4 Answers2025-11-05 03:15:32
If you want a straightforward path to drawing Deku, I’ve got a go-to routine I use that turns messy scribbles into something recognizable without overcomplicating things.
I start with basic shapes — an oval for the head, a light cross for eye placement, and a rectangle for the torso. From there I block in the hair mass; Deku’s hair is spiky but rounded at the tips, so I sketch loose zigzags and then refine them into clumps. Next I break his face into thirds to place the big, expressive eyes typical of 'My Hero Academia', adding the signature forehead scar and freckles. For the body I think in cylinders: neck, shoulders, arms, then add his school uniform or hero costume as simplified shapes before detailing. Shading is minimal at first: flat shadows under the chin and around the hairline.
For guided material I like a mix: a short YouTube step-by-step for pacing, a Pinterest step-layer image for reference, and a DeviantArt or Tumblr breakdown for pose ideas. If you want specific practice drills, I do 10-minute face studies, 5-minute hair clump sketches, and then a single full-body pose once I feel comfortable. That combo — structure, focused drills, and reference layering — is what finally turned my scribbly Deku into something I’d actually post. It’s honestly so satisfying when the eyes start to feel alive.
4 Answers2025-11-05 16:08:45
Picking up a pencil and trying to copy Deku's poses is honestly one of the most fun ways kids can learn how bodies move. I started by breaking his silhouette into simple shapes — a circle for the head, ovals for the torso and hips, and thin lines for the limbs — and that alone made a huge difference. For small hands, focusing on the gesture first (the big action line) helps capture the energy before worrying about costume details from 'My Hero Academia'.
After the gesture, I like to add joint marks at the shoulders, elbows, hips, and knees so kids can see where bending happens. Encouraging them to exaggerate a little — stretch a pose or tilt a torso — makes copying easier and gives a cartoony, confident look. Using light lines, erasing, and redrawing is part of the process, and tracing is okay as a stepping stone if it's paired with attempts to redraw freehand.
Give them short timed exercises: 30 seconds for quick gestures, 2 minutes to clean up, and one longer 10-minute pose to refine. Pairing this with fun references like action figures or freeze-framing a 'My Hero Academia' scene makes practice feel like play. I still get a rush when a sketch finally looks alive, and kids will too.
4 Answers2025-11-05 16:30:23
Let me walk you through my favorite setup for drawing Deku if you want something simple but effective.
I start with a couple of pencils: an HB or B for construction lines and a 2B or 4B for darker linework and quick shading. A small, soft kneaded eraser and a clean vinyl eraser are lifesavers — kneaded for gentle highlights and vinyl for stubborn marks. For paper, a smooth sketchbook or a sheet of Bristol (smooth surface) keeps lines crisp and works well if you decide to ink. For inking I like thin-felt pens (0.1–0.5) and a brush pen for hair strands and dynamic line weight. If you want color later, cheap alcohol markers or a handful of colored pencils (greens, skin tones, and a few neutrals) cover Deku’s palette.
For easy tutorials, pick ones that break Deku down into simple shapes: circle for the skull, cross-line for facial direction, rectangles for the torso. Tracing paper or a window tracing method is perfect for early practice, and a lightbox is a nice upgrade. Practice expression sheets, three-quarter head rotations, and quick gesture poses to capture his energy from 'My Hero Academia'. I find this combo keeps the process fun and not intimidating, and I usually end up smiling at the results.
4 Answers2025-11-05 15:56:52
I get a real kick out of digging up references, and for 'Deku' there's a goldmine if you know where to look. Start with anime frames: queue up scenes from 'My Hero Academia' on YouTube, slow them to 0.25x and use the comma and period keys to step frame-by-frame. I make a small folder of screenshots — run, punch, breath, expression — and they become my go-to animation references.
Besides screenshots, I lean on pose apps like Easy Poser or DesignDoll to recreate tricky foreshortening; you can tweak limb lengths until the silhouette reads like the anime. For facial and costume details, Pixiv and Instagram hashtags like #dekudrawing or #izukumidoriya are full of stylistic studies and expression sheets. I also use GIF extractors (ezgif.com) to pull a handful of keyframes from fight sequences; then I trace loosely to learn motion flow before drawing freehand. Pro tip: import the keyframes into Krita or Procreate, turn down the opacity and onion-skin the next frame — your in-betweens will feel way more natural. This workflow keeps things simple yet accurate, and I always end up smiling at how much more confident my sketches look.
4 Answers2025-11-05 03:04:43
I find that practice is the single most useful thing you can do to get better at drawing Deku in simple comic panels. When I break it down, what really changed my work was doing tiny, focused drills: quick gesture sketches for 60 seconds, three-frame expressions, and practicing the same punch pose from different angles. Those little repetitions build muscle memory so you stop overthinking every line and let the character feel alive.
I also mixed study with play: I’d pull frames from the 'My Hero Academia' manga and anime to see how the artist handles speed lines, head tilts, and panel layout, then I’d redraw them as simplified thumbnails. Thumbnailing helped me decide what to show and what to cut away. Over weeks you’ll notice your storytelling improves — pacing, camera choices, and facial clarity. It’s satisfying to watch a page go from messy sketches to readable, punchy panels, and I still get a kick out of tiny wins like cleaner expressions or better motion.
5 Answers2025-11-05 06:58:39
I've always been moved by how 'Orange' handles loss, and if you're asking who actually dies in the original timeline that the letters try to change, the central tragedy is Kakeru Naruse. In the world the future Naho writes from, Kakeru dies by suicide, and those older friends carry that grief into the letters they send back. That death is the engine of the whole story — it's what motivates every intervention, every awkward conversation, and every small kindness they try to reroute into a different future.
Beyond Kakeru, the only other notable death we learn about is Kakeru's mother, who died before the main events and whose loss deeply shapes him. Other main-group characters — Naho, Suwa, Azusa, Takako, Hagita — don't die in the original narrative; their arcs are about coping, guilt, and trying to save someone they love. The emotional weight of those losses (one past, one imminent in the original timeline) is what gives 'Orange' its ache. For me, that juxtaposition — past grief shaping present danger — is what keeps the story lingering in my mind.
3 Answers2025-11-06 00:39:35
That Red Wedding scene still hits like a gut-punch for me. I can picture the Twins, the long wooden hall, the uneasy politeness — and then that slow, impossible collapse into slaughter. In the 'Game of Thrones' TV version, Robb Stark is betrayed at his own peace-hosting: Walder Frey opens the gates to murder, the Freys and Boltons turn on the Stark forces, and when the massacre is at its darkest Roose Bolton steps forward and drives a dagger into Robb's chest, killing him outright. He even delivers that chilling line, "The Lannisters send their regards," which seals how deep the conspiracy ran. The band plays 'The Rains of Castamere' as a signal; the music still gives me chills.
What always stung was how avoidable it felt. Robb was young, tired from war, and stretched thin — the betrayal exploited both his honor and his military weaknesses. The show amplifies the brutality by killing other loved ones in the hall too and by desecrating Grey Wind's body afterwards; it becomes not just a political coup but a crushing emotional massacre. In the books the betrayal also occurs in 'A Storm of Swords' and the broad strokes are similar, though details and some characters differ.
Watching or rereading those chapters makes me think about the costs of idealism in politics and how storytelling uses shock to rewrite a world. It broke me then and I still catch my breath when the bells toll in that scene.
4 Answers2025-11-05 01:45:27
I was pretty shaken the day I first read the news about Aziz ‘Zyzz’ Shavershian — it felt like the internet lost one of its biggest party‑hearted gym icons. He collapsed in a sauna while vacationing in Thailand on August 5, 2011, and was only 22. The official report listed the cause of death as sudden cardiac death due to a previously undiagnosed congenital heart defect; basically his heart had an underlying abnormality that led to fatal cardiac arrest.
People will always debate whether steroid use, stimulants, dehydration, or the heat from the sauna played a role. Those theories got a lot of airtime because Zyzz was such a visible figure in bodybuilding culture, but the formal finding focused on the congenital condition as the immediate cause. I remember scanning forums where folks alternated between mourning, mythmaking, and trying to learn medical facts.
What stays with me is how his death reminded many in the scene to take cardiac checks seriously — especially if you push hard in the gym or use performance drugs. For me, it’s a sad mix of admiration for his charisma and a cautionary note about health, and I still miss the energy he brought to the community.