Things that Hop says:
Just warms the heart.
Arven, you better say stuff like this when Blueberry Academy time rolls around. Make that Koraidon ride pale in comparison!

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Things that Hop says:
Just warms the heart.
Arven, you better say stuff like this when Blueberry Academy time rolls around. Make that Koraidon ride pale in comparison!
just thought i’d put this beautiful moment on replay
“Just another day in @funimation !”❤️ Are you ready for the new #MyHeroAcademia #TwoHeroes movie? No Spoilers! Your #1 Hero can only tell you it will be a rollercoaster of emotions! 😄 Thanks again #FUNimation for this opportunity and for being such a #PlusUltra family! 🙌🏼 #AllMight #Movie #Midoriya #Hero #MakeUp #LeonChiro #OneForAll #Power #Strong #SuperHero #Cosplay #Art #Smile #MakeUp #Test #Preview #Hype #BokuNoHeroAcademia #Motivation (presso Funimation Entertainment) https://www.instagram.com/p/BnXdGDkHlL4/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=m19u68k2kval
Off to become the world's Symbol of Peace and Justice! Or at least see him and the others on the big screen 😁 #myheroacademia #twoheroes #allmight #nerdalert #peaceandjustice (at Portland, Oregon) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bomsrc6A8s7/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1xnu9sz01b0bo
Analysis of Samuel Abraham's Evil Actions in My Hero Academia: Two Heroes
Samuel Abraham, often referred to as Sam, is a supporting character in the My Hero Academia film Two Heroes. As David Shield's longtime assistant and fellow scientist, he initially appears as a dedicated collaborator in groundbreaking research. However, his actions during the film's events reveal a darker side driven by resentment, greed, and betrayal. Below, I'll break down his key "evil" actions—defined here as morally reprehensible choices that endanger others for personal gain—based on the provided biographical details and synopsis. This analysis focuses on his motivations, the mechanics of his schemes, and their broader implications within the story's context.
1. Betraying David Shield's Trust
Description: Sam collaborated with David on the Quirk Amplification Device, a headset that enhances Quirks without harmful side effects. After the project was shut down and confiscated due to safety concerns from I-Island's sponsors and global governments, Sam outwardly protested the decision alongside David. He then proposed staging a "fake" villain attack to retrieve the device, framing it as a way to reclaim their work for heroic purposes.
Evil Element: Unbeknownst to David, Sam secretly hired real villains (Wolfram's crew) instead of actors. This turned a deceptive but relatively low-risk plan into a genuine terrorist invasion of I-Island during the I-Expo. By misleading David, Sam exploited their professional and personal relationship, which spanned years of shared research.
Motivation: Sam's quote in the query—"I served you for so long, but you let your research be frozen so easily, and the honor and renown we were supposed to get all went away... If I didn't get at least some money, then it was a waste of my time!"—highlights his bitterness. He blamed David for not fighting harder against the shutdown, viewing their collaboration as a personal investment that demanded financial payback. This resentment transformed loyalty into opportunism.
Implications: The betrayal not only shattered their partnership but also put David's daughter, Melissa, and numerous civilians (including heroes like All Might) at risk. It underscores themes in My Hero Academia about how unchecked ambition can corrupt even those in supportive roles.
2. Orchestrating a Real Villain Invasion for Personal Gain
Description: Sam coordinated with Wolfram's crew to invade the I-Expo reception party, take hostages (including himself and David as a cover), and access the storage room where the device was sealed. He unlocked the device alongside David under the pretense of heroism but intended to hand it over to the villains.
Evil Element: By involving actual criminals, Sam escalated the situation from a heist to a full-scale attack involving violence, property damage, and potential mass casualties. This included fights throughout the tower, where Izuku Midoriya and other young heroes had to intervene. Sam's plan directly enabled Wolfram's crew to seize control of I-Island's security systems.
Motivation: Greed was central; Sam expected "monetary compensation" from Wolfram for delivering the device. He saw this as fair recompense for his "wasted" efforts, prioritizing self-interest over ethical science or public safety. His actions reflect a villainous mindset, where the ends (personal reward) justify endangering an entire island of innovators and heroes.
Implications: The invasion disrupted a global event meant to showcase support items for heroes, ironically perverting the very field Sam worked in. It also amplified the device's dangers, as villains could weaponize it—exactly what the sponsors feared. In a broader narrative sense, Sam's scheme parallels real-world ethical dilemmas in scientific research, like selling proprietary tech to malicious actors.
3. Attempting to Profit from Dangerous Technology
Description: The Quirk Amplification Device was confiscated precisely because of its potential misuse. Sam, aware of this, still pursued its recovery not for altruistic reasons (as David believed) but to trade it for money.
Evil Element: Handing over such a powerful tool to villains like Wolfram could have led to widespread chaos, empowering criminals' Quirks and tipping the balance against heroes. Sam's complicity in this exchange shows a willful disregard for societal consequences, making him an enabler of villainy rather than a mere opportunist.
Motivation: Stemming from entitlement, Sam felt undervalued in his role as David's assistant. The device's shutdown represented lost "honor and renown," but he fixated on tangible rewards, revealing a materialistic worldview that devalues collaborative science.
Implications: Although Wolfram double-crossed him by attempting to shoot him, Sam's plan indirectly led to David taking a bullet to save him. This moment highlights the irony: Sam's evil actions nearly cost him his life, yet elicited heroism from his victim. It also forces reflection on redemption—Sam's surprise at David's sacrifice suggests possible regret, but the film leaves his ultimate fate "unknown," implying unresolved moral ambiguity.
Overall Assessment
Sam's actions qualify as "evil" within the My Hero Academia framework because they stem from selfish betrayal and endanger innocents, contrasting sharply with the series' emphasis on heroism through selflessness. Unlike outright villains like Wolfram, who revel in destruction, Sam's villainy is more insidious: a "goodhearted" scientist corrupted by resentment and greed. His scheme wasn't born from inherent malice but from a perceived injustice, making him a cautionary tale about how unaddressed grievances can lead to moral compromise.
Wolfram... is Wolfram. There is nothing much to really say; he’s an antagonist in the regular terms. Even the creator agrees. Anyhow, his powers, appearance, and skills are cool. He doesn't play around too much with his enemies and is a skilled mercenary with a group of lackeys. But that’s really it. He’s a very flat character. While it's cool to make him more than such, I tend to just make him a lackey in MHA AUs (Alternate Universes). Though sometimes he is friends with Nine.
Swordkil is okay; he has a simple Quirk but is a threat nonetheless. He’s similar to street thugs, except he's far more intelligent and threatening. That’s really it for the villain who is Wolfram's second-in-command. That said, what makes them a threat is that despite their lack of overpowered abilities, they are still pragmatic in attacking heroes.
Daigo and Nobu were both cool for different reasons.
Daigo is basically the Incredible Hulk, which immediately makes him cool since the Hulk is my favorite Marvel character. Nobu just reminds me of Simian from Ben 10.