My Hero Academia season 5About Daily Life at UA
My Hero Academia's UA is such an interesting school. What is day to day life like there?
The superhero animated series My Hero Academia brings us a world where quirks (superpowers) are commonplace, and this means a lot of villains and heroes alike with special powers. While villains use their quirks for crime and personal gain, heroes are the professionals who keep the peace on the streets. How does one become a pro hero? By graduating from a heroics school, such as UA and Shiketsu.
This puts My Hero Academia in the "magic high school" category as well as the superhero genre, and the students of hero class 1-A often get the limelight at UA, from leading man Izuku Midoriya to Katuski Bakugo and Momo Yaoyorozu. But now we wonder: since this is a high school in a quirk-filled world, how similar is it to our real-life schools, and how might it differ? We know the names and faces of the teachers, and we loved the Sports Festival arc, but the little details are often what bring a place to UA to life. Here's what we wonder about life there.
10Is There A Band?
What's life without a little music? This guy is Present Mic, the English teacher at UA, and he loves radio and DJ stuff, even during the Sports Festival. To him, louder is better, and we would like to know if UA has a band class to match.
Did you join your high school's marching band? It can be really fun to play an instrument with your classmates and make some great music, and it really spices up home football games. If UA's non-heroics students can't have fun practicing hero work, they can at least make some noise.
9Are There Regular Sports Teams?
Mina Ashido sure is having a great time, isn't she? This girl did well at the Sports Festival, and we bet she'd also love to join a soccer team or volleyball team at UA, too. Sports are great exercise and teach sportsmanship to students, after all.
There are many aspects to high school life that we're not sure are present in UA or not, and that includes good old sports. There can only be so many quirk-battle tournaments, so why not fill the stadium for a tennis match or soccer game in between battles?
8What Is Midnight's Class Like?
Midnight is the art teacher at UA, and we're sure that her classes are a lot of fun. She is excitable and creative, and she has a hysterical personality (and she loves kids). We're sure that her art classes are a fine educational experience, but we have yet to see one on-screen.
Art class is an excellent time to express yourself or the society you live in, and artistically inclined students can learn a lot of essential skills in a class like this. And if you've got a quirk, that can add some unique angles to art, such as using Mina's acid or Sero's tape or Shoto's fire to make a unique statue or sculpture. We can picture Bakugo getting impatient with this class and throwing paint onto a canvas, Jackson Pollock style.
7What Is Detention Like?
Aizawa is one stern homeroom teacher, and we are sure that he'd be quick to hand out detentions to any troublemaking students. He's a new teacher, too, so maybe he gives out a lot of them to make an impression and discourage bad behavior before it starts.
Detention is no fun, but in works of fantasy, detention scenes can be creative and unique, such as requiring a student to help with chores or mundane tasks like that... until a plot twist happens! If you act out in Aizawa's class, or Vlad King's class, you're in for it... we imagine.
6How Many Students?
Based on all those UA students we saw during the Sports Festival, we saw quite a few classes beyond either class 1-A or class 1-B, and most of those other classes are based on business studies, general education, and the like. Students there are not about to save the day while wearing a cape.
Just how many classes are there, though? Does it go all the way from A to Z for each grade level, or does it stop after a point? We've seen some pretty crowded hallways and cafeteria scenes within the walls of UA, after all, and we wonder if there may be something like 2,000 students there?
5Are Any Villainous UA Alumni?
Many villains are outcasts who felt that they never belonged in society after all, and they go rogue, making their own rules. Often, they use their quirks to steal, harm others, and in general wreak havoc on society for their own benefit. They're the opposite of upstanding citizens.
But a question comes to mind: are any villains bitter UA dropouts who were told, "you're not good enough?" We can picture a student getting kicked out of the school, and they try to prove themselves by becoming powerful on the other side of the law. Maybe even the likes of Dabi or Himiko or Mustard once considered going to UA or even applied, until other factors changed the course of their lives.
4Are There More Nurses?
Pictured is Recovery Girl, a petite older woman with an outstanding quirk. With a kiss, she can mend flesh, including repairing broken bones. Her power is finite, though; major injuries still need splints and bandages, even after the application of her healing quirk.
But does Recovery Girl operate alone? She really has her hands full with classes 1-A and 1-B, not to mention second and third-year heroics students. We wonder if "regular" nurses are on hand to help with multiple injured students once Recovery Girl has finished using her quirk.
3When Was It Built?
Okay, technically this is a question about the school as a whole, but we're really curious. Pictured is a flashback of Eijiro Kirishima, and by now, we've seen flashbacks for many characters at UA, even All Might, Present Mic, and Aizawa. What's tricky is determining the time frame for all this, since we're seeing a near-future setting with high-tech robots and the likes of Mei Hatsuma's equipment.
UA must have been built right after quirks started appearing, but we can't figure out a decade for this. The 1960s? The '70s? Later? In fact, it's possible that this school hasn't even been built yet in the real-world timeline at all.
2Are There Parent-Teacher Conferences?
It was one thing for All Might and Aizawa to visit the families of class 1-A's students and explain the villain danger to them, to check whether the parents still want their children to remain at UA. But this is the only time we've seen much of the parents thus far.
Real schools have parent-teacher conferences all the time, and we want to see scenes of Mitsuki Bakugo or Inko Midoriya or Kyoka Jiro's cool parents showing up during parent-teacher conference day. Maybe UA is totally different from when the parents attended this school. Or they may be envious that they never got to enroll here when they were younger!
1Is There A Student Newspaper?
You might remember this from your high school days, too. Many high schools feature a newspaper staffed by students, and they can take a journalism class to learn how to crank out articles about student interests and campus events. Colleges do this, too.
Why not UA? We'll bet that some of the non-hero students in the mass communications class are learning to become proper journalists, and with the likes of class 1-A around, those headlines must be incredible. Such as coverage of the Sports Festival: "KATSUKI BAKUGO OF CLASS 1-A WINS TOURNAMENT, REJECTS MEDAL". We'll bet Bakugo declined to comment.
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