Okay, this is one of those concepts that gets overused as a shortcut, and Honnoji is the prime example. It’s not just a school; it’s a power generator for conflict. The setting of an elite, isolated academy provides a perfect pressure cooker. You take these kids with latent supernatural abilities, throw them into a rigid hierarchy with club activities, dorm life, and secret societies, and boom—the mundane school rules become the arena for magical duels. Student council authority gets twisted into mystical law enforcement, and a simple sports festival turns into a tournament arc for world-altering relics.
What I find more interesting is how the academy’s reputation itself becomes a weapon. In some derivative webnovels I’ve skimmed, the name 'Honnoji' is invoked like a brand. Rival factions from other dimensions or sects see it as this legendary nexus of power, so they attack it not just for territory but for prestige. The school’s normalcy is the facade; the conflict is about who gets to control the facade. It flips the script from 'students discover a secret world' to 'the secret world is desperately trying to infiltrate the student body.' The cafeteria food probably tastes terrible, though.
Ultimately, the academy’s influence is structural. It forces supernatural conflicts into schedules, semesters, and social cliques, which is honestly more relatable than another ancient prophecy in a forgotten temple.