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ĺăŽăăźăăźă˘ăŤăăă˘
25
TV
Finished Airing
Oct 1, 2022 to Mar 25, 2023
With Tomura Shigaraki at its helm, the former Liberation Army is now known as the Paranormal Liberation Front. This organized criminal group poses an immense threat to the Hero Association, not only because of its sheer size and strength, but also the overpowering quirks of Jin "Twice" Bubaigawara and Gigantomachia. As new intel from the covert hero Keigo "Hawks" Takami confirms that Shigaraki is nowhere to be seen, the Hero Association decides to strike the enemy headquarters with a surprise attack using the entirety of its assetsâand the UA students find themselves on the battlefield once again. As the fight rages on, the unsuspecting villains must regroup and push back, but the brave heroes are determined to eradicate every last one of them. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
8.0/10
Average Review Score
70%
Recommend It
20
Reviews Worldwide
It's no secret to my friends that I have liked this show and have been a fan for a while. This is a show that I've pretty much grown with out of high school and into college, so trust me when I say that this season is a true a return to form. After two seasons of inconsistency and arcs that may have felt tedious at best we have reached a season that I think not only meets some earlier entries but can exceed them. This is a return to the emotions, the themes, and the moments of the early MHA that I watched duringmy last few years in high school. What I think MHA had been missing for a while was introspection, the intricate and deeper moments that made up a lot of the earlier seasons. Whether it was All Might's final stand and realizing that he was passing on his will to his successor or Deku and Bakugo's fight embroiled in the complicated childhood trauma shared between them. While we saw flashes of that in the fourth and fifth season, I really don't think that other than Endeavor's moment in the fourth season we get that deep, even relatable introspection for a character. But we do here, not only is both halves of the season filled with reflection and introspection from multiple characters, but there are character moments that have been building up for seasons now that finally hit their stride and it's amazing to see. There's actual internal conflict for Deku that results in possibly one of my favorite episodes of the season yet. There's so much I can talk about, but I do not want to spoil the plot or any other intracies. Instead I want to let anyone who reads this, MHA is back, it's back and it's finally as good as it was before.
Click an episode to read its synopsis.
We continue where we left off in the last season, with the raid on the Nomu hospital. But then so much shit happens during the battle, the whole series is basically different by the time the battle. It is one bombshell, after another during the hospital raid. The sheer number of plot twists and drops this season is amazing. Look, I wonât pretend that the plot is the best thing in the world or anything. But the way it is executed in this anime makes all the difference. And how the hospital raid arc ended was probably a huge shock to anime onlies. I absolutely lovethis new grittier style the anime went with for the 2nd half. About the characters, We separate out a bit from our usual Class A characters in My Hero Academia Season 6. Only the essential characters from Class A get the spotlight. In this season, the spotlight mainly goes to Dabi, Shigaraki, All for One, Endeavor, Todoroki, and Deku. Between the first and second halves, Dekuâs character development skyrockets. Hawks too is such a standout this season. Then, of course, we have the whole Todoroki family backstory bomb. The character writing in this season was definitely better than in the previous seasons. Even side characters that appear for only a few episodes, like Lady Nagant, get some excellent character writing. The current situation in MHA has brought attention to the moral grayness of hero society, which has quietly lurked in the series for ages. That grayness has finally become front-and-center, impossible to ignore. Nowhere is that complicated reality more apparent than in the previously unsulliable protagonist, Izuku Midoriya. The tone of My Hero Academia and Deku himself has completely transformed. Someone who hasnât checked in since the early seasons might find the series and its central character unrecognizable. The second part of the season which is my favorite has focused on the fallout from the huge battle in the first part. Not only were heroes unable to mitigate the destruction and loss of life, but mega-antagonist All For One orchestrated a mass jailbreak on the same day. Villains are now on the loose all across Japan, plunging the country into a state of violence, lawlessness, and chaos. Worse still, there is simply not enough manpower to address the direness of the situation. and thatâs before a ton of heroes began resigning, simply because theyâre human beings who can only take so much pressure. Neither the show nor the other pro heroes judge those who have resigned. Understandably, public sentiment toward heroes is at an all-time low. Many citizens are even trying to take protection into their own hands with vigilante justice. In doing so, they often just make a bad situation worse with their lack of expertise and add more collateral damage. And in the middle of all of this, thereâs our boy Izuku. As the current holder of One For All, Deku is the person All For One is after. And heâs currently reading like a mirror to how dark the world of MHA has become. In order to try to protect people, Izuku left UA and is working with All Might and an elite squadron of heroes. However, the pressure of believing heâs the cause of the current dire situation is exacerbated by All For Oneâs sardonic willingness to kill whoever is getting to Izuku. What happens when you place a ton of pressure on yourself, and then start blaming and judging yourself harshly? Yupâdepression, withdrawal, isolation, twisting of your inner monologue. Dekuâs âIâm fineâ attitude has taken a grim turn. He doesnât care about taking care of himself. He has started to distance himself from all his allies, even All Might. As long as he gets to All For One, he doesnât care how people see him. He even now sees his friends in opposition to his goals. To sum up, the anime has taken a huge step in almost every aspect from animation and plot and character development.
If you told me nearly seven years ago when My Hero Academia first aired that it would end up dropping into a secondary popularity tier among anime fans, below something like Attack on Titan or even Bleach, I wouldâve told you to leave me the hell alone because I didnât like anime and didnât care at all about My Hero Academia. But, if you told me the same thing four years ago when I first watched mha, I wouldâve called you an overly cynical edgelord; an embittered asshole desperately tearing down earnestly crafted pop media pieces as some pretentious measure to justify their supercilious ass taste.Of course, this anime snob in my head turned out to be largely true. That isnât to say My Hero Academia has lost its cultural weight entirely, as it continues to enjoy endless success in Japan with a cavalcade of spin-offs, financially successful filler movies, merchandise tie-ins, and 85 million copies sold to boot. Iâve probably seen at least a dozen random civilians (mostly kids) wearing heroaca t-shirts out in the wild since the pandemic and I live in the fucking boonies. This, among anything else, speaks to mhaâs continued resonance among audiences over the years. However, among the anime fandom at large âacamaniaâ has ostensibly waned substantially since I finished season 3 in the Summer of 2019. Let alone before I became interested in anime which I thankfully never had to experience. And it isnât hard to tell why if youâve had eyes on the anime fandom as a whole over the last few mha releases. After a series of middling adaptations of arcs that were controversial even during their initial publication, itâs no wonder that My Hero Academia couldnât retain its luster forever. Frankly, it exposes one of the key flaws in the âseasonalâ model of anime production thatâs become dubiously more popular over the last half decade. If the material no longer resonates with its core audience due to recurrent weak seasons, then fandom passion will rapidly dwindle. Anime fans are probably more forgiving than they should be when it comes to art, but it becomes quickly apparent when they stop giving a fuck about something. I honestly couldnât believe my ears when I heard the biggest English-speaking anime content creator, when asked by another major content creator if it was worth catching up to heroaca from episode 89, straight bold-faced said fucking âno.â Again, donât blame him. Season 5 was straight garbo I didnât even consider because I never planned on watching the anime or touching the property ever again after season 4. The only reason I returned to mha after the labyrinthine, drawn-out slog that was the Overhaul arc, was because a friend of mine in early 2021 showed me a picture of Deku when images of the Dark Hero Arc were leaked online. And as jaded as I was, it seemed like they were finally picking back up the thematic thrill line Stain left spiraled on the ground, and I liked Stain. So, seven months later, during a standard biannual weeb library trip while I had some time to kill, I impulsively grabbed the volume from where the Pro Hero Arc began and started reading. I discovered two things: 1. Horikoshiâs art is genuinely amazing, some of the best talent Jump has at the moment. And 2. despite the Joint Training arc being one of the most dull, anemic, and tedious fucking things Iâve ever read, Horikoshi can actually write a story with interesting ideas and decent characters. The MVA Arc is awesome and even though the producers of season 5 did their best to pound that arc into the ground, I felt like it was going to be impossible to adapt it well anyway outside of a few amazing sakuga moments (which didnât materialize at the frequency I expected). I came back to season 6 specifically because there were key moments of the war arc that, if adapted well, were going to be as cool, engaging, or emotional as they were in the manga. Any adaptation worth their salt tries to do this, and with a studio that has the man power and prestige to excel, especially without a filler movie this year, I expected just that. Unfortunately, that isnât what I got. I donât want to sound like an uncompromising pontifical manga fanboy here, but the My Hero Academia TV show will never look as good as it did pre-season 4. When the flashbacks in your shonen anime are at a consistently higher visual echelon than the show youâre currently watching thatâs a fucking problem. Whenever there was content from seasons one or two, I was thinking âdamn, this season generally looks aight, but this shit seems excellent,â and I just shouldnât. I rememberâlike the naĂŻve young lad I was, being so excited to witness a scene from the anime where a character bifurcates a huge woodland complex with his quirk, only to be sorely disappointed when it was truncated into a single still frame. I canât even begin to tell you the migraines I got with all of the panning shots with speed lines over blobby ass crowds ârunning around.â There are some decent cuts, but thereâs this consistent impression of absolutely amateurish direction and utilization of talent. Seiji Mizushima, the director of Fullmetal Alchemist (2003), said in a relatively recent interview that the key role of a director in anime is to distribute the resources properly and efficiently to both meet deadlines and create a well-made product. Despite not making a filler movie, this show doesnât fucking have that. Cuts that SHOULD look amazing were uninspiring at best, and other way less important scenes received tender love and care without proper justification. I donât need every anime to be this Mob Psycho-esque perfectly crafted masterpiece where everything is drawn on oneâs. I just want the good shit to look good, and for the rest of it to not flounder around as a poorly composited and shittily art directed mess. I do want to mention that the whole season isnât terrible visually. In fact, thereâs some segments that look pretty solid or are at the very least visually engaging. Itâs just, as both a viewer of prior seasons and aS a MaNgA rEaDeR, I expected more from the available staff. It doesnât hurt that I find the ost horribly melodramatic at times, and it completely rips me out of scenes I would normally give a shit about. It makes emotional moments so manipulative that itâs almost lame? There are pages of the manga, same arcs mind you, where I was feeling sincerely emotional, because Horikoshiâs art and paneling can be that legitimately powerful. The main reason Iâm giving this show a 5 is because the material is still commendable with some flaws. The War Arc is a great action piece with lots of moving parts, fun twists, and legitimate narrative consequences (sort of, with one major asspull). I think Horikoshi learned from his mistakes during his previous action arcs and tried to pace this one in a way that felt more balanced and thus more riveting overall. Though, the Dark Hero Arc is rockier, and I can understand why this would be the point the manga fans start having issues again, because I kind of feel like I was lied to. This arc FEELS rushed, as if there were storyboards created for two or three extra chapters that got stolen by his editor and thrown into the recycling bin. The intention of the arc and what I think Horikoshi wanted to do with Deku was probably cucked by both hackneyed editorial incompetence, and publication cowardice, because whenever My Hero does anything edgy or cool itâs a whole ass issue. From my understanding, a lot of this has to do with the fact that whenever villainy is depicted in Jump as too sympathetic, a lot Jumpâs associative partners like video game companies get kind of pissy. Sure, Chainsaw Man does exist, but Fujimoto is shielded by reinforced concrete thanks to his editor, and mha is trying to reach far broader of an audience than Chainsaw Man ever dreamed of having. Additionally, it doesnât lean into the appeal of mha in Japan at all. A lot of casual Japanese audiences just kind of want a high school super hero power fantasy manga, and not the comparatively interesting meta-commentary that Horikoshi wants to write. This tension leads to things like the MVA arc getting screwed in season 5, and Dark Hero getting screwed during its publication. Of all the times to not have fucking filler, WHY NOW? This ultimately amounts to the emotional beats of the arc containing little impact, and the overall plot evolving in less imaginative ways. Itâs a shame too, I was looking forward to seeing Deku, comprehensively burdened by his own ideals, hitting ideological walls and self-destructing despite his insane power increase. The arc ends up being underwhelming to watch because of its aforementioned problems despite its own potential. Recently, I got sick with both the flu and COVID in the same week, and while I was in my various fever states straining to hold my body together after having it internally beaten with a leather belt, mha was the only show I could actually pay attention to since everything else was âtoo thinky for me.â Even so, I pondered to myself, âAm I too old for shonen anime adaptations?â I know Iâm not too old for shonen, because I like earnest camp affair like Fist of the North Star, and shows like Yu Yu Hakusho and Hunter x Hunter are among my favorites. Hell, I LIKE the My Hero Academia manga as a whole despite the constant issues thatâs plagued its narrative pacing in the last two years. But, when I was half-awakeâhalf-dead, watchingâgobsmacked, Bakugo garrulously repeating exposition the audience should already know in the midst of a fight between Deku and Shiguraki that mostly amounted to speed line infused panning shots; only to then have one of the most important and cathartic emotional climaxes of the series be depicted as a FUCKING STILL FRAME, I considered that maybe for shonen anime, I was. Have a nice day.
This season of MHA is one of the best. With very little filler and very intentional thrilling sequences, this anime is the epitome of shonen. The character development of all characters really gets put to the test in this season, and all of the positives and negatives that occur feel really heavy and important. Usually, it's easy to like other characters besides the main character in any anime, and that's especially true of MHA, but in this season, Deku really shines. That's not to say the cohesiveness of Class 1-A isn't also put on display! This season really has everything covered! The writers of this showdo a very good job at humanizing the villains, making much of the conflicts in this series very stressful. It also becomes clear in this season (if it wasn't clear before) that this series takes place in a dark and scary world, not a happy and positive one. It's a dark and gritty anime that really displays that David and Goliath type of victory.
Out of all the shows that aired in the Fall season last year, from the ridiculous hype of Chainsaw Man to the return of Bleach, there was no show I was more curious as to see how it would turn out than My Hero Academia season six. Thereâs little denying that My Hero Academia has been on a slow decline ever since the midseason climax in season three. The show has just never seemed to recapture the hype and emotion of that moment and has been going through the motions ever since. Each arc just seemed to get more boring and following the status quoto the point where we just seemed to start getting a bit apathetic with the series. The haters were starting to get more justified and more importantly, it was no longer the big dog in the battle shounen space. When MHA was at itâs peak, there wasnât really a show that could compete. Sure The Seven Deadly Sins existed, Boruto...well Iâm sure Naruto fans will tell you how they feel about that one and Black Clover was around the corner when season two aired, they could not compete with MHA. It was only until the release of Demon Slayer, Jujitsu Kaisen and Black Clover getting better that were able to capitalize on MHA declining to usurp it as the top dog. My point being is that season six felt like a make or break season (for me at least). Season five featured probably the least interesting arc in the series that very much felt like filler and the much hyped âMy Villain Academiaâ arc being butchered because they had to sacrifice a few episodes to promote the third movie, but those few episodes did feature perhaps the best moments from the season with the Todoroki family drama. It couldnât start off slow like the previous seasons, not with the way it set itself up. It had to come out swinging to get people engaged again otherwise people would just not care. It would very much feel like it was going through the motions again and the same problems that was creeping up in previous seasons would start rearing their ugly heads again. If this season failed, then apathy would have fully set in for how long this series plans to go for. So what did I think? Was this series a step back in the right direction? Honestly yes. This has been the most enjoyment Iâve had in MHA since season three and it actually might be my favourite season to date and there are three main reasons as to why I think so. Reason 1: It spends no time p**sing about A problem that seems to get worse with each season is that each season needs to spend sometime just reintroducing everyone and remind us what has happened before getting to whatâs actually new. It makes it feel slow and as more seasons have aired, it just gets more and more annoying when you know who they are, what their quirks are what has happened, only for it to keep reminding you each season. This season is not the case. It gets right to the point and right where we left off from season five and continues on from there. It speeds up the pace and as such, improves engagement because we have got some interesting stuff to begin with. It know what we want, so it gets right to it. It gives us that immediate engagement to get invested quickly and efficiently. Reason 2: Changes to the status quo The showâs story was starting to get too formulaic for its own good where one arc would focus on school stuff and the other would focus on the big bad villain(s) of the season and how our characters would stop them. It was solid at the time but as the tone and story shifted away from the school stuff to be more serious, society shaking stuff, the school stuff just got in the way. I know the show is called My Hero Academia but the school stuff was gradually getting more in the way and the important things that were happening outside the school where the world was getting ready to be shaken up; which they kept teasing how fragile the Hero Society is but never did anything drastic with it. This season however, we finally get some payoff of multiple seasons worth of world building that actually has some serious impact on the story, the world and the characters in a way that we really havenât seen since the season three halfway climax and itâs done so in a non formulaic way where its not trying to do half and half. Itâs treating it like, âThis is real and this is happeningâ sort of way that has significant impact on the show going forward and it gets me excited to see what happens next. Reason 3: Itâs just exciting to watch again Of course whatever reason you may have, the most important thing is that, âIs it fun to watch?â Seasons four and five were honestly routine and boring and nothing we have not seen before. Season six felt refreshing as there are really big stakes in this season. Character revelations that make it interesting. The action felt intense and weighty. Knowing that if the heroâs fail, the consequences could be catastrophic. It felt like everything that MHA has been building up, the storylines that have been progressing and everything that was teased was meant for this season to be the culmination of all that and with everything behind that, it made this season felt like this was the season it was going to have to deliver and in my opinion, it did. Combining these three reasons helped make season six the most impactful to the series in terms of engagement in the narrative and its characters. By doing some things different, it made for a more enjoyable experience that makes me excited for what the series brings next. It actually makes me excited to watch My Hero Academia again because of how well this season delivered. Through its twists, revelations and shakeups to showâs world building, season six feels different than other seasons and considering where the series was going, it was meant to be a good thing. But thatâs all in the story and character department, what about the production department? My Hero Academia has always been solid in terms of art style and animation and it can get better when it needs to. I understand why people complained with the animation when you look at Mob Psycho 100 season three which Bones was making at the same time as this season. But Mobâs simplistic and rough art style allows for that added flexibility to go nuts with the animation. Whereas MHA is more visually presentable. This season is no different, it still continues that good art direction and solid animation and get better when the scene calls for it. Although, ithas slightly improved, mainly because there is constant action this season so the animation has to catch up to make the scene more exciting. The sound department I think stands out a bit more. I thought the showâs ost was really good this season. It mainly comes down to how well itâs used to set a tone and mood but I thought this season in particular is where it packed a punch. It flows along really well with what is going on screen and does its job of enhancing whatever scene its in. Whether it would be something ominous or to ramp up the action. The ost certainly delivers in that space. As for the Openings and Endings, they are a mixed bag with it leaning towards the negative side. The first opening by SUPER BEAVER has a very nice comic book aesthetic for the first half of it, but then it ditches the comic book aesthetic and it just devolves into another bog standard MHA opening with the song not really doing much to shake that feeling and it ends being kind of forgettable. However, Itâs this seasonâs second opening, "Bokurano" by Eve, that makes this a mixed bag because I think this is one of the best MHA openings. It mainly comes down to two things. First, the tone of the opening is refreshingly different from other OPs due to it being rather grim but has bright spots of hope; helped by the song being more positive as it goes on and the animation looking really good. Definitely one of my favourite MHA openings. As for the EDs, Iâm not really a fan of either of them. The first one is very average. Titled, "SKETCH" by Kiiro Akiyama is about as average when it comes to EDs, using still images and using overly long shots of Deku and Shigiraki, even though I thought the song was fine. The second ED is hardly better. For most of it, it just uses screenshots of previous seasons until it has a nice moment with all of Dekuâs classmates from U.A. But it just really bugs me when it reuses scenes from previous seasons and it takes up the majority of the ED so I just think itâs lazy. Conclusion My Hero Academia season six is a step back in the right direction for the series. Being the best season weâve probably ever had. With its change of pace and nonstop action, season six felt refreshing after the last two seasons were letdowns and staggered any momentum the series had. Now it feels like itâs starting to get that momentum back and Iâm all for it. I didnât want this series to shrivel and die as weâve seen too many popular shows have the same thing happen. So this season does give me hope that MHA wonât go the same way. Of course, the ball is now in its court. It now has to continue this return to form and not lose it again. I hope it doesnât though, I like MHA. So hereâs hoping that the future is bright. Story: 8.5/10 Improved pacing and changes to the status quo makes this a more enjoyable narrative to follow Characters: 8/10 Character revelations and significant growth improves on what was starting to grow stagnant. Animation: 7.5/10 Continues to be very solid, helped by the constant action this season provides. Sound: 6/10 Soundtrack put to really good use here, but hampered by lacklustre OP and EDs. My Personal Enjoyment: 8.5/10 The most fun and excitement Iâve had watching MHA in a while. Overall Score: 7.7/10 Recommendation: Watch It