Mha:The Bat of Musutafu
Izuku Midoriya once believed in heroes.
He believed that when people screamed, someone would come. He believed that the bright costumes, shining smiles, and heroic promises meant something. Then his mother was murdered by a villain, and no pro hero arrived in time to save her.
That night, the boy who dreamed of heroism died in an alley.
What came after was something darker.
Abandoned by a billionaire father who cared more about protecting the Wayne name than raising his son, Izuku took the money, signed the NDA, and buried that name forever. He was not a Wayne. He was his mother’s son. A Midoriya.
And if heroes would not protect the forgotten, then he would.
Years of training turned his body into a weapon and his mind into a blade. With no quirk, no license, and no permission, Izuku became the thing criminals whispered about in the dark. A shadow with white eyes. A demon in a cape. A nightmare wearing the shape of a bat.
Musutafu calls him a vigilante.
The police call him a problem.
The Hero Commission calls him illegal.
The criminals call him Batman.
But Batman’s war is bigger than street thugs and alleyway predators. Beneath Musutafu’s hero society lies a hidden world of corruption, missing children, illegal experiments, and monsters created in secret by men who believe power gives them the right to play god.
Killer Croc. King Shark. Clayface. Scarecrow. Black Mask. Penguin. Riddler. Bane. Hush. Poison Ivy. Two-Face.
And somewhere in the shadows, All For One watches the Bat with growing interest.
As Batman digs deeper, he uncovers secrets the hero world buried for years: corrupt police, fake charities, human experimentation, and the horrifying truth behind Endeavor’s family. But even as he becomes the terror of Musutafu’s underworld, Izuku must face a harder battle — learning how to be more than vengeance.
Because fear can stop criminals.
But it cannot raise a broken child.
It cannot comfort the innocent.
It cannot bring back the dead.
With Melissa Shield becoming his partner, his Oracle, and the one person stubborn enough to drag him out of the darkness, and Himiko Toga — a rejected twelve-year-old girl society already branded a monster — becoming his ward, Izuku slowly learns that Batman cannot only be a symbol of fear.
He has to become a symbol of protection.
Aizawa may not approve of his methods, but when students vanish in the night, even Eraser Head knows who understands the dark best. Bakugo may hate taking orders from him, but even he cannot deny the Bat gets results. Heroes, students, sidekicks, and police will all be forced to ask the same question:
What happens when the unlicensed vigilante becomes the only one prepared to save the city?
In a world where heroism is ranked, licensed, sponsored, and sold…
A quirkless boy in a cowl will remind Japan what a hero is supposed to be.
He is not the Symbol of Peace.
He is not the Number One Hero.
Not yet.
He is the Bat of Musutafu.
And criminals should be afraid.