• An addendum to Rule 3 regarding fan-translated works of things such as Web Novels has been made. Please see here for details.
  • We've issued a clarification on our policy on AI-generated work.
  • Our mod selection process has completed. Please welcome our new moderators.
  • Due to issues with external spam filters, QQ is currently unable to send any mail to Microsoft E-mail addresses. This includes any account at live.com, hotmail.com or msn.com. Signing up to the forum with one of these addresses will result in your verification E-mail never arriving. For best results, please use a different E-mail provider for your QQ address.
  • For prospective new members, a word of warning: don't use common names like Dennis, Simon, or Kenny if you decide to create an account. Spammers have used them all before you and gotten those names flagged in the anti-spam databases. Your account registration will be rejected because of it.
  • Since it has happened MULTIPLE times now, I want to be very clear about this. You do not get to abandon an account and create a new one. You do not get to pass an account to someone else and create a new one. If you do so anyway, you will be banned for creating sockpuppets.
  • Due to the actions of particularly persistent spammers and trolls, we will be banning disposable email addresses from today onward.
  • The rules regarding NSFW links have been updated. See here for details.

Dame Verylin

“Attention whore…”
Joined
Oct 12, 2025
Messages
39
Likes received
311
I am seeking other perspectives on the themes inside of W.B. work or what the work itself wants to say.

An easy example to make is how Kohei Horikoshi in his work My Hero Academia (BNHA) start with the very simple thematic premise that "anyone can be a hero" or rather that a hero can come from anywhere and then proceeds to undermine said premise by taking this quirkless character that wants to be a hero (the epitome of someone who cannot be a hero (or is not even considered viable in universe)) and gives them the Quirk of their idol the number 1 hero All Might.

So the premise is never tested or even properly constructed. It's the same as saying anyone can be a millionaire and then having Jeff Bezos adopt you. Anyone could have been Izuku ( for that one time or for that one opportunity) but everyone can't be him (as that one opportunity has been used by others) and the only thing proven is that the inheritor of One for All can be a hero instead of anybody.

Some easy things to take note of (than can be used to construct a thematic analysis):

Para site - Para human
The way trans humanism or rather parahumanism is approached and what it says.

The mutilation of self (or to be more accurate the sacrifice) and others in the pursuit of goals.

Difference between intent and action.

Isolation loneliness and estrangement (self imposed and of others).

Entities shoving their hand up characters asses and piloting meat puppets.

Cohabitational compromise in toxic relationships.

Shedding/mutilation/discarding of humanity and dehumanization.

Illegality and criminal conduct when systems fail or are designed to engineer negative outcomes for a significant amount of people and how the dismantling of said systems is viewed…

Etc



If any of the above speak to you, you can try composing a thematic statement with them and then give your reasoning or argument for why the thematic statement of Worm is X Y or zed.
 
That was a bit of a kick in the nads, MHA would have been much better if Izzie rejected discount Superman with a 'Fuck you, I'm Batman' much to All Might's confusion- at least I don't think Batman is common knowledge in that universe otherwise quirkless discrimination wouldn't be as severe.
Reminds me of the Dragon Ball series, as humans are quickly left behind in the dust and even the last holdouts Yamcha, Krillin and as much as he counts as human Tien all either die off or retire- do any of them permenently die? I don't even know, they became such non-entities and it was all about having monkey blood just like Naruto came to be who had the best chance for a bit of incest with a certain primodial goddess who turned out to be an alien, all about who had that bod, them eyes and such.
Anime is pretty anti-human ain't it, Satima comes closest to a regular human as the hero but even he has that weird clicking thing when he exercises and his limiter is broken- I suspect his eating of monsters is responsible, I bet he ate Crablante too- the first monster he faced and the only one he seemed to fight without super strength.. until he pulled out his insides by Crablante's eye.
 
An easy example to make is how Kohei Horikoshi in his work My Hero Academia (BNHA) start with the very simple thematic premise that "anyone can be a hero" or rather that a hero can come from anywhere and then proceeds to undermine said premise by taking this quirkless character that wants to be a hero (the epitome of someone who cannot be a hero (or is not even considered viable in universe)) and gives them the Quirk of their idol the number 1 hero All Might.

I don't think that's what MHA was about, at all. It's more about societal flaws, complacency, and how surface-level beauty or safety can make cover for a flawed society, and sometimes people don't get the help they need because of that.
 
That was a bit of a kick in the nads, MHA would have been much better if Izzie rejected discount Superman with a 'Fuck you, I'm Batman' much to All Might's confusion- at least I don't think Batman is common knowledge in that universe otherwise quirkless discrimination wouldn't be as severe.
Reminds me of the Dragon Ball series, as humans are quickly left behind in the dust and even the last holdouts Yamcha, Krillin and as much as he counts as human Tien all either die off or retire- do any of them permenently die? I don't even know, they became such non-entities and it was all about having monkey blood just like Naruto came to be who had the best chance for a bit of incest with a certain primodial goddess who turned out to be an alien, all about who had that bod, them eyes and such.
Anime is pretty anti-human ain't it, Satima comes closest to a regular human as the hero but even he has that weird clicking thing when he exercises and his limiter is broken- I suspect his eating of monsters is responsible, I bet he ate Crablante too- the first monster he faced and the only one he seemed to fight without super strength.. until he pulled out his insides by Crablante's eye.

It really was, the story goes so hard on him being quirkless and wanting to be a hero and through his youth being discriminated and bullied for not having a quirk and then his friend with a strong quirk wants the same and is already considered a shoe in by the rest of society and said friend even turns on him. They're made out to be this extremely big thing that he just doesn't have and there's this ache, this need inside of him to be a hero and when his saved his childhood idol tells him "no be realistic" you can't be a hero be a police man or firefighter.

But then his ex friend is in danger and he rushes in while all the heroes just watch him and that moment, that step he took, rushing in just cause with no plan because someone needs help. More heroic than everyone watching but failing and getting punished due to not having enough skill or power to properly be heroic then getting bailed out. Genuinely I thought All Might would apologize and tell him that though it would be hard he had a future as a hero.

Making a really nice arc where even when no one believed in him (even himself) he was still heroic and the words of his idol create a small core of resolution and conviction in him that makes him strive to outshine everyone else that is trying to be a hero in spite of not having a quirk.

In general I think of anime as more "interesting" so having normal people isn't that interesting in the same vein that having a +4 firesword is cooler than a +4 sharpness sword (its the same as a normal sword just sharper... so why not just a sword?(because cool and firesword is cooler than sword so...)) and since the inherent premise is magical or ficitionalish then you can link X or Y Clan or ability or bloodline or ...etc to a MacGuffin or plot point and it becomes easier to develop the story that way and makes it easier to suspend disbelief on the readers side because you have to eat the premise to engage with the work.

The same way that you have to accept trigger events give powers in Worm in order to engage with the premise. Or in the way it is presented Taylor has bug powers, because trigger events, because shard experiments, because... etc and stacking them on the initial premise becomes easier since they build on eachother.

But back to my Worm analysis. So themes are reocurring motifs or events and since there are many arcs you can have multiple themes per arc as well as per work.

One that I personally find interesting is "Heroes are bad". Both in Taylors personal experience and more in general for the Worm verse. Or rather that heroes as we know them and as Taylor thinks of them (at the start of the story) "are not allowed to exist". And it's presence resonates through all the arcs of the work.

A rather minor theme I feel but one that defines the setting.


Edit: Or rather would it be more accurate to say that "Heroes are dead" both metaphorically and literally with the death of Hero?
 
Last edited:
One that I personally find interesting is "Heroes are bad". Both in Taylors personal experience and more in general for the Worm verse. Or rather that heroes as we know them and as Taylor thinks of them (at the start of the story) "are not allowed to exist". And it's presence resonates through all the arcs of the work.

No, it's more that labels like that aren't quite right...most major characters in Worm are genuinely trying to do the right thing, but they're callous about it, helping some people and hurting others. And people slip through the cracks, the ones that need help don't get it. You can see this with Taylor, Amy, Tattletale and Reggie, Brian and Aisha. This is discussed at the very end, during the conversation between Taylor and Contessa.
 
I don't think that's what MHA was about, at all. It's more about societal flaws, complacency, and how surface-level beauty or safety can make cover for a flawed society, and sometimes people don't get the help they need because of that.

Well lets keep the alleged central theme in mind and develop from there, "Anyone can be a hero" (or "anyone is capable of being a hero"):

Now I won't reiterate my points at the start rather I'll be going through some events.

So Izuku's hero name is literally Deku which to him and those who bullied him means useless. To Uraraka this is instead inspiring because it sounds like dekiru (can do or able to) and he proceeds to reclaim this derogatory name that meant useless and give it a new spin as his Heroic identity quite literally saying "I am not (no longer) useless. I am (or will be) a Hero." by discarding this old identity that was assigned to him and that he internalized and instead assuming the new one.

Metaphorically this signals a transition from a useless quirkless nobody to a Hero aspirant.

Then we go to Aizawa and the conflict is "are you worthy of being a Hero?" are you better than at least one other student here? And he isn't not at that moment, not without being combat incapable. He can't use his quirk at a setting that isn't on or off but he figures out a way around it and with resolve and conviction marches onwards.

Then Katsuki where the conflict is an assertion "you (quirkless, nobody, loser )are not (worthy of being) a hero" ignoring the bullying previously when they find out he applied to U.A. because he can't be a hero.

And you can look at the rest of the work in that lense.

From a societal perspective Stein asserts whenever he kills or cripples a hero that "You (fake hero) are not worthy of being a Hero." Which is dumb since if someone is going to kill you you dont particulalry care if your savior did it for a +1 to pr or for the love of the game.

Quirk law says "You are not allowed to be a Hero" not without a license (only allowed to use quirk for self defense not defense of others).

The struggle with Destro and Redestro (as well as the metahuman liberation army) can be summarized as "everyone should be allowed to use their quirks" (from an ideological perspective) with some quirkcist packaging and other side issues. And society has comformed and said "only Heroes are allowed to use their quirks" and limited who can and cannot express this part of themselves that they were born with and to go against this is to be other and to be a villain and the villainization of people for the desire to express themselves or act in a heroic fashion without a license leads back to the premise since conflict is started due to the limitations imposed on everyone.


Of course please also keep in mind that said thematic statment was inmeditately undermined by the author but I hope that this has served a quick defense as I'm not delving into antithesis statements and foils but I hope to have successfully elucidated why "Anyone can be a hero" is a valid thematic statement to take from BNHA and why I think it was undermined and that while you may not see eye to eye with me on this you can view my perspective as a valid one.

Would you mind giving your own thematic statement or analysis and why for BNHA or Worm?

Opinions are well and valid but not really of use to me if I can't see where you're coming from since I'm searching for perspective.
 
Well lets keep the alleged central theme in mind and develop from there, "Anyone can be a hero" (or "anyone is capable of being a hero"):

Idk where you got this central theme from. Everything you discussed is asking the question "what does it mean to be a hero?" rather than giving the answer of "anybody can do it" - it's the journey to find the answer.

Edit: the themes I discussed about society are hammered pretty heavily by the dependency on All Might as the Symbol of Peace and how that complacency allowed for the various issues that created the League of Villains, plus Endeavor being a competent hero and a child abuser.
 
Last edited:
No, it's more that labels like that aren't quite right...most major characters in Worm are genuinely trying to do the right thing, but they're callous about it, helping some people and hurting others. And people slip through the cracks, the ones that need help don't get it. You can see this with Taylor, Amy, Tattletale and Reggie, Brian and Aisha. This is discussed at the very end, during the conversation between Taylor and Contessa.

So what would the thematic statement be?

And people slip through the cracks was discussed at the end between Taylor and Contessa? uhm if it was it slipped over my recollection and a rereading of 30.7, is there a paragraph you could point to and interpret for me as I failed to see it?

If instead its trying to do the right thing being discussed between Taylor and Contessa I can see it. Just looking for clarity.

What I mean by "Heroes are bad" or rather "Heroes are not allowed to exist" is the platonic ideal per say. What you or I think of and what Taylor thought Armsmaster and Alexandria were. Those shining bastions of morality that would find a way to triumph over evil.

Edit: And that such shining beacons of morality are not allowed to exist.



Idk where you got this central theme from. Everything you discussed is asking the question "what does it mean to be a hero?" rather than giving the answer of "anybody" - it's the journey to find the answer.

I feel that there is a wide gap in reading comprehension between yourself and myself and what you read and what I wrote and what we both read in BNHA. Do you feel this to be accurate?

So I suppose the answer to my question is that you can not see my point of view as valid?

I got the central theme from everyhting pre All Might giving Izuku his quirk. Which should not really be contentious as the question he asks him is literally "can anyone be a hero? can I (quirkless) be a hero?" and he literally says no. Then he changes his view when he sees Izuku behaving Heroically. Then I applied said theme and it kept cropping up.

The story naturally shifts once Izuku becomes a Hero and the central theme simmers on the backburner to "What is a hero/what does it mean to be a hero" and then it takes the forefront once more on and off again throughout the story. Can X be a hero (can anybody be a hero?), should X be a hero (should anybody be a hero?), and through the literal gatekeeping of heroism (vigilantes/quirklaws) and the various interpretations of what a Hero is of various characters and whether other people are heroes to them and what they do about it.

Edit: the themes I discussed about society are hammered pretty heavily by the dependency on All Might as the Symbol of Peace and how that complacency allowed for the various issues that created the League of Villains, plus Endeavor being a competent hero and a child abuser.

Okay so your themes are...

It's more about societal flaws, complacency, and how surface-level beauty or safety can make cover for a flawed society, and sometimes people don't get the help they need because of that.

So if those are the central themes of a work we should expect them to show up fairly often and be strongly emphasized throughout it especially in the first arc or to at least be present in it.

Where are your themes present in the first arc? (Measuring from the start of the series to the end of the USJ incident at the crisis simulation.)
 
Last edited:
And people slip through the cracks was discussed at the end between Taylor and Contessa? uhm if it was it slipped over my recollection and a rereading of 30.7, is there a paragraph you could point to and interpret for me as I failed to see it?
Speck 30.7 said:
"Don't- don't regret it. Was- had to. Saved lives. But I would do different, given a chance."

She smiled, bobbing her head up and down a little. "It's always about the people, isn't it?"

"Protect some, pay less attention to others."

Her smile twisted. A little sad. "Can't bet on the wrong horse."

Not what I'd meant. "Giving too much power to wrong people. To bullies. With powers, bullies without."

She gave me a slightly surprised look at that. "I don't see that applying to Scion."

"Doesn't."

"He doesn't factor? He isn't a consideration, at the end?"

"Fighting him… always more about us than about him. Not a consideration."

Misuse of power, help some people and hurt others. Power, institutional or parahuman, does not help the people who need it.

I got the central theme from everyhting pre All Might giving Izuku his quirk. Which should not really be contentious as the question he asks him is literally "can anyone be a hero? can I (quirkless) be a hero?" and he literally says no. Then he changes his view when he sees Izuku behaving Heroically. Then I applied said theme and it kept cropping up.

...

So if those are the central themes of a work we should expect them to show up fairly often and be strongly emphasized throughout it especially in the first arc or to at least be present in it.

Where are your themes present in the first arc? (Measuring from the start of the series to the end of the USJ incident at the crisis simulation.)

Yeah, but the story doesn't just end when Izuku gets One For All. The question isn't closed. It's a journey to find the answer - what makes a hero?

As for those themes of a flawed society... Bakugo was a cool guy with a great power and a bright future, and then he almost died while the heroes kinda just waited for someone with a suitable power to try to save him. All Might being the Symbol of Peace on which Hero Society rested upon was also kind of a big deal during the USJ.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top