Does Midnight Die In Mha According To Author Interviews?

2025-10-31 02:22:03 140

5 Answers

Ryan
Ryan
2025-11-02 09:38:10
I get why this question pops up so often — Midnight's fate is one of those things fans cling to. From what I’ve read, Kohei Horikoshi hasn’t gone on record in interviews explicitly saying “Midnight dies” outside of the story itself. He tends to avoid spoiling plot outcomes in offhand interviews and usually treats the manga as the canon place for such revelations. So if someone points to an interview and claims he confirmed her death, that’s not accurate based on the interviews I’ve seen.

What matters most is what the manga shows and how scenes are presented there. Horikoshi will sometimes talk about themes or how he feels about characters in interviews, but he rarely uses those moments to give definitive plot confirmations that aren’t already in the published chapters. For fans watching interviews for scoop, it’s a bit of a trap — interviews can hint at tone or emotional beats but not usually explicit fates.

Personally, I prefer to let the panels speak — I reread the chapters when I want closure. Interviews are fun for behind-the-scenes color, but they’re not a substitute for the source material, and in this case they don’t provide a straight ‘yes’ from the creator himself. I still get chills thinking about how impactful those scenes were, though.
Stella
Stella
2025-11-03 16:19:27
I’ve followed a lot of the creator interviews and fan translations over the years, and my read is: Horikoshi hasn’t plainly said in interviews that Midnight dies. His interview style leans toward discussing influences, design choices, and emotional goals rather than confirming exact plot endpoints. Sometimes he’ll say he wanted to portray the cost of being a hero or that a scene was intended to be painful, and fans read a lot into that, but a thematic statement isn’t the same as a factual confirmation of death.

Also, interviews are often context-limited — short magazine spots, promotional Q&As, tweets — and can be misquoted or taken out of context. For me, that means I treat interviews as flavor commentary. When I want the cold facts about character outcomes, I check the manga chapters and official publisher notes. In the meantime, I participate in the theorizing because it’s a blast and because those moments of uncertainty really show how attached people are to these characters. I still get a bit misty thinking about Midnight’s scenes, though.
Henry
Henry
2025-11-04 09:27:09
Shortly put: I haven’t seen Horikoshi explicitly confirm Midnight’s death in any interview. He tends to avoid clear plot revelations outside the manga, so interviews usually provide background and tone rather than straight spoilers. That means any claim that an interview definitively states her death is likely a misread or an extrapolation.

If you want to know for sure, the most reliable source is the manga itself and any official statements that quote chapter events directly. I follow the interviews because they’re fun and sometimes heartbreaking, but I don’t expect them to be the authority on specific plot points — the chapters are. Still, discussing what the interviews hint at is half the fun for fans like me.
Stella
Stella
2025-11-06 14:51:54
I can say confidently from keeping up with Horikoshi’s public comments that there isn’t a straightforward, published interview where he flat-out announces ‘Midnight dies.’ He’s often deliberately coy about hard spoilers and prefers to let the serialized manga reveal major outcomes. So if anyone points to an interview as proof, I’d be skeptical unless it cites a direct, on-the-record quote tied to a chapter release.

That said, interviews do sometimes reveal the author’s mindset — whether he intended a scene to be tragic, how he designed a character’s arc, or why certain emotional beats were important. Those insights fuel fan debate but aren’t a substitute for the actual story pages. I enjoy reading both the interviews and the manga because they complement each other: interviews add texture, and the manga gives the canonical result. Either way, Midnight’s moments stick with me, and I often replay the panels in my head long after reading.
Zachary
Zachary
2025-11-06 20:05:42
I’d say straight up: no, there isn’t a clean interview quote from Horikoshi that says ‘Midnight dies.’ He’s been careful in public Q&As to avoid explicit spoilers and tends to leave definitive plot details to the manga run itself. Fans might read an interview and interpret subtext, but interpretation isn’t confirmation.

Beyond that, discussions with the author often focus on motivations, design choices, and themes. He might mention that he wanted a scene to feel tragic or to convey the cost of heroism, which fuels speculation, but that’s not the same as confirming a death in an offhand chat. If you want absolute canon, the manga panels and official statements tied directly to chapters are where Horikoshi’s intentions about characters’ fates are concretely revealed.

I enjoy the interviews for the little extras — character sketches, inspirations, and those small anecdotes — but I don’t treat them as a place for final plot confirmations. It’s part of why the fandom keeps debating; mysteries like this keep conversations alive, and I kind of love that communal sleuthing vibe.
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