The fourth season of the My Hero Academia anime series was produced by Bones and directed by Kenji Nagasaki (chief director) and Masahiro Mukai, following the story of the original manga series from the second half of the 14th volume to the first chapters of the 21st volume. It covers the "Shie Hassaikai" (chapters 125–162), "Remedial Course" (chapters 163–168), "U.A. School Festival" (chapters 169–183), and the first part of the "Pro Hero" arc (chapters 184–190); partially including chapters 191–193. The season follows Izuku Midoriya and his classmates in their Hero Work-Studies, where they face off against the Shie Hassaikai group, with their goal is to stop them from creating a Quirk-Destroying Drug and save a little girl at the center of it. Meanwhile, two students of U.A. High attend a special Hero License course, having failed their previous exam. Then, U.A. holds its annual School Festival and Class 1-A decides to have a dance performance with a live band in hopes to ease the public's doubt of their worth. Later, the new hero rankings was revealed after All Might's retirement. The fourth season premiered on October 12, 2019, on ytv and NTV.[1] However, the first episode of the season on NTV was suspended in some regions of Japan due to the emergency reporting on Typhoon Hagibis, and international simulcasts were delayed. Funimation has licensed the season for an English-language release in North America.[2] Funimation premiered the first episode of the fourth season at Anime Expo on July 6, 2019, with the English dub.[3][4] Crunchyroll and Hulu are simulcasting the season outside of Asia as it airs, while FunimationNow is streaming in Simuldub.[5] Funimation's adaptation premiered on Adult Swim's Toonami programming block on November 9, 2019.[6] Several episodes on Toonami got delayed, due to the schedule redaction or disruption and the effects of COVID-19 pandemic which ended on June 28, 2020, instead of May as it originally scheduled. Four pieces of theme music are used for this season: two opening themes and two ending themes. For the first fourteen episodes, the opening theme is "Polaris" (ポラリス) by Blue Encount, while the ending theme is "Kōkai no Uta" (航海の唄, The Song of the Voyage) by Sayuri.[7] The second opening theme is "Starmarker" (スターマーカー) by Kana-Boon and the ending theme is "Shout Baby" by Ryokuōshoku Shakai.[8] Chrissy Costanza performs the insert songs "Each Goal" in episode 19 and "Hero too" in episode 23.[9] Episode list[edit]Home video release[edit]Japanese[edit]Toho released the fourth season of the anime on DVD and Blu-ray in six volumes in Japan, with the first volume released on January 22, 2020, and the final volume released on August 19, 2020.[41] Toho (Region 2 — Japan)
English[edit]Funimation released the series in North America in two volumes, with the first volume released on September 29, 2020 and the second volume on February 16, 2021.[48][49] Both volumes received a DVD/Blu-ray release on February 15, 2022.[50] Funimation (Region 1/A — North America)
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Quand sort la saison 7 de My Hero Academia ?Il est sorti le 6 août 2021 au Japon et le 26 janvier 2022 en France.
Quand sort la saison 6 de MHA ?Un nouveau teaser est publié le 24 septembre 2022 sur les réseaux sociaux. Il vient confirmer la date de diffusion de l'épisode 1 au 1er octobre 2022 ainsi que la continuité du studio Bones.
Quand il y aura la saison 3 de My Hero Academia sur Netflix ?La série n'est cependant pas disponible du tout ni sur le catalogue Netflix US, ni Netflix Canada. Comme précisé en introduction, il faudra patienter jusqu'au mois de mars / avril 2021 pour profiter de la saison 3 de My Hero Academia.
Pourquoi DEKU quitté YUEI ?Au lendemain de la guerre, et du déclin de la société des héros, Deku quitte temporairement Yuei, travaillant aux côtés de All Might, du Top 3 des héros et des Luckers pour traquer les restes du Front de Libération du Paranormal, ainsi que de continuer à exploiter la pleine puissance du One For All en préparation de la ...
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