4 回答2026-06-23 09:39:32
Ugh, the endless psychological torment some writers put Aizawa through in these is something else. You've got him grappling with his whole 'logical ruse' philosophy, trying to square his protective instincts with his belief in letting kids learn through harsh experience. Seeing Midoriya's self-destructive zeal up close forces a reevaluation he never signed up for.
Then there's the whole mentor-guilt spiral. If they're paired romantically, it adds this extra layer of 'I am so, so fired and also possibly a monster.' The age/power differential gets mined for maximum angst about corruption and crossing lines. But honestly? I sometimes skip those. I'm here for the quieter tension of two people who communicate primarily through action having to actually use words. When it's done right, it's less about grand drama and more about the sheer, awkward terror of admitting you care too much in a way the rulebook never covered.
My favorite conflicts are actually the external ones—how they'd hide it from the school, the other students, especially Bakugou. The fear of ruining Midoriya's future or Aizawa's career creates a different, more practical kind of pressure cooker.
4 回答2026-07-01 15:34:16
Popular tropes for Mx Joke and Aizawa? Oh, this is such a fun one because they've got that whole 'sunshine vs grump' dynamic locked down. A ton of fics lean into the 'grumpy one is soft for the sunshine one' trope. You'll see a lot of scenarios where Aizawa gets sick or injured and Emi is just annoyingly persistent about caring for him, which is a classic. There's also a surprising amount of fics that play with the idea of them having been in a secret relationship during their U.A. days, a 'what could have been' that gets rekindled later. I've also noticed a lot of people love putting them in fake dating or marriage of convenience plots, usually for some mission or to keep the media off Aizawa's back. It always ends with him begrudgingly admitting he doesn't want to pretend anymore. The forced proximity trope shows up a lot too—like they get stuck sharing a hotel room on a mission or during a storm. It's all about that slow, irritated erosion of his walls.
One niche trope I see popping up sometimes is 'Aizawa actually finds her jokes funny.' Not just a single chuckle, but he's the only one who truly gets her incredibly specific, often dark, sense of humor. It becomes their little secret language. It's less about grand romantic gestures and more about this quiet, mutual understanding that nobody else is privy to. That one always feels a bit more character-centric to me, which I prefer over some of the more generic fluff.
4 回答2026-07-01 01:11:21
One thing I keep coming across in MHA fics featuring Joke and Aizawa is the awkward hilarity of their history. She was his senior at U.A., right? That flips the usual teacher-student script before they even become colleagues. A lot of stories play with that—she knows this incredibly serious, grumpy man from when he was a scrawny, sleep-deprived kid, and he has to deal with her relentless cheerfulness as a peer now. It’s not a traditional authority imbalance; it’s more about two professionals who have a weirdly intimate past.
What I find interesting is how the ‘teacher’ angle often gets explored through their students, not directly between them. Like, in a fic where they’re co-advising a joint training exercise, you see their contrasting methods clash: her loud, performative encouragement versus his brutal, silent pragmatism. The dynamic becomes a debate on pedagogy through their interactions, with the 1-A kids caught in the middle. It’s less romantic tension and more ideological friction, which can be just as compelling to read.
4 回答2026-07-01 17:52:27
This is a weirdly specific cross-section of the fandom and I'm kind of living for it. The classic 'Joke' ship is obviously Ms. Joke/Aizawa, that's the whole point of her character. Some writers really lean into the potential awkwardness of a professional hero with a pun-based quirk trying to thaw the eternal grump, and it can be fun. But honestly? I've read a few where Aizawa is paired with Present Mic and Ms. Joke becomes this amazing, supportive third wheel who just shows up to annoy them both, and it's unexpectedly wholesome.
On a weirder note, I stumbled across a 'crack' fic ages ago that shipped Ms. Joke with Mirko. The logic was something about them both having loud, high-energy personalities, but Mirko's being pure aggression and Joke's being performative. It was surprisingly well-written, exploring how two people who seem similar on the surface could have completely different motivations.
I also have a soft spot for fics where Ms. Joke mentors a younger, more anxious student—sometimes it's a younger version of herself, sometimes it's an OC—and Aizawa begrudgingly gets dragged into it because the kid shows potential for underground hero work. It's less a romance ship and more a found-family dynamic, but the slow-burn respect between the two pros is the real draw.
Most of the good stuff I've found tends to be on AO3, filtered by the 'Ms. Joke & Aizawa Shouta' relationship tag, then digging through the related works. You find the real gems in the bookmarks of authors who write that dynamic well.
4 回答2026-07-01 22:47:49
The dynamic between Ms. Joke and Aizawa is such a weirdly specific niche, and honestly, it mostly hinges on that one joke she makes about marrying him. Fandom latched onto that so hard it's kind of funny. Most writers play it as Ms. Joke being the relentless, cheerful pursuer and Aizawa being the perpetually exhausted, deadpan rejecter—it's the classic "sunshine/grumpy" trope dressed in hero costumes. You see a lot of one-shots where she wears him down through sheer persistence, or he begrudgingly admits she's competent. What I find more interesting are the rarer fics that flip it, where her humor is a mask for something darker and he's the one who sees through it. Those can get pretty angsty.
I think the development often feels samey after a while because the source material gives so little. It's all fanon interpretation, so the progression is usually either a slow-burn office romance between two pros, or a crackfic where she finally snaps and ties him to a chair. I'd kill for a story where they're just colleagues who respect each other and the romance is a background element, not the whole plot. Most of the time, the dynamic develops from annoyance to tolerance to reluctant affection, with maybe a side of shared trauma from being heroes. It's a comfort read, predictable but cozy, like putting on a worn-out hoodie.
I stumbled on a crossover once where she was a villain pretending to be a hero and he had to figure it out; that was a wild take on their dynamic and actually made me rethink the whole pairing.
4 回答2026-07-01 11:38:11
Finding stories that really dig into the emotional layers of Ms. Joke and Aizawa is a bit like searching for a specific type of mood. You want something that gets past the surface-level teasing and acknowledges the shared weight of being a pro hero, especially a teacher. The ones that stick with me often use quiet moments after a joint training exercise or a late-night patrol debrief to let the walls down.
I stumbled across a longer fic a while back, I think it was called 'After the Laughter Fades' or something similar. It wasn't a romantic romp; it focused heavily on their different approaches to trauma—hers with deflection through humor, his with withdrawal and blunt pragmatism. The writer had them collaborating on a case involving a student's family, which forced them to navigate their own protective instincts and past failures. The emotional growth felt earned, like they were learning from each other's coping mechanisms without either one having to fundamentally change who they were.
Those smaller, character-study pieces on AO3 tagged with 'Emotional Hurt/Comfort' or 'Post-Canon' often hit the spot better than the more plot-heavy AUs for this dynamic.