Challenging a speedster requires basically 2 major aspects to pivot upon.
The first is the idea of planning and forethought, IE Intelligence. Even if a speedster is fast, their applied intelligence might not be in the realm of unraveling motivations or key mysteries, so the more occluded you can make the plans of their antagonists, the more it will be difficult for them to deal with and also give them a more demanding ticking clock to struggle against.
Ah, that's actually good considering my "Deku" in this crossover/adaptation is the speedster, and like a core aspect of his character is having to rely on thinking his way out of situations instead of brute forcing them. That said, the setting I'm working with means a number of encounters are against monsters that probably won't be able to out-
think my protagonist, so I may need to add an extra layer here.
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Building off that, another key advantage an antagonist can account for is positioning. Locations and situations where the speed cannot be used to the full effect or otherwise have physical limitations. In general, it actually irritates me that speedsters can stop on a dime and ignore the MASSIVE amounts of momentum built up. They also shouldn't be able to corner terribly well.
That's like, the
one thing I managed to figure out on my own, mainly because of the key battles against allies (e.g. Deku vs. Todoroki) that I wanted to adapt. Since then, I've also heard about the idea of simply running through rain or grass at high speeds being a problem. I'll have to see how much I want to rely on it because it would feel… repetitive? if the protagonist is literally running into walls too often.
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Lastly, a factor that most everyone ignores or hand waves is that speed is something that the individual can be built for, but that doesn't make other materials or individuals impervious to the physical effects of such speed.
To be fair, I think having a speedster's clothes all burn away every time they fight might not be a great idea
. On a more serious note, I get where your coming from, as most every superpower has been given a hard look over the years to show the audience that normal physics means there would be consequences, if only for gag strips. I remember Cyborg 009 doing that specifically for its speedster when I was a kid, now that I think about it -- he picked up the elderly doctor to take him out of harm's way, but had to be told by the telepath, "hey, the doctor's just a human whose body can't withstand your extreme speed". Ooh, now that I think about it, that's an excellent vein to tap when I have to put the protagonist in the same kind of "protect the civilian" situation that we see Deku in multiple times throughout HeroAca.
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Meanwhile, what I'm currently watching alongside HeroAca (which I've finally gotten to season 7) is the first season of
Queen's Blade, and
Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer (AKA
Hoshi No Samidare)
It was honestly a toss-up for me whether to try revisiting Queen's Blade or to rewatch Monster Musume, because while I did end up having a bad time overall with the latter, that was because I'd come in with much, much higher expectations, and I remember both the tits being very well-animated and the OP being a banger. I ended up deciding to go with the new experience, and it's been a bit of a trip so far. At least
Exiled Virgin is better animated than
Rebellion, which I started on, but it still suffers from basically being a hentai plot, and I can't help but be confounded by all the errors and weirdness in the show. At one point the main character ends up inside a pyramid but enters a chamber with an oculus (a round opening at the ceiling of a dome to let in sunlight). It's crazy.
I've honestly heard nothing but bad things about the anime adaptation of Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer, but it's all been about how bad the animation is, and I know how spoiled people are by the likes of Jujutsu Kaisen so I have my doubts it's that bad. I've only watched a few episodes so far because I'm wanting to compare it to the manga at the same time since I own it (one of my favorites), and one thing I never thought I'd say is that they took out the panty shots to the detriment of characterization. The male protagonist of Hoshi No Samidare is made out to be an anti-hero of sorts, only in on the "save the world" plot because the female protagonist whom he swears loyalty to is going to destroy the world herself, and he has so much trauma that he hates the world and would rather see it destroyed. To that end, they show him being a bit of a douche early on in the series by unabashedly looking up some skirts, and those are completely removed in the anime. Not
only that, but there's a moment when a different character is made to look worse because they took a scene where he was supposed to playfully flip the female protagonist's skirt up and instead it looks like he groped her now. Overall, it's feeling like they ground a lot of the edges off, and I'm starting to worry about the characterization, but apart from the
dog I'm not at all seeing the complaints about the animation. I've seen a LOT worse.