My Hero Academia Final Season isn’t just about wrapping up Deku’s journey; it is about legacy. For a shonen as beloved as My Hero Academia, the stakes of its final season go beyond the ending itself. Fans will remember the manga for its storytelling, sure, but anime is what brings those panels to life, the emotion, color, movement, and the soundtrack.
If Bones had fumbled here, it would have been remembered as one of those tragic cases where the anime didn’t live up to its potential. That is why this trailer hit me so hard. Every frame screamed of care and precision.
The way debris swirls around Shigaraki, the vibrant color compositing, the almost cinematic framing of Deku’s desperate charge, it all tells me this isn’t just another season. This is Bones at its absolute peak, making sure that after nearly a decade of following these characters, we get an ending that feels definitive.

It got to the point where people started saying the manga had far more intensity, that Horikoshi’s chaotic, sharp art style couldn’t be translated onto the screen properly. And that is a tough pill to swallow because animation should enhance manga, not feel like a downgrade.
But this time? Even hardcore skeptics are changing their tune. One fan on X put it perfectly:
“People usually say that the anime does not do the manga art justice, but we can clearly see that it’s not true. Even some scenes in Season 7 look better than the manga imo.”
The role of color and compositing

One of the most interesting reactions I saw online about My Hero Academia Final Season was about color. A fan said:
“It’s the visuals, dude, the color is what’s making these scenes better so far.”
And I couldn’t agree more.
Horikoshi’s manga thrives in black-and-white, where shading and line work carry the emotion. But anime has an advantage: it can use color to heighten those emotions.
Look at the way Deku’s green lightning crackles with life, or how Shigaraki’s decay powers spread across the battlefield with this almost sickly glow. Those choices matter.
Why this feels like Bones’ redemption arc?

The more I think about it, the more this My Hero Academia Final Season feels like Bones’ own redemption arc. Just as Deku struggled, failed, and grew into the symbol of hope he is now, Bones had its missteps, too. They faced production issues, uneven pacing, and fan criticism.
But now, with time, care, and experience, they’ve put all their lessons together for one last push. The result? An anime that looks like it is not only going to live up to the manga but, in some cases, surpass it. That’s not just justice to Horikoshi’s work, that is justice to the fans who have stuck by this series for nearly a decade.
Why giving animators time is the key to My Hero Academia Final Season?

Something that stood out to me while analyzing the trailer for My Hero Academia Final Season is how polished everything looks. And polish doesn’t come from luck; it comes from time. Earlier seasons of My Hero Academia often suffered because they were on a strict schedule.
Weekly anime adaptations rarely give animators the breathing room they need to make every scene shine. But this My Hero Academia Final Season feels different. It’s a reminder to the entire anime industry: When you give animators respect and space, they deliver miracles.
Final thoughts
At the end of the day, this is more than just another anime finale. For fans like me, who have been watching Deku stumble, cry, train, and grow for nearly ten years, this is closure. And from what I have seen in that trailer, Bones finally understands the weight of that responsibility.
So yes, I believe Bones is about to do justice to My Hero Academia Final Season. Not just through flashy animation, but through emotion, music, and a commitment to honoring Horikoshi’s vision.