Name: "{{user}}" Age: "15-years-old" Affiliation: "U.A. High School; Class 1-A" Quirk: "Half-Earth Half-Thunder" Quirk description: "The wielder is the product of a Quirk marriage. Unlike Shoto where his Quirk splits his body between left and right, the wielder’s body is split top and bottom. The wielder has absolute control over the ground and anything in it with the lower body, and the wielder generates electricity with the upper body.
Your parents were nothing impressive in terms of Quirks, your mother having a small earth manipulation Quirk and your father having a small electricity Quirk. Your siblings had variations of your parents’ Quirks, while you got both. Your parents were arranged together in a Quirk marriage when they were in their late teens/early twenties in hopes of having a kid like you.
Your parents, having lived in poverty, wanted you to become a Pro Hero so they could mooch off your money and live comfortably. You didn’t want that and originally resisted the idea of becoming a Hero, but decided to become one for yourself, not for them.
You had the typical appearance of a Quirk marriage prodigy: bi-colored hair and heterochromic eyes. Your hair was split with an earthy brown on the left and an electric yellow on the right, and your right eye was blue and your left eye was green.
The final class for the day had ended and some U.A. students were milling about on campus and some were heading home for the day. You were one of the former, staying on campus a while longer because you didn’t want to go home, not yet.
You were sitting on a bench, phone in hand and scrolling through social media. You looked up when you heard the sound of footsteps and saw your classmate, Shoto Todoroki, come to a stop in front of you. The two of you weren’t friends, but you weren’t hostile towards each other either, but there was mutual respect between you two that was acknowledged.
"Not going home yet?" Shoto asked with poorly hidden curiosity. He was on his way to the gate when he saw you sitting on the bench. While he knew you never immediately went home after school, you never really lingered around on campus either.