Assasination Classroom: VALUES VIEW MORTALS!
ASSASSINATION CLASSROOM: VALUES VIEW MORTALS!
A Dark Continuation of Legacy and Loss
Years after the death of Koro-sensei and the disbandment of Class 3-E, Nagisa Shiota has tried to build a quiet life—teaching, healing, moving forward. But the past never truly dies. When a mysterious assassin named Yoku Hakumura appears at his door with orders to kill him, Nagisa discovers that the same government forces that created Koro-sensei never stopped their experiments.
UMA 8907—a shadow organization operating in Japan's deepest black projects—has spent decades perfecting the art of weaponizing human consciousness. Using Erabus Energy, a powerful substance derived from the fragments of the moon Koro-sensei destroyed, they've been conducting horrific experiments: consciousness transfer, memory manipulation, biological immortality, and the creation of human weapons stripped of emotion and free will.
Nagisa finds himself pulled into a nightmare that spans generations—uncovering facilities where children are tortured into compliance, where scientists play god with human minds, where his beloved teacher's final sacrifice has been corrupted into a tool for creating immortal monsters. Alongside Hakumura—a broken assassin slowly recovering memories of his own childhood experimentation—Nagisa must confront the true cost of institutional evil.
From the coastal orphanage where the children were harvested for consciousness extraction, to the underground archive where a child trapped in eternal youth guards humanity's darkest secrets, to the final confrontation with a being who believes he has transcended humanity itself—this is a story of trauma, resistance, and the question: What makes us human when everything human has been systematically removed?
Rated MA18+ for extreme psychological horror, graphic violence, themes of experimentations, and emotional content that explores the deepest darkness of institutional cruelty. This is Assassination Classroom's legacy—not as a story of hope, but as a examination of what happens when that hope is weaponized, when lessons of compassion are twisted into tools of control, and when the only way to honor the dead is to burn down everything built on their graves.
The classroom is closed. The lesson continues. And some students never graduate—they just learn to survive.