Yoroi Musha’s Core Flaws
1. Secretly Selfish (Fame > Duty)
Despite his lofty, “samurai-like” image as the “Equipped Hero,” Musha admits to himself upon retirement that he only became a hero for fame and admiration, not true altruism.
This makes all his previous “noble samurai” posturing hollow, showing he never embodied the loyalty and self-sacrifice his theme suggested.
His retirement speech tries to make it sound noble (“falling on my sword”), but it’s really a self-serving attempt to exit gracefully while saving face.
2. Cowardice (Dirty Coward / Screw This, I’m Outta Here!)
When society is shaken after the Paranormal Liberation War — villains escaping from prisons, cities in ruins, heroes dying — he quits at the worst moment possible.
Instead of trying to restore hope or rebuild public trust, he wavers and runs away, proving he doesn’t have the backbone the samurai aesthetic implies.
His exit is contrasted with characters like Death Arms (who also quit, but did so lamenting his emotional exhaustion) — Musha quits with excuses and self-pity.
3. Can’t Take Criticism
His decision to retire comes directly from the negative backlash against heroes after the disaster with Shigaraki, Gigantomachia, and Dabi’s revelation.
Rather than weather public anger and prove himself, he folds at the sheer idea of losing face.
This tells us his entire identity as a hero was based on external validation (status, applause, rankings) rather than conviction.
4. Hypocrisy (Broken Pedestal / It’s What I Do, Until It Isn’t)
At the Hero Billboard ranking event, he claimed: “My duty has not changed. I’ll continue doing what I must.”
That vow is utterly contradicted when the backlash hits — meaning he was all talk, no substance.
This hypocrisy leaves fans disillusioned. Some even heckle him mid-announcement, a rare humiliation in-universe for a top 10 Pro Hero.
5. Superficial Identity (Image Over Integrity)
His entire persona is wrapped in samurai aesthetics — armor, beard, loyalty symbolism. Yet his actions reveal he shares none of those samurai values.
This creates an ironic contrast: Japan’s cultural archetype of unwavering discipline and loyalty embodied by someone who abandons his post under pressure.
Essentially, he’s a cosplay samurai — image-rich, substance-poor.
6. Oblivious Insensitivity
His “falling on my sword” comment wasn’t noble; it angered people even more. He failed to recognize that the public was grieving lost family, murdered civilians, destroyed homes — real pain.
His statement boiled down to: “I’m done because you people hurt my feelings; remember me with honor.”
This lack of empathy highlights how disconnected he was from the struggles of the people he claimed to protect.
7. Fragile Resolve (Weak Mental Fortitude)
The real heroes of MHA — from Deku to Mirko to Aizawa — push forward despite injury, hatred, or exhaustion. Yoroi Musha demonstrates the inverse: the moment things look bleak, he exposes that he never had the internal drive to continue.
His retirement effectively makes him a cautionary tale — someone who had a high rank and reputation but no real spirit when it mattered most.
Summary of Flaws
Self-centered:Â Heroism was a means to personal validation, not altruism.
Cowardly:Â Quit when his duty became the hardest test.
Hypocritical: Words and image didn’t align with actions.
Weak under scrutiny: Couldn’t stand to lose reputation or endure criticism.
Insensitive: Framing his retirement as “honorable” belittled real suffering.
Theme Irony: “Samurai” hero who embodied everything samurai values are not.
Narrative Function
Yoroi Musha is not meant to be admired — he’s there to show that even the Top 10 heroes included frauds who were more attached to glory than sacrifice. In a story about what makes a true hero, his downfall is a narrative foil: setting him beside people like Mirko, Aizawa, or even Deku makes their conviction shine brighter by contrast.
He’s the sacrificial lamb of disillusionment: proof that not all pro heroes are worthy, and that the public’s mistrust after the war isn’t baseless.
✅ Conclusion: Yoroi Musha’s greatest flaw is that he was an image hero — driven by recognition, defined by appearances (armor, status, reputation), and hollow at the core. When hero society fractured, he cracked instantly. His legacy is not one of valor, but as a symbol of the rotting weakness underneath the hero system.











