Tensei Iida seemed like a pretty decent guy and hero.
>>155751375
I think it was about the fact thatStainsaw him as a symbol of prestige rather than heroism.
>>155751431
It still seems kind of picky from stain.
I mean he was one of the few heroes we have seem who has used teamwork to this extent.
Though I guess that makes him more akin to a police force officer than a Hero.
>>155751756Stainis probably just an All Might -fanboy gone bad.
Like, seriously:
>ONLY ALL MIGHT HAS THE RIGHT TO BEAT ME
>>155752067
He still have standards and an ideology.
Though it was all based on all might.
And as much as I love all might he IS dedicated to his role as a hero to an obsesive point.
So maybe Tensei just wasn't try hard enough about being a hero.
I would like to see the moment he faces Stain in illegals though.
>>155752067
He decided that not only Midorya is worth keeping alive, but Todoroki too, so it's not like AM is the only one he respects. I'm guessing he didn't like Tensei, because he had a large office and belongs to a rich family. Also he said to Iida that he intended Tensei to stay alive.
Tensei was weak.
>>155751375
He didn't respect the rules
>>155751375
Cuz Stain a fucking shit. SHIIIIT
>>155753215
Yeah Tensei wasn't particulary strong as an individual, he was more of a strong leader type.
Hey, now that I think about it shouldn't All might be super rich with all of the merchandise to his name?
>>155754133
He donated all his profits.
>>155754030
>>155754168
Sasuga Toshinori.
>>155751375
is he actually dead?
Tensei represented the establishment of heroes who do their job for fame and glory. Which is nothing wrong, but it is in Stain's eyes since his paragon of virtue is All Might who was the literal symbol of peace and justice who did it for the people.
>>155751375
Cause Stain has a "Guilty unless proven innocent" kind of justice.
He threatened Iida's life straight of the bat.
He had not entirely malicious ideals but he was still an indiscriminate killer.
>>155754380
Paralyzed from the waist down.
>>155751375
>>155751756
He wasn't necessary. Point is, a lot of heroes that Stain claims are phonies could be deemed worthy if he just gave them a chance. But by default, he judge them as being fakes.
Stain isn't wrong but he's not right either.
>>155755020
It'd be more accurate to say he's both.
He's wrong on everything regarding his methods, but in terms of intent he's right on one thing: the current society propagates a lot of self serving heroes, which opens the way to corruption, see: Endeavor using his hero status to force a woman to marry him and play eugenics.
It hasn't come up outside of Endeavor yet (hell pretty much every named hero so far has had a moment emphasizing they are in fact in it for saving others), but I predict sooner or later, whether through Endeavor or maybe an arc following Stain escaping, we'll see more examples of corruption running deep in the hero industry.
For now it's awkward tho, cause outside of Endeavor (who we don't know if Stain even cared about, he might just have a stern reputation rather than a malicious one), not a single one of Stain's named targets feel justified in the slightest.
Looking at these now hits a little harder.
>>155756145
Oh he does care for Endeavor.
Or at the very least is one of his targets.
>>155756620
Oh, I must've missed that! Thanks.
>>155756658
Np glad it helped.
>>155756620
Oh wow I never noticed Endeavor was straight up willing to attack Stain even if it put Izuku at risk.
>>155756807
Oh yeah he jumped the gun super hard.
Also that makes 2 times stain has saved Izuku.
>>155751375
Stain was never meant to be right. Stain was culling heroes, you have to remember, it wasn't simply a matter of cleaning out guys like Endeavor who leveraged their status, but also getting rid of people who didn't meet his criteria of hero otherwise.
The reason Tensei got Stain'd probably did have to do with him being part of a company that made heroes into a community service. Even though they're by all means selfless people doing good deeds, their existence goes directly against Stain's idea of heroes being inspiring icons, because they effectively make heroes into regular people.