Analysis: The Creature Rejection Clan (CRC)
And Whether Spinner’s Actions After the War Could Revive Them
1. Who and What Was the CRC?
Full name: “Heteromorph Rejectionist Ideology Group”
A pre-quirk-era hate cult that survived into modern times
Core belief: Mutant-type (heteromorphic) Quirks = “impure,” “monstrous,” sub-human
They wore monk robes + skull masks, held “purification” ceremonies, and committed hate crimes
By the time we see them in the manga (chapter 218), they’re a pathetic shadow: broke, tiny, scattered into even more extreme splinter groups (“Animal Rejection Clan,” “Face Border Clan,” etc.)
The League literally walks into their temple, insults them, robs them, and slaughters every single member on-screen in about five pages. They die so unceremoniously that Tomura complains they didn’t even have anything worth stealing.
Official status after that massacre: 100 % extinct. No known survivors, no leadership, no money, no public support.
2. Why They Were Already Dead Before the League Showed Up
Society moved on. Mutant heroes like Gang Orca, Hound Dog, and Tsuyu are nationally beloved.
Overt heteromorph discrimination became socially unacceptable (at least on the surface).
The CRC became the equivalent of flat-earthers or KKK chapters in 2025: everyone knows they exist, but literally no one takes them seriously except the few dozen losers still wearing the robes.
3. Spinner’s Actions After the Final War – The Spark That Changes Everything
Here’s what actually happens post-war (manga chapters 412–427 + epilogue):
Spinner is the only League member left alive and free.
He writes and publishes a book: “The League of Villains – The Story of Shuichi Iguchi”
The book becomes a massive underground bestseller among angry, discriminated-against heteromorphs.
Giant heteromorph riots break out across the country (we see panels of thousands marching, burning cars, attacking “normal” people and police).
The old lady from Spinner’s rural hometown narrates that “the hatred and anger that had been bottled up for years finally exploded.”
An 8-year-old heteromorph child is shown reading Spinner’s book and saying “I want to be like Spinner when I grow up.”
Result: The biggest wave of heteromorph extremism in modern Japanese history is directly caused by Spinner’s memoir.
4. Could the CRC Actually Come Back Because of This?
Short answer: Yes, but not as the CRC. Something far worse will take its place.
Here’s the breakdown: FactorOld CRC (pre-war)Post-Spinner Landscape (now)Public supportAlmost zeroSuddenly massive among poor/disenfranchised heteromorphsMoneyBrokeUnknown, but riots show organization and fundingIdeology“All mutants are monsters”“Humans oppressed us → now we fight back” (reverse discrimination)Recruitment poolA few hundred craziesMillions of angry heteromorphs who feel the system failed themLeadershipDead cult priestsNo clear leader yet, but Spinner is now a martyr/icon
The original CRC is still dead. Nobody is digging up the skull masks. But the exact same hatred they represented has now flipped 180 degrees:
Old CRC: “Mutants should die because they’re freaks.” New movement (implied): “Humans should suffer because they made us feel like freaks.”
Conclusion
The Creature Rejection Clan as we knew it is gone forever — Tomura made sure of that. But Spinner’s actions after the war planted something much bigger, much angrier, and much more popular.
The CRC didn’t come back from the grave. It evolved.















