Imagine a story about how the main character is often both lucky and unlucky at the same time depending on the situation. π±
Won't that be a great story and do you know any story or character that relate to this post? π
Imagine a story about how the main character is often both lucky and unlucky at the same time depending on the situation. π±
Won't that be a great story and do you know any story or character that relate to this post? π
This might fit
Hm...yeah his imagine breaker negates luck but I don't see how he is still lucky?
Okay you're not wrong, but i feel like the fact that he is still breathing and academy city isn't destroyed has to mean he has at least a little luck with everything he goes through on a daily basis right
And if it really doesn't count that's why i put it might count because although i think it fits it might not
Hm...more like plot armor
I can agree with that, plot armour will protect from anything it's practically guarantee you don't die, as long as you don't lose it that is '-'
What is a plot armor? π€¨β
@Kmwno 1 used to refer to the phenomenon in fiction whereby the main character is allowed to survive dangerous situations because they are needed for the plot to continue
You mean like a fail-safe thing?
Plot Armor is less of a superpower and more of a plot device. It is essentially the idea that "the story cannot continue without this character, so they will survive".
One example would be if the villain, having caught the protagonist, goes on a long monologue instead of just killing them, giving them time to escape. Or perhaps the enemy sharpshooters suddenly can't hit a shot when it's the main character running across the battlefield. Or if the main character does get hit, they'll be able to shrug it off and keep going with minimal complications, not because of any inherent superpowers, but because if they're horribly crippled then they wouldn't be able to reach the final climactic confrontation with whatever big bad the story has.
What do you think?