Meanwhile, Black Clover has found a formula that more effectively puts the spotlight on minor characters without setting these moments up to fail. Related: Black Clover Isn't Actually About Asta (or Yuno) Because no one could remember the important incident in question, no one really cared. Although later chapters explained why Yuga made sense, the execution was off since My Hero Academia obviously put a massive amount of emphasis on the tease rather than focusing on his backstory first to get readers invested. Even though the real traitor Yuga Aoyama was a better choice, the effectiveness of his reveal was still doomed to fail because the critical moment that gave him away occurred hundreds of issues before (i.e., years ago). The misleading first tease that Invisible Girl betrayed her classmates might have been false but already set up the big reveal for failure based upon the incredulous response from fans. My Hero Academia's largest blunder recently occurred during the chapters that introduced class 1-A's traitor. Regardless, this could have always been remedied with better execution, which the manga has yet to accomplish. More characters mean more time fleshing out each of their stories. My Hero Academia already began at a massive disadvantage by choosing to fill Deku's 1-A classroom with 20 students as opposed to the 15 members in Black Clover's equivalent group, the Black Bulls. Additionally, the one time that My Hero Academia tried to put the spotlight on a minor character in a massive way, the effort failed miserably. My Hero Academia has always struggled with keeping the supporting characters in class 1-A relevant while Black Clover continues to one-up the former, more popular series. Warning! Spoilers ahead for Black Clover chapter 312!
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