My Hero Academia Season 4 release date confirmed

My Hero Academia key art
When does My Hero Academia Season 4 come out? The manga gives fans a hint about what to expect. Pic Credit: Viz Media

The My Hero Academia Season 4 release date has been confirmed for October 12, 2019. Anime streaming company Funimation plans on streaming the upcoming Boku no Hero Academia Season 4 in North America. The announcement was made by Funimation’s Twitter and Facebook account.

Anime news leaker Yonkou Productions is claiming that My Hero Academia S4 will have 25 episodes in total. This information has not yet been officially announced.

The first episode of MHA Season 4 will be an original story. It will be a recap of prior events told from a new perspective.

“Since Class A has garnered a lot of attention recently, someone comes to U.A. to get more information on them. What he’s really aiming for is the scoop on All Night’s successor.”

In mid-August, Yomiuri Television released a new key visual for Boku No Hero Academia Season 4 featuring Deku, Bakugou, All Might, Todoroki, Kirishima, Ochako, Yaoyorozu, The Big 3, and Nighteye! (Please see below.)

The My Hero Academia Season 4 OP theme song will be “Polaris” by music group Blue Encount. In the past, Blue Encount has produced anime theme songs for Banana Fish as well as Gintama.

The Boku no Hero Academia S4 ED theme song will be “Koukai no Uta” by Sayuri. In the past, Sayuri created the ending theme for Golden Kamuy Season 2 (see our article on Golden Kamuy Season 3) and the Erased anime.

The production of My Hero Academia Season 4 was confirmed before the third season even finished airing, but the exact time frame was not announced at first. Thankfully, the Boku no Hero Academia manga series provides enough source material for a quick turnaround in 2019.

  • Updated October 4, 2019: Added number of episodes and info on My Hero Academia Season 4 Episode 1.
  • Updated August 23, 2019: Added new key visual and OP/ED theme song info.
  • Updated Jun 18, 2019: Added exact My Hero Academia Season 4 release date, trailer video, and key visual.
  • Updated June 07, 2019: Added Funimation confirmation of streaming My Hero Hero Academia Season 4. Rewrote sections of the article based on the latest news.
  • Updated December 19, 2018: Added key visual and the official time frame for the My Hero Academia Season 4 release date.

This article provides everything that is known about My Hero Academia Season 4 and all related news. As such, this article will be updated over time with news, rumors, and analysis. Meanwhile, let’s delve down into what is known for certain.

My Hero Academia Ending In 2020 At The Earliest But It Could Go Longer

Bones studio C based the story on the My Hero Academia manga series by writer and illustrator Kohei Horikoshi. When the second cour of the third anime season finished airing in September 2018, the manga was already up to My Hero Academia Volume 20 in Japan. As of May 2, 2019, the manga series is up to MHA Volume 23.

The official English translation by VIZ Media is not too far behind the Japanese release. Volume 19 was released on June 4, 2019. The release date for Volume 20 is scheduled for August 6, 2019, Volume 21 is set for October 1, 2019, and Volume 22 will come out on December 3, 2019.

The manga creator has promised fans that the entire manga series will last for years to come, claiming in 2016 that only about 20 percent of the planned plot had been released thus far. By late 2017, Kohei Horikoshi already decided on how the final fight will play out but stopped short of naming which heroes and villains will be involved in the final confrontation.

Just how many story arcs are left to tell is unknown, but Horikoshi did reveal in mid-2018 that “the current arc that is going on all has [a] purpose that will be relevant in the last arc.” The longest story arc so far was the Internship story, which was 41 chapters.

Horikoshi also mentioned that the Internship story arc had a very important character that he wanted to draw for the ending. He was asked, “Does that mean that all the characters will come together at the last arc?”

“All characters will come together and go forward into the last arc,” Horikoshi confirmed. “However, at the moment we are not even close to the last battle, but I do have an idea of how I want it to be planned out.”

My Hero Academia Season 4 Key Visual

A key visual for My Hero Academia Season 4 released mid-August in Weekly Shonen Jump. Pic credit: Weekly Shonen JumpIn the summer of 2018, Horikoshi also revealed that he’d considered ending the story with Volume 30, but then he realized that “ending the series at Volume 30 will be impossible.” In August 2018, an interview with Horikoshi and One Piece creator Eiichiro Oda was released, and Horikoshi was still talking about Volume 30 being a goal.

“How many volumes do you estimate the series will be?” Oda asked, and Horikoshi replied, “Honestly I thought about 30 or so would be about right, but I hadn’t really been counting at all.”

Oda noted that he once had estimated One Piece’s ending, but “it’s gone about triple [his] original calculations.” Similarly, Horikoshi admitted that “the Sports festival arc was about twice longer than [he] had originally expected.” Oda also suggested that Horikoshi “shoot for about 50” volumes, but Horikoshi laughed and replied, “Can I really do ten years though…?”

On May 28, 2018, the manga entered the Pro Hero story arc, which ran from Chapter 184 through Chapter 193. The Jointing Training story arc was quite a bit longer, running from Chapter 194 through Chapter 217. The current story arc is about the Meta Liberation Army and it’s already 14 chapters.

By Volume 30, the manga series should be up to around Chapter 287 since each manga volume usually comes with around 10 chapters. Projected into the future, that means the My Hero Academia ending could happen before Chapter 300, assuming the series isn’t extended again. Since the manga is released weekly, that means Izuku Midoriya’s story won’t be complete until at least late 2020.

Calculating the ending of the anime adaptation may be a bit presumptuous at this point, but there seems to be enough future manga chapters for at least three to four more anime seasons. That means My Hero Academia Season 6 or 7 will be the ending.

That’s also assuming that the manga’s story is not renewed with a sequel similar to Fairy Tail: 100 Year Quest (which makes the anime Fairy Tail Season 4 possible). Considering that My Hero Academia replaced Naruto in the hearts of many anime fans, many would prefer at least 10 seasons. Or even beyond. Plus Ultra!

Boku no Hero Academia Manga Compared To The Anime

Like many anime adaptations, the My Hero Academia anime is slowly catching up to the source material. The pacing in the first season was pretty slow, covering the events of about 1.5 manga chapters per episode. The pacing accelerated in the second season, with the ratio of chapters to episodes changing to roughly 2-to-1.

The third season covered three story arcs with 25 episodes, ending with the Provisional Hero License Exam story arc. All in all, My Hero Academia Season 3 covered chapters 70 through 124, meaning that the anime maintained its 2-to-1 chapters to episode ratio.

Thankfully, that means there is currently plenty of source material for My Hero Academia Season 4 to be a two-cour season produced by Bones. Similar to the third season, Boku no Hero Academia Season 4 will probably open with a filler recap episode and cover multiple story arcs.

Chapter 168 would be a good stopping point for the anime since the short story arc provides a stirring moment between Endeavor and All Might. The next story arc, the U.A. School Festival story arc, is 15 chapters long so it’s probably best reserved for My Hero Academia Season 5.

However, some fans believe there is evidence that My Hero Academia Season 4 will go all the way to Chapter 183. The reason is that some MHA merchandise being sold in Japan shows Jirou wielding a guitar, which does not happen until the school cultural festival. Covering that much material would require increasing the pacing greatly so this rumor seems unlikely at the moment.

Vigilante: My Hero Academia Illegals
The main three characters of the Vigilante: My Hero Academia Illegals manga. Pic Credit: Viz Media

Vigilante: My Hero Academia Illegals Anime Possible By 2020?

While many anime-only fans probably haven’t heard about it, there is an MHA spin-off by writer Hideyuki Furuhashi and illustrator Court Betten called Vigilante: My Hero Academia Illegals. Started in 2016, the series is already up to six volumes as of February 2019.

The English translation by VIZ Media is up to Volume 4. MHA Vigilante Volume 5 is scheduled to release on July 2, 2019, while Volume 6 is set for October 1, 2019.

The story is about Vigilantes, illegal heroes who have not received hero licenses from the government. The plot takes place several years before the events of the main manga series so it’s a prequel that features new characters in addition to cameos by heroes like Eraserhead. All Might shows up using his weak form to secretly work as his own manager. Even the villain Hero Killer Stain makes a showing as a masked Vigilante, Stendhal.

The manga introduces 19-year-old Kouichi Haimawari, a wannabe hero who missed his high school entrance exam because he stopped to save a drowning child. Not able to pursue official hero schooling, he’s been content to do small good deeds until he meets Knuckle Duster, a Quirkless hero who is literally “just a tough old man” in the words of Eraserhead. Knuckle Duster (real name Takeshi Kuroiwa) is always hoping for a new fight and is hunting down villains for the challenge.

Kouichi has a Quirk called Slide and Glide, which allows him to both stick to and repel surfaces. In practice, he can slide over cement as fast as a vehicle and can even slide up the side of a building. The Quirk is also capable of providing limited flight abilities, but when he was young, his mother punished him every time he started floating, so he did not remember he had that ability.

Kouichi is recruited as a Vigilante by Knuckle Duster, and the duo works together to stop minor crimes that are normally ignored by big-name heroes. They also begin investigating the rise of a drug called Trigger, which increases a Quirk’s abilities at the cost of a person’s reasoning. The usage of Trigger has been creating so-called instant villains and tracking down the unknown mastermind has thus far been the overall plot of the manga series.

Since Sword Art Online’s spin-off, SAO Alternative: Gun Gale Online, received an anime adaptation, is it possible that the same could happen for Vigilante: My Hero Academia Illegals? After all, there is now enough manga chapters for a single-cour anime season, and by 2019, the bi-weekly manga would have enough chapters for a full two-cour season. Let’s just hope the Vigilantes anime becomes a reality.

https://twitter.com/Spytrue/status/1136634297887145985

Boku no Hero Academia Season 4 Release Date

The official MHA website has officially confirmed that the My Hero Academia Season 4 release date will be during the Fall 2019 anime season. The exact Boku no Hero Academia Season 4 premiere date is scheduled for October 12, 2019.

Studio Bones ended the second season with an end card confirming the next season. Episode 25 of MHA Season 3 followed suit but only told fans to expect My Hero Academia Season 4 in the future and did not give any hints about the time frame.

Back in 2018, Yonkou Productions had initially claimed that BnHA Season 4 would occur during the spring 2019 anime season. Yonkou has a well-known reputation for leaking accurate information about the anime industry so it’s possible the My Hero Academia Season 4 anime was delayed.

Although the delay was a disappointment to many anime fans, Yonko points out that “October helps a lot with spreading the Shueisha properties across the year.” The manga story arcs being adapted by the fourth season are also pretty action-heavy so the extra time will alow production team at Studio Bones to create quality animation.

My Hero Academia Season 4 Spoilers

Note: This article summarizes some events up through My Hero Academia Season 3 Episode 25 (or Episode 63 for entire series). The third season of the anime adaptation ended around manga chapter 124.

The last time we watched My Hero Academia, Endeavor is now the number one hero several weeks after All Might’s retirement, but all anyone can talk about is how the Symbol of Peace is gone. Villains are organizing into small gangs since they feel the power of Heroes is weakening. The League of Villains has been scattered due to the fight between All Might and All For One, but they are also reorganizing and trying to expand.

In a hellish prison, All Might tries to interrogate All For One to discover the whereabouts of the villain’s successor, Tomura Shigaraki. While the interrogation is fruitless, All For One goads All Might by revealing his dark predictions for the future.

Meanwhile, Katsuki Bakugo has figured out that All Might has transferred his Quirk to Izuku Midoriya and confronts his classmate in secret. Bakugo wants to fight Izuku again to confirm why All Might would go so far to help Izuku. He’s angry that someone who trailed behind him his entire life is now in front of him. He’s even angrier because he feels guilty that he’s the reason for All Might’s end as a hero.

The fight between Bakugo and Izuku causes emotions to flow, and Izuku finds that he’s able to harness more power from One For All. Izuku realizes and states openly that he has finally caught up with his classmate. The fight only concludes when All Might interrupts, leading them to discuss the future of all three heroes.

Bakugo agrees to keep secret One For All and the relationship between All Might and Izuku. He even goes so far as to give Izuku tips on how to make his One For All Shoot Style attack super (Plus Ultra?) effective.

The second semester at U.A. High begins with everyone preparing for Hero Internships, which allows students with Provisional Hero Licenses to have a more formal experience with a pro-hero of their choice. To explain this process, Class 1-A is introduced to The Big 3; three third-year students named Tamaki Amajiki, Nejire Hado, and Mirio Togata who rank the highest among all current U.A. students.

Mirio challenges the entirety of Class 1-A to a fight all at the same time. Mirio has a teleportation and phase shift Quirk called Permeation that allows him to strategically overwhelm the entire class. Although Izuku is also defeated, he manages to impress Mirio by predicting his attack against Izuku.

Eraserhead shocks everyone by stating that Mirio is the most likely person to become the number one hero. At one point, All Might had even considered making Mirio his successor until he met Izuku.

My Hero Academia Mirio Costume
Miro has the hero name Lemillion because he desires to rescue at least one million people. Pic Credit: Viz Media

Meanwhile, new villains Overhaul and Twice introduce themselves at the League of Villains hideout. Twice was driven mad by his Quirk since he had the ability to clone himself, but the clones lost track of who was the original and went on a killing spree against each other. Overhaul (Kai Chisaki) is a last generation villain, a Yakuza leader of an organization called the Eight Precepts of Death.

All For One had previously controlled the villain underworld, but with his imprisonment, the villains are trying to determine who will rule next. Tomura, of course, thinks he is All For One’s successor and desires that Overhaul should join him. Overhaul disagrees, claiming that the League of Villains is disorganized and doesn’t have a solid plan and asks Tomura to instead join him.

The resulting confrontation ends with horrible wounds and the death of several villains on both sides. But Overhaul still wishes to try again after everyone calms down and leaves a business card at Tomura’s feet.

My Hero Academia Manga Overhaul And Eri
Overhaul and Eri as depicted in the manga. Pic Credit: Bibimi Kenranzaki/ Viz Media

The third season will likely end with the brief introduction of Sir Nighteye and the realization that Overhaul has made contact with the League of Villains. My Hero Academia Season 4 will launch with the start of the internships.

It turns out many of the teachers, including All Might, are against allowing the first year students to have a Hero Internship. Izuku desires to intern with Sir Nighteye at the advice of Gran Torino, but All Might won’t make the introduction. It turns out Mirio was already being trained by Sir Nighteye, so Mirio and Izuku visit the pro hero together.

Sir Nighteye was All Might’s sidekick at one time, but their partnership ended due to an injury and differences in values. Sir Nighteye now has multiple sidekicks of his and is reluctant to take on Izuku for a variety of reasons. But Deku realizes that Sir Nighteye is an All Might superfan and uses his nerdy knowledge to barely convince the pro hero to give him a chance to prove himself.

Izuku is challenged by Sir Nighteye, whose Foresight Quirk allows him to predict the actions of opponents and even see the future of an individual. After seeing Izuku in action, Sir Nighteye bluntly claims that Mirio was more worthy of inheriting One For All and cannot understand why All Might chose Izuku. Such statements enrage Izuku, who attempts a strategy but fails to beat Sir Nighteye in the allotted time. Regardless, Sir Nighteye stamps the employment contract because he hopes to train Izuku to become a dazzling light in the hero world.

All Might eventually reveals the full truth behind his history with Sir Nighteye. Izuku is shocked and distressed at what he learns, but anime fans will simply need to wait until My Hero Academia Season 4 releases to watch their conversation.

My Hero Academia Sir Nighteye
Sir Nighteye was the brains while All Might was the brawn when they were a team. Pic Credit: Viz Media

Poor Izuku must reconcile what he’s learned with how he plans on becoming a hero. But he doesn’t have much time to think since it’s not long before Overhaul and the Eight Precepts of Death clash with both Izuku and Mirio. Their mission is complicated by their desire to rescue a mysterious little girl named Eri, an innocent being held by the leader of the Eight Precepts of Death, from the villain organization.

Events culminate in a heroic invasion of the headquarters for the Eight Precepts of Death, but Sir Nightey’es group of heroes are surprised to find that the League of Villains has formed an alliance. What’s more, the Yakuza villains have developed the deadly new weapon of Quirk-destroying bullets.

Unfortunately, you’ll need to wait until the My Hero Academia Season 4 release date to see how this huge battle plays out. Stay tuned!

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