I forced Maddox, Mr. Tough Guy, into putting on a sexy dress, essentially killing his chances of a social life.
I grabbed the bottom of the ever-aloof Zane and made him red in the face.
I kicked Damian, the crybaby, into the ground, and all he could do was glare at me through his tearful eyes.
My aggressive antics only fueled their resentment.
“One of these days, I’ll get you.”
I winked at them without a care. “I’ll be waiting.”
The day they crossed paths with the female lead would be the day I left this world. Their revenge didn’t scare me one bit.
Little did I know, the time would come when I would be proven wrong.
While I scrambled to get away in tears, he said softly, “Save your strength. The night is still young.”
When I arrived at my wedding in my bridal gown, I found an octagonal fighting ring set up in the center of the stage.
My fiance, Derek Hale, was holding the hand of his "girl bro," Chloe Shaw. With a smile, he handed me a pair of boxing gloves and explained, "Vivian, this is a tradition from my hometown. The bride has to get into the ring and wrestle one of the groomsmen for good luck. I asked Chloe to go up. Just play along for a minute."
Looking at Chloe, who was always acting frail and sickly, I did not think much of it and stepped straight into the ring.
But the next second, she threw an extremely professional spinning kick and knocked me unconscious with a severe concussion on the spot.
When I woke up, I was paralyzed in a hospital bed. Derek stood there holding Chloe's hand and said to me, "Our relatives and friends gave us so much wedding money. The wedding can't go on without a bride. Chloe is willing to take care of me in your place. You're so kind, Vivian. You won't mind, right?"
Under the torture of humiliation and severe depression, I pushed my wheelchair off the rooftop of our wedding home.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back one month before the wedding.
I turned around and knocked on the door of a national-level kickboxing champion training base.
"Coach, if I trained for a month, can I punch someone's head open?"
After dying after a mall explosion I wake in a 7 year old body, wait I what? I become a child?!! OMG
Good thing this child face is so exquisite however as soon as I wake up life is so hard. Both parents are missing, chased to death by the so-called relatives, have nothing to eat but I do have a gentle elder brother, an adorable younger brother and a sister-obsess twin brother.
"Wife I came back fetching your gold" a certain main coiled his arms my waist
"Wife?! Whose wife your calling?! I'm your big bro"
A night had pass
"Do you know your mistake?"
"Yes, hubby I'm sorry"
"Who am I?"
"Your my younger bro--of my husband. I will beat anyone who dared to refuse to that!"
"Quarterback SneakWhen Stacy Halligan is dumped by her boyfriend just before Valentine’s Day, she’s in desperate need of a date of the office party—where her ex will be front and center with his new hot babe. Max, the hot quarterback next door who secretly loves her and sees this as his chance. But he only has until Valentine’s Day to score a touchdown. Unnecessary RoughnessRyan McCabe, sexy football star, is hiding from a media disaster, while Kaitlyn Ross is trying to resurrect her career as a magazine writer. Renting side by side cottages on the Gulf of Mexico, neither is prepared for the electricity that sparks between them…until Ryan discovers Kaitlyn’s profession, and, convinced she’s there to chase him for a story, cuts her out of his life. Getting past this will take the football play of the century. Sideline InfractionSarah York has tried her best to forget her hot one night stand with football star Beau Perini. When she accepts the job as In House counsel for the Tampa Bay Sharks, the last person she expects to see is their newest hot star—none other than Beau. The spark is definitely still there but Beau has a personal life with a host of challenges. Is their love strong enough to overcome them all?Illegal Use of Hands is created by Desiree Holt, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author."
The first thing I do after being reborn is secretly keeping six stunning male models behind my wealthy husband’s back. I seduce them and sleep with them for 999 days to get myself pregnant.
I do all this because in my past life, my husband found out that he had asthenozoospermia and married me because I am known for being fertile. He wants to carry on the family line so that he will have a successor to inherit the family fortune.
I try everything I can to get pregnant, but nothing works.
Conversely, my infertile best friend gives birth to twins and triplets within two years after marrying a 70-year-old man.
When my wealthy husband hears that my best friend is blessed with children, he is immediately captivated.
They get together behind my back and even arrange for someone to run me over with a car when I find out the truth.
After my death, I discover that my best friend has bound herself to the child switch system.
Any child I am impregnated with is transferred into her womb.
My best friend's infertility is transferred to me in return.
When I open my eyes again, I find myself back on the day when my husband married me and brought me home.
I smile happily when I think about all the things that took place in my past life. My best friend wants lots of children, doesn't she? If so, I will make her experience the joy of having 18 babies in one pregnancy!
I get hyped thinking about those signature power moves that snatch victory (or at least a comeback) out of thin air. In 'Dragon Ball Z' alone, the Kamehameha, Spirit Bomb, and Vegeta’s Final Flash aren’t just flashy beams — they define turning points. Goku’s Kamehameha has stopped foes cold more than once, but what really flips the script is the Spirit Bomb’s whole-moment vibe: it forces everyone to feel the stakes and gives the hero a literal last-ditch lifeline. Similarly, in 'Naruto' the Rasengan and the Rasenshuriken, or Naruto’s Sage Mode + Kurama fusion, shift fights from stalemate to spectacle. Sasuke’s Chidori or his Susanoo moves make him a walking force multiplier; a single well-timed Amaterasu can force an enemy to rethink their whole strategy. Those moves don’t just do a lot of damage — they change the pacing, the opponent’s choices, and sometimes the moral weight of the battle.
I love how power moves can be so personal and tied to the character’s story. In 'One Piece' Luffy’s Gear shifts (especially Gear Fourth) are the kind of things that take a scrappy pirate fight into cartoon physics territory and totally reframe the conflict — suddenly he’s using speed and elasticity to rewrite what’s possible. Zoro’s Asura and three-sword techniques in the same series are similarly game-changing because they make him a force that alters enemy targeting and the crew’s tactics. Over in 'My Hero Academia', All Might’s United States of Smash and Deku’s One For All moves are both spectacle and story: they physically change the battlefield and narratively pass the torch. Then there’s the emotional punch of power moves that double as personal resolves — like Tanjiro’s Hinokami Kagura in 'Demon Slayer' or Ichigo’s Getsuga Tensho in 'Bleach', where a single swing or chant carries the weight of identity and history, ending fights but also changing the characters forever.
Some of the most brutal examples feel like strategy bombs: Gon’s adult transformation in 'Hunter x Hunter' or Netero’s 100-Type Guanyin in the Chimera Ant arc are not just big hits — they reorient the conflict’s entire logic. And I can’t ignore the theatricality of 'JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure' moves: Jotaro’s Star Platinum: The World and Dio’s Za Warudo literally pause reality and flip combat into a wholly different realm. Outside pure power, there are technique-based game-changers like Meliodas’ Full Counter in 'The Seven Deadly Sins' or Yusuke’s Spirit Gun in 'Yu Yu Hakusho', moves that weaponize the opponent’s strength against them and force a reversal. Even non-shonen examples matter — Eren’s Titan transformations in 'Attack on Titan' change warfare and geopolitics rather than just a fistfight. Those moments where one signature move collapses tension and forces everyone on-screen to react are exactly why I keep rewatching key episodes; they’re satisfying, emotional, and often leave you cheering or stunned in equal measure. That’s the kind of pulse-racing payoff I live for.
If you're looking for scenes where villains are played for laughs, I get ridiculously excited—this is one of my favorite little tropes. I love how 'Gintama' will take an ostensibly terrifying foe and have them slip on a banana peel five seconds later; one moment the city is trembling, the next the bad guy is doing a goofy dance or getting dragged into a parody skit. Those flips from grim to absurd are intentional: they parody shonen melodrama and let the audience breathe between heavier beats.
Another classic is 'One Punch Man' where the whole point is deflating villainous menace. Saitama strolls in, buys groceries, and the villain’s grand monologue collapses into awkward silence. Scenes like the monster who tries to deliver a TED-talk about destiny only to be casually knocked out turn what should be fear into punchline. I find that approach cathartic—it's a wink at the genre and keeps the story playful, which I really enjoy.