

Meaning that at the core of villainy is that essential imbalance. As such, that sort of logical evil or enemy of society is shunned and scorned. Unstable characters like that deviate from their pigeonholes in society and threaten to destroy the entire framework. But when an extreme and violent will stimulates a Quirk into running amok, or on the flip side, when an unruly Quirk twists a person's will to its own ends, that disparity creates a dangerous imbalance. When that will and that Quirk support each other to form a bedrock of resolve, well, those people are called heroes. Since then, All For One wants to bequeath his place to his protege, Tomura Shigaraki.Īll For One: Kurogiri, you and I may be what the good little citizens and politicians call villains, but what is a villain, really? The term is far too emotionally charged to simply describe a certain class of criminal, wouldn't you say? If that were all, why not just say "Quirk Criminal" and be done with it? I believe that the concept should be defined by a particular relationship between a person's will and their Quirk. Five years prior to the events of the main story, All Might put a stop to his reign of evil by defeating his minions and eventually the man himself in a battle that left both parties severely injured.

He had a younger brother named Yoichi Shigaraki, who opposed him and became the first wielder of One For All. Since that time, he had used his power to amass numerous devout followers, with whom he ruled the Japanese underworld from the shadows for years. Initially only heard through a computer monitor, he is eventually forced to reveal himself to save the rest of the League from capture, at the cost of his own imprisonment.Īll For One has been around since Quirks first emerged.

The founder and mastermind of the League of Villains, an infamous villain believed to be an urban legend. because you determined that he is an important pawn. That's why I've brought along your little band. There will be more chances to set things right.
