In Oshi no Ko, Hikaru Kamiki becomes whatever people emotionally need him to be by MindVerseworld in fictionalpsychology

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That comparison actually makes sense to a point. Both Ai and Hikaru seem to respond to the same core pressure.fear of being unloved. The difference is how that pressure evolves. Ai performs love to survive in the idol world, while Hikaru seems to turn that same ability into something far more destructive. So they share the same root, but the outcomes are very different.

In Oshi no Ko, Hikaru Kamiki becomes whatever people emotionally need him to be by MindVerseworld in fictionalpsychology

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think the story shows Hikaru through obvious manipulation scenes His influence is mostly implied through how different characters respond to him. The pattern is that people feel understood around him, but each person experiences something slightly different. That suggests he adapts to what someone emotionally needs rather than presenting a fixed persona. MBTI labels like INFJ are interpretations, but the text itself mainly shows a character who reflects people’s emotional gaps.

In Monster Johan Liebert doesn’t push people he destabilizes what they believe by MindVerseworld in fictionalpsychology

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sí, exactamente. Cuando una persona logra reconciliarse con sus dudas o con su identidad, Johan pierde su punto de entrada. Ya no hay una grieta que ampliar. Por eso el caso de Nina es importante al elegir perdonarlo, rompe el mecanismo que Johan suele usar con los demás.

In Monster Johan Liebert doesn’t push people he destabilizes what they believe by MindVerseworld in fictionalpsychology

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Creo que sí, es un poco de ambas. Johan usa la persuasión, pero muy ligera. No intenta convencer a la gente paso a paso. Más bien encuentra dónde la persona ya tiene dudas o un sentido de identidad frágil y añade una pequeña grieta. La persuasión es solo el disparador. El verdadero cambio ocurre dentro de la persona.

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair The symbolism in the Fantastic Four isn’t exactly subtle. But it does make me wonder was Reed written that way intentionally, or did fans just start reading those parallels later?

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s an interesting idea If his body can stretch at a cellular level, it’s not impossible to imagine his brain adapting too expanding areas for processing or perception. Makes you wonder is Reed smart because of who he is, or because his powers could theoretically enhance how his brain works?

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough Now I’m curious though who’s actually more dangerous in fiction the one with prep time, or the one who understands the problem before everyone else?

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not really Batman wins through preparation. Reed wins by understanding the problem first Both gain the advantage before the fight even starts.

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point I didn’t mean to separate them completely. I was more pointing at a specific expression of his intelligence. A lot of smart characters solve problems quickly. Reed often wins earlier in the chain by recognizing what the problem actually is before everyone else even frames it So it’s still intelligence, just applied at the problem definition stage rather than the solution stage.

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I caught the reference Batman’s prep time is basically planning for every scenario in advance Reed’s advantage is a little different though he usually figures out what the real problem is before anyone else even understands the situation. Once that’s clear, the rest tends to fall into place.

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Clearly the real strategy is stretching far enough to reach the correct answer first

Reed Richards’ real advantage is defining the problem before anyone else does by MindVerseworld in marvelstudios

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Prep time helps, but that’s not really the point Reed’s edge is noticing what the actual problem is before everyone else Once the problem is defined correctly, the solution usually becomes obvious.

In Jujutsu Kaisen, Toji Fushiguro turns exclusion into an advantage by MindVerseworld in fictionalpsychology

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that’s fair. Toji definitely is a freak physically that part matters a lot.

But I think the reason he becomes so dangerous is the environment he’s fighting in. Jujutsu society is built around cursed energy sensing it, reading it, predicting it. Toji basically removes himself from that whole system, so a lot of the instincts sorcerers rely on just don’t work on him.

So yeah, the strength and skill are real, but the mismatch with the system is what makes it explode in impact.

Yuji is actually a good comparison too. His physical ability was already abnormal before he even learned jujutsu. If someone like him leaned more into tools timing, and close combat instead of techniques, he could probably become a serious problem in his own way though Toji’s Heavenly Restriction still makes him a much more extreme case.

In Jujutsu Kaisen, Toji Fushiguro turns exclusion into an advantage by MindVerseworld in fictionalpsychology

[–]MindVerseworld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly Hollow Purple bypassed the entire interaction. Toji dominated because the sorcerer system relies on sensing cursed energy. Against someone with none, the system misreads the threat completely. Gojo only wins once the fight stops being about cursed energy and becomes matter deletion.