What does it mean to be a hero?
The answer most would give is simple—someone who saves people.
But is that really all there is?
Could it not also be one who saves the world itself?
Or perhaps one who saves just a single person—the one they love above all others?
What about those who do good deeds in silence?
What about those who uphold the "greater good," even if it means staining their hands in ways others never would?
Heroism. Heroic deeds. Heroic decisions.
Hero.
The word alone gleams with the weight of morality, wrapped in ideals and dressed up as virtue.
But when you strip away the gloss, isn't it just as subjective as "good" and "evil" themselves?
They say heroes are born with the power to change everything—the strongest beings alive, destined to pull people toward some brighter future.
To them, the world bends.
To them, miracles cling.
And yet… even if the meaning shifts, even if its edges blur, the center always points to one thing:
Doing something good.