they both think theyre the most normal guy in the room
My Mha OC
Name: Atsuki Aname
Hero Name: Terra or Gala (Tear-ah… Gahlah)
Age: 16
Species: Human
Pronouns: She/her/they/them
Sexuality: (Closeted) Bisexual
Gender: Female
Height: 170 cm (5’ 7”)
Body Build: Athletic to Muscular
Distinguishing Marks: Black dots under eyes (is it makeup? No one knows…)
Personality: Serious; a mix of Bakugo, Mina, and Jirou
Favorite Color: Dark, monotone colors
Birthday: 1/12
Hair Color: Blonde
Eye Color: VERY DARK teal; looks almost black
Style: Down town
Powers (Quirk): Geokinesis(Terrakinesis)
Favorite Food: Spicy Ramen
Nationality/Ethnicity: Dad is American, Mom is Japanese
Favorite Song/Genre: Rock, RnB
Weakness: Inhuman amounts of heat or coldness (VERY hot or cold temps)
Occupation: Student at U.A.
Love Interest: Momo?
Good Personality Traits: Strong, Intelligent, Strategic, etc
Bad Personality Traits: Blunt,
Likes: Music, Working out, Drawing
Dislikes: Too sweet of food, The News, big spiders, heat (hot weather)
Backstory: Atsuki Aname was born in America but moved to Musutafu, Japan, to attend the prestigious U.A. High School. A top student in middle school, she consistently excelled academically and physically, often outperforming her peers, including many boys. Her dream of becoming a hero was shaped by a tragic event in her childhood—her parents were killed by a villain, leaving her in the care of her uncle, Kei. As her mother’s brother, Kei already lived in Japan, providing Atsuki with the perfect opportunity to pursue her goal of becoming a pro hero. Driven by both her personal loss and an unwavering resolve, Atsuki is determined to honor her parents’ memory and protect others from suffering the same fate.
Details/abilities she can do with her Quirk?
Since her quirk is Geokinesis, she can pretty much manipulate any type of earth. Whether it’s lava, sand, mud, stone, or even metal.
What Parts of their childhood trigger them?
Anytime she sees the news (she found out her parents died on the news) she has small panic attacks but as she gets older she has learned to control it better, even if she slips up sometimes, and try’s to stay away from the news television by asking everyone in the dorms to not watch the news in front of her. (It was mostly Jirou who asked but Atsuki is forever grateful for it)
How do they treat themselves when they’re feeling sad?
Atsuki would either do 3 things: one, go to Momo or Jirou and ask if they could chill and listen to music, two, she would tell Kirishima or possibly Bakugo that she is going blow off steam in the gym, and three, she would go make herself her comfort meal (spicy chicken ramen) and go watch a movie to cheer herself up.
What parts of themselves do they tend to hide?
Atsuki tends to hide how touch starved she was. Since her parents had died when she was young she didn’t get much of the parental love that she longed for.
How do they punish themselves when they make mistakes?
Atsuki would usually punish herself by doing most hardcore workouts and work on her weaknesses. She hates being underestimated because she is a woman so she trains painfully hard to prove how strong she really is.
Who are they loyal to? Why?
Atsuki is most loyal to Momo, Jirou, Sero, and Kirishima. Other than that she has brother-sister vibes with Katsuki and studies with Izuku, Iida, Uraraka, and Todoroki.
What emotions or situations do they try to avoid? Why?
She gets really nervous when someone brings up the topic of sexuality or even dating. It’s not that she isn’t happy for who ever was dating in the dorms it’s just that she was a closeted bisexual so she was too scared to come out to the class.
What angers them?
When she is belittled because she is a woman, when a man is disrespecting a woman (feminist Atsuki we stan), and when a villain just kills just to kill.
What are their insecurities?
She’s insecure about being looked down on for being a woman and that she isn’t following the ‘girly’ standards. She’s also insecure about her thighs, and how tall she is (being the tallest girl in the class; around Bakugo’s height)
What is their relationship with their family like?
Since her parents had died at such a young age she was left to be taken care of by her uncle, Kei, who was not married or engaged so he was now a single father who worked for the journalism sections in the newspapers. Kei usually had crappy hours so Atsuki was usually left by herself to eat her comfort food, spicy chicken ramen. (It was her and her dads favorite food)
What kind of people do they tend to gravitate towards?
Atsuki tends to gravitate towards more talkative people since she is socially awkward she wants someone to keep the conversations flowing. (For example: Izuku, Denki, Sero, Kirishima, Momo)
What do they like/dislike about themselves?
Likes: Her hair, her eyes, her biceps, her muscular legs, height, etc, etc
Dislikes: Her height, her thighs etc etc
Note: I really hope no one thinks she has main character energy or smth just because she is a feminist and what not ‘omg she’s trying so hard to be sooo different’ like bro-
My queens 🤭
Teal. Black. Black. Teal. Black
what is your eye color. what is your favorite color. what is the color that appears most frequently in your wardrobe. what color is your favorite blanket. what color is your water bottle.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
I went back to my roots and rewatched season 1 and remembered why I love these two's relationship so much. Their friendship was born out of trust. He saved her, she saved him back and isn't that just beautiful. I would even dare to say she was his very first mutual friend
٩(ˊᗜˋ*)و ♡
And before you say "ummm actually Bakugo's the first person he trusted" no, Bakugo is the fist person he KNOWS in school, not trust
Alright, let’s break this down. If Izuku Midoriya had been born a girl, the entire conversation about Bakugo and Izuku’s relationship would be completely different. The ship wars? The debates over whether it’s platonic or romantic? They wouldn’t even exist. Instead, Bakudeku would be praised as one of the greatest slow-burn rival-to-lovers stories in anime history.
Why? Because fandom—and honestly, media in general—has a massive double standard when it comes to male friendships versus male-female dynamics. If two male characters have intense emotional ties, it’s almost always framed as “just friendship,” even when the relationship is filled with deep emotions, personal growth, and the kind of tension that would make any heterosexual pairing an obvious romance. But when a male and female character have that same dynamic? It’s immediately viewed as romantic, or at the very least, something that could become romantic.
Now, let’s apply that logic to Bakugo and Izuku.
The Classic Rival-to-Lovers Trope
Rivals-to-lovers is one of the most beloved tropes in fiction. People love the idea of two characters who start off on opposite sides, clashing and challenging each other, only to grow in ways that make them understand one another. It’s a dynamic full of passion, tension, and deep emotional shifts.
Bakugo and Izuku fit this trope perfectly. They have history. They have misunderstandings. They have emotional wounds tied to each other. And most importantly, they push each other to grow in ways no one else can.
If Izuku were a girl, their dynamic would be seen as peak shonen romance. You’d have the stubborn, fiery rival (Bakugo) and the determined, compassionate protagonist (Izuku). Fans would swoon over the idea of “childhood friends turned rivals turned lovers.” The same way shonen anime often teases romance between a male protagonist and his female rival, people would fully expect Bakugo and Fem!Izuku to end up together.
Instead of people saying, “Bakugo hates Izuku too much for it to be romantic,” the conversation would flip. People would say, “His anger comes from deep-rooted feelings he doesn’t understand,” or “He pushes her away because he actually cares too much.” You know, exactly the way people talk about every male tsundere love interest in anime history.
The “I Push You Away Because I Care” Trope
Speaking of tsunderes—Bakugo is one. He’s emotionally stunted, struggles with vulnerability, and lashes out instead of expressing his feelings properly. But that’s part of why his relationship with Izuku is so compelling.
If Izuku were a girl, the narrative of “I’m cruel to you because I don’t know how to deal with my feelings” would be obvious. It’s the same thing we see in dozens of other anime relationships. If we swapped Izuku for a female protagonist, Bakugo’s behavior would be framed as frustration at his own feelings—because he sees this girl, someone he once thought was weak, surpassing his expectations and making him feel things he doesn’t want to confront.
People would romanticize the idea of Bakugo slowly realizing that his anger isn’t just about rivalry—it’s about admiration, about the fear of losing the person who has always been by his side, even when he didn’t deserve it.
The Moments That Would Be Seen as Romantic
Now let’s talk about specific moments in My Hero Academia that would hit completely differently if Izuku were a girl.
1. The “Stay Out of My Way” Scene
• Right at the start of the series, Bakugo tells Izuku to stay out of his way, acting like he doesn’t care. But the moment Izuku does get stronger, Bakugo reacts with frustration, jealousy, and confusion. If Izuku were a girl, this would immediately be framed as the classic tsundere doesn’t know how to handle his crush getting stronger than him trope.
2. The Training Camp Rescue
• When Bakugo gets kidnapped, Izuku loses it. She throws herself into danger without hesitation. In anime with male-female dynamics, this is always romanticized—the idea of someone willing to risk everything to save the person they care about. If Fem!Izuku had done this for Bakugo, shippers would be screaming about how much she loves him.
3. The Rematch at Ground Beta
• This is the moment that solidifies their relationship as something deeper than just rivalry. Bakugo finally opens up, revealing his guilt, his frustration, his fear that he wasn’t strong enough to prevent All Might’s fall. He chooses to be vulnerable with Izuku, something he doesn’t do with anyone else. If Izuku were a girl, people would instantly call this a love confession in disguise—Bakugo breaking down his walls for the one person who has always truly understood him.
4. The “You’re the Best” Moment
• When Bakugo acknowledges Izuku’s strength and says, “You’re the best,” it’s already a huge deal in canon. But if Izuku were a girl? People would be calling it one of the most romantic moments in shonen anime. A rival who once belittled the protagonist finally admitting that she’s incredible? That’s classic love interest energy.
The Double Standard in Fandom
We’ve seen this pattern before. Other anime have had rivalries where, because one character was a girl, the tension was immediately read as romantic. Look at Sasuke and Naruto—people often compare them to Bakugo and Izuku, but because both are male, the default reading is “brotherhood.” Now imagine if Naruto had been a girl. People would have demanded that ship be canon.
Even in My Hero Academia itself, we see this with ships like IzuOcha—because Ochako is a girl, every moment of concern or admiration she shows for Izuku is interpreted as romance. But when Izuku shows the same concern for Bakugo, suddenly it’s just friendship? The logic doesn’t hold.
So Why Isn’t Bakudeku Universally Shipped?
Because they’re both male. That’s it. That’s the reason.
If the exact same story played out, line for line, but Izuku were a girl, there wouldn’t be debates. People wouldn’t be arguing about whether their relationship is platonic or romantic. It would obviously be romantic-coded. Bakudeku would be the top ship in the fandom, no contest.
Instead, because it’s two guys, there’s resistance. People are more comfortable interpreting their bond as “brotherly” because that fits the traditional mold of shonen anime. But in reality? Their story, their dynamic, their growth together—it all fits the framework of a deep, complex, and undeniably compelling love story.
Conclusion
At the end of the day, it all comes down to the way people perceive relationships in fiction. Male-female tension? Always a potential romance. Male-male tension? Almost always downplayed as friendship. If Izuku had been a girl, Bakudeku wouldn’t just be a ship—it would be the ship.
And honestly? That just proves how strong their dynamic actually is. Because even without the gender swap, people still see it. They still feel the connection, the emotion, the weight of their story. And that’s what makes it real.
Man’s needs to lock tf in bruh
i’m in love with the fact that this shows the different heights of all the boys. izuku is so short compared to iida, shoto and katsuki
DROP THE APP/WEBSITE YOU USE AND YOUR BRUSHES PLEASE 🙏
might actually
𓆉𓆝 𓆟 𓆞 𓆝 𓆟𓇼 •Atsuki Aname•She/They • Pinterest) @art3mis_twt • Artist; Writer; Rp/Blog•1/12 (Capricorn) 𓆉𓆝 𓆟 𓆞 𓆝 𓆟𓇼
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