[center][img]https://i.imgur.com/dhHhENc.png[/img][/center] [hr] Reiji considered the match-up he was given, Seiki Kanako and Himura Amaya. Of course, being the dutiful Class President that he was, the moment that he was told that they would be helping the training practice for 1B, he had to look into Class 1B students. Seiki Kanako, quirk Mind Link. She was a telepath who specialized in mimicking the 'inner voice' of the target, thus making them second guess themselves and distract them in the middle of battle. Her role, typically would be more of a support to front-liners who would then subdue the target. The main weakness of her quirk was the fact that it has a limit of a 25-meter radius. Himura Amaya, quirk cryogenesis. Like Reiji, she was an emitter type, only except for emitting shards, Himura emitted ice. However, like Reiji, the products of their quirk had special properties aside from merely being shards of ice. In her case, it was that the more apathetic she was, the stronger the ice. The main weakness would be then if her feelings of apathy for her target waned. One scenario that Reiji could think of where that would be an issue, was when the villain was not doing something premeditated but more of a victim of circumstances. Overall, it was not as good of a match-up as if Reiji were to face the 1B students with a light quirk, because his shards will just deflect or use the light to generate electricity. But it was also not that bad of a match-up, just not something where an immediate plan is obvious yet. Not having support items narrowed his options, but he'd have to make do. Still, his main objective wasn't to win here. While that did not mean that he should hold back, as those tasked to help train their underclassmen, their main objective should be to 'test' them and then give constructive feedback. Ergo, if there were a chance to end the fight early, don't, because you're supposed to see what they're capable of giving feedback. Not that Reiji thought it would be an easy fight, but that was the sort of paradigm he needed to have going into the fight. See what they could do—preferably test for their weaknesses, if possible—then give constructive feedback. As he strategized further, he was then interrupted by the visit of Spiderman, who started quipping at everyone. Reiji did not like Spiderman. Well, 'not like' was too strong of a word. It was more that he was neutral, but he leaned more into the 'Spiderman is a menace' opinion. Apprehending criminals and villains was part of their job, yes. But the use of appropriate force was paramount because a hero's job wasn't simply to catch the criminal but to also maintain public order by being an example, whether they liked it or not. They were paid for that, they were compensated for that aspect of the job, thus it was part of their obligations. That was why they were [i]professional[/i] heroes and not vigilantes. Using an excessive amount of force than necessary belied a lack of professionalism. [b]"Not sure why you're designating me as the Ironman Jr, Senpai. Teknus Agency have other sidekicks beside me, one that's probably closer in 'style' to Ironman, really. That aside, are you going to be involved in the training exercise?"[/b]