[center] [img]http://i.imgur.com/OKR0FTf.gif[/img] [h1]Ayato Kamina[/h1] [/center] Kamina was pretty slow in cleaning up after class. He was just barely finished putting the weapon away when the bell actually rang. He still wasn't in to much of a hurry. He walked back to the classroom and picked up some of his stuff before heading to the next class. Villain Psych was going to be interesting. Definitely not as fun, but still very important. It seemed he was one of the later students to arrive, so he just found an empty seat and slouched in it. He was ready for this day to be over. This was the last class, but it felt like there was still a lot more. The teacher didn't take very long to show. Ms. Mako was very to the point and prompt. He started off pretty slouched and ready to be bored, but she quickly changed that. Learning that she was a most wanted villain in the past was pretty interesting too. He sat up straighter in his chair as he listened to her now. It wasn't long before she handed out a paper with several scenarios on them. She wanted them to write how they would react to them. It really wasn't hard to think like a villain. Maybe, predicting them was difficult, but with the right information, even that seemed pretty easy. You just had to play by their rules. It would be really easy playing by there rules, since they had very little rules. He read over the paper and started answering them. Scenario 1: You arrive at the scene of a bank robbery. The robber holds an elderly lady at gunpoint and demands that you let them escape or he'll shoot. The robber seems terrified, and his gun hand is shaking. [i]Tell the robber that he can leave the bank or be arrested, but the elderly lady does not go with him. Also inform him that if he kills the elderly lady, he will die as well, as opposed to just being arrested.[/i] The first one seemed easy enough. Scenario 2: A sword wielding killer in armour had massacred several people in the middle of the day in a downtown market. As you confront him, he bows, and appears to be following old-fashioned combat etiquette. [i] Wait for him to stand up, and then capture him by any means necessary, probably by shooting him. I don't know what 'etiquette' he follows, but it's obviously not important since he slaughtered several people. I'm guessing they were innocent civilians.[/i] That was pretty easy too. Although, fighting a sword master would be pretty difficult. Scenario 3: You've managed to get tied up against a chair, and your quirk has somehow been nullified. The villain has a gun to your head, and says "I've waited a log time for this. This is one plan of mine that you won't foil!" Kamina had to think for this one. [i]Assuming I couldn't escape from the chair, I would ask him what his plan was and try to continue conversing with him until either help came, or I got loose from the chair. Then I could resist, but I would probably try to hold off on that until the last possible moment. Reinforcements would be a lot better.[/i] Scenario 4: A villain has brainwashed several civilians, and armed them. They stand between you and the villain, and they are advancing towards you with intent to attack. Your quirk has been nullified. The villain claimed earlier that if you killed him, the civilians would die. [i]If he is telling the truth, then it sounds like they are lost anyways. I would do the best I could to bypass them or knock them out until I reached the villain. If I could capture him without endangering myself, I would. Then there might be a way to force him to free the civilians or sever his connection to them safely. Otherwise, I would kill him and find out whether he was telling the truth or not. [/i] The thought of him telling the truth in this scenario was chilling, but if he took over more people it would be worse. Stopping him would absolutely be necessary. Scenario 5: The classic; a villain has kidnapped a member of your family or a loved one very close to you, and has strapped them to a bed with a laser cutting the table their on, inching closer to their body with every passing second. They have also taken a school bus full of children and rigged it with a timed bomb. They claim that you don't have time to save them both. [i]I would threaten the villain. Either he could stop both of the traps or he would be killed. If he didn't care about dying, then he probably didn't have an escape planned. I think I would save the bus, and then I would arrest the villain.[/i] This question made him really uncomfortable. He paused after he thought about the villain not caring about dying. Someone who felt like they had nothing to lose. It was sort of scary. Villain's power tended to come from fear, so just using fear on them seemed to be within the rules, but if they didn't care about that fear, then it would make a really scary situation. He wrote his name on the paper and handed it back to the teacher. It didn't seem like there were right or wrong answers, but he hoped his weren't too weird. Only time would tell. [@Silver Carrot]