15 / 29
Sep 2021

Yeah :smiley: It carries a sense of pride and "you totally want my ability now" with it. Or a sense of justice for the main character who fights with the abilities of the oppressed.

Then stuff gets sad when an ability dies out and all the history surrounding it. Or if the bond you had is broken, that ability get stunted or completely forgotten.

that reminded me of a character from Hunter x hunter who made explaining his abilities a requirement for his power because abilities can be empowered with restrictions and because he used those circumstances to blackmail people affected by it.

They were cursed by a witch to always explain their powers. :grin: Valid.

In all seriousness... To add, I think it'd make sense with a strong person vs weaker person dynamic. If the weaker person has no chance of gaining any advantage even when they do learn the explanation, the stronger person has no reason not to explain it apart from personal reasons (unless the weaker person could get back to someone else who's stronger, who would then use the knowledge). This has been done before in some anime and manga, and it should be in-character. Sometimes the stronger person is humoring the weaker one, toying with them, other times they pity them and they're being nice so they explain what is going on.

The person explaining the ability does no only because he is confident, but wants to humiliate the victim by telling them how powerful the technique is, thus how beyond anyone else this person is.

This for a villain of course

Let them explain their powers but lie, like they may say
" I have fire powers, and i couldn't function near water"
So if enemy was smart, they would put them in big bodies of water, then character can defeat them and admit to lying , and just before killing them, actually saying/showing their powers

and to stick further into the wound the character may say: "you really thought i would be foolish enough to tell you my ability and weaknesses?"

Why not just lie tho lol.
"Hey, yeah, so i have fire powers. I touch water and i die."
Villain dives into a water body with them "Aha!"
"Sike bro i'm actually half mermaid i love water. Behehehehehehehehe thanks."

I had to think for a while since seeing this topic. I've come to the conclusion, that there is no justification for explaining powers to an opponent in combat. It's at the worst a bloated narrative tool, and at the least a poor tactical decision.

Edit: HXH is pretty much the only series I've read that managed to make this trope work. But even then, it's a bit of a slog to read through.
I prefer to let the readers figure out how powers work over time.

Hunter X Hunter often takes interesting angles because such explanations are rarely done to enemies.

-Explaining their ability is often done between allies to optimize teamwork or as a sign of trust.

-There is a nen user in Greed Island who does this as a requirement for his ability and as a result, said ability has a massive boost in power.

-Hizoka's memetic explanation of "bungee gum has the properties of rubber and gum".......makes his ability sound ridiculous until he uses it for many creative and deadly tricks.

Which is mostly because Togashi himself dislikes the tropey nature of Shonen comics, so he actively changes up the formula.
But anyways, I'm not writing a Shonen series so it's a moot point xD. If people really want to know how powers work in my series, they can wait until I do Q+A's and I'll answer them lol

(Hope you accept joke answers)

Maybe they'll be scared over what it can do alone they'll just die on the spot.

actually, intimidation can be a valid tactic....

"come at me, i dare you.....i will disintegrate you with my touch"

Oh, well there you go.

THIS JUST IN MY ANSWER WAS COMPLETELY SERIOUS!