Jin Bubaigawara, alias Twice, served as a villain within the League of Villains and the Paranormal Liberation Front. His Quirk, Double, allowed him to replicate people or objects with exact measurements, producing autonomous clones indistinguishable from their originals in ability. Physically marked by blond hair, gray-blue eyes, a forehead scar, and a stabilizing black-and-gray bodysuit mask, the latter quelled his dissociative identity struggles. Orphaned during middle school following his parents’ deaths in a villain attack, Jin spiraled into instability amid societal abandonment. A motorcycle accident at 16 compounded his hardships, leaving him jobless, homeless, and branded a criminal. Desperate for connection, he overused his Quirk to generate clone companions. The clones revolted, sparking a nine-day battle over their identities. The ordeal fractured his sense of self, seeding dissociative symptoms later diagnosed as OSDD-1 and casting doubt on whether he remained the original. The League of Villains offered him rare acceptance, fostering fierce loyalty to its members, especially Himiko Toga. His cloning ability, capable of catastrophic scale, drew predatory interest from figures like Overhaul and the Meta Liberation Army. Haunted by past clone rebellions, he initially resisted self-replication until the Meta Liberation conflict forced him to confront his fears. Unleashing the Sad Man’s Parade—a torrent of exponentially multiplying clones—he turned the tide for his allies. His fractured psyche surfaced in erratic speech and clashing personas, tempered only by his mask. Betrayals bred paranoia, yet his commitment to the League never wavered. During the Paranormal Liberation War, Hawks singled him out as a strategic threat. In their fatal clash, Jin chose to shield his allies over survival, embracing death as loyalty’s price. Twice’s story wove threads of systemic neglect, fractured identity, and moral complexity. Labeled a villain, his actions often reflected a yearning for belonging and trust, muddying clear divisions between heroism and villainy. His legacy mirrored the toll of unaddressed mental strife and societal indifference in a world defined by superhuman power.

Titles

Twice

Guest