
Finally it has come… It has come… Clank.
It’s a situation that should be purged, even disregarding some business ethics.
Is this the story about how the Nakagawa Consortium suffered such a huge loss that they went overseas to escape?
>>2
I successfully took over completely, but I was immediately fired at the shareholders’ meeting.
>>2
I’ve been steadily increasing my assets through stocks by learning about the stock mechanisms from Electrode Plus.
They have even started acquiring companies, but the company they acquired was one at the end of the Nakagawa Group.
I always thought it would come someday…
Nakagawa’s subordinate is properly recognizing and being cautious of Ryotsu.
Let’s read!
You can truly understand the terror of hostile takeovers with this.
With such amazing initiative, it would be terrifying if they gained wisdom.
>>9
Ryo-san is smart in a way that is unnecessarily smart…
It’s terrible that it’s not gradual but at quite a fast speed.
The density of the story is strange.
>>11
I laughed at the comment about a trillion game that ends in one episode.
>>32
If Ryotsu wanted to, he could handle Haru and Gaku by himself…
If you can get a struggling company back on track, then you can do anything…
>>13
It’s not the goal, but a means, so it won’t stop.
I think it was already beginning to corrode from the grassroots when Kinjirou married Nakagawa’s extremely distant relative.
The development of products that companies in Nakagawa want has been successful, which is terrible.
You’re really good at getting things on track, Ryo-san.
This time, perhaps because I stubbornly aimed for the acquisition itself, it’s terrible that there’s no chance of stumbling along the way due to greed.
Even Nakagawa can’t compete with overseas investment funds.
>>18
As long as it is a corporation, no company can win against investors.
>>23
Usually, I only give stocks to investors up to the line where it’s okay to play.
Because we’re family, after all.
I think the executives who are easily fooled by Ryo-san’s smooth talk are also to blame.
It seems like Ryo-san should know about stocks and stuff, but didn’t he?
>>20
Ryō-san’s amount of knowledge is variable…
There was a time when I used to say things like “What is a computer?”
The technical capabilities of the acquired company are amazing.
You’re doing something quite outrageous nonchalantly…
When he switched to revenge, he didn’t involve others. I like Ryosan.
>>22
If it were Honda, he would definitely have been taken down with them.
Ryotsu has great business acumen, so it’s scary how the companies he acquired in the early and middle stages have been successful.
I know very well that I can do it…
It’s sad that they are being cut off from the Nakagawa Group just because there was Ryozu among the executives, even though they merely acquired a dynamic company without knowing anything.
Hey, did anyone hold shares of Nakagawa Automobile…?
I wonder how many people have died.
Because Nakagawa did something unnecessary, a fire started…
>>34
Considering the risks involved with Ryotsu, it’s only natural to want to forcefully cut losses even if it results in some negatives…
>>63
In the first place, the goal is to take over the company from the ground up, so if we leave that alone, it would normally be completely consumed and ended at the fastest pace…
But it’s also bad that Nakagawa has a part of him that seeks this thrill.
It’s amazing how the theme of the company belonging to its shareholders is portrayed from start to finish…
It was no good that high-quality low-cost LCD development was successful as if it were a matter of course.
Hey, Ryo-san, quit being a police officer and go into consulting.
>>39
Ryō-san is no good because he misses the timing to quit when things are going well.
It’s nice that Nakagawa was also afraid that the day would come when Ryozutsu would become an enemy.
When Ryo-san gets greedy, he fails, but I like that this time he knows the line and is told to drop to plus.
Ryo-san would probably make the most profit by starting a venture and selling the business once it gets on track.
>>42
Starting a venture, getting profitable, getting carried away, and then going bankrupt.
It seems like there is a kind of format for that.
Among the powerful, there are only a handful of really intelligent people, which makes it vividly possible to be caught off guard.
The pace of the story is incredible.
It’s an episode that makes you think “Kochikame is really amazing.”
It’s easy to understand and incredibly dense.
As expected, transferring the equipment is not allowed; you should buy a new one.
>>47
Right before the change in management, we only signed a contract with the new company to sell all the equipment at fair market value, didn’t we?
Episodes featuring Ryotsu and Nakagawa are all interesting, aren’t they?
I think there are a few people hanging themselves behind this story.
>>49
The 20 people at the small factory didn’t have to hang themselves!
I thought that Witch Watch has the closest style to the current issue that I’m reading.
Normally, you have strong allies in your family, but when it comes to Ryō-san, there’s a significant possibility that those family members might actually side with Ryō-san.
The stock price of Nakagawa Motors has dropped to 5 yen, and probably a few people are hanging themselves.
>>52
This is amazing…!
>>52
This is the scary side of stocks, you understand now, right?
It’s really convenient until the company gets on track, you know, Ryo-san.
That’s where it really goes wrong.
It’s nice to see Nakagawa trembling while Ryozu is reading the economic newspaper.
I already have a bad feeling about this at this point.
I feel like the punchline is weak compared to the overwhelming momentum leading up to it.
Well, if I actually get kicked out, then that would be the end of it, I suppose…
I think it must have been very difficult for Nakagawa to explain the situation regarding why he caused Nakagawa Motors to go under, especially since he is Nakagawa himself.
To the outside eye, he is a smooth-talking, skilled manager.
I generally like the episodes where Nakagawa gets really angry or seriously flustered.
A man who can rise but cannot maintain.
The punchline is “This is the fear of stocks,” but what dealt the final blow to Ryotsu isn’t the fear of stocks, is it?
“But I think Nakagawa next to me has reconfirmed the fear of stocks through personal experience…”
>>61
Because of the stocks, Ryo-san got taken over, and because of the stocks, Ryo-san was kicked out, so if you were to talk about fear, well…
It was actually a success in hoarding.
I misunderstood and thought I had failed halfway through.
As expected from always watching.
It’s good to acknowledge the fear of a motivated senior.
Don’t let capable elementary school students roam free.
The supposedly unbreakable bond of relatives, could Ryotsu, one of Nakagawa’s few friends, not sell it? What if he ends up selling it?
There was also a story about how I swapped bodies with Ryō-san and then confined the real Nakagawa to do whatever I wanted.
When Ryotsu’s switch flips, he really demonstrates incredible performance… but when he loses it, he quickly falls apart and it’s over.
I can’t believe you don’t dislike Ryo-tsu.
>>70
I like you as a person.
I just really don’t want to get involved in business.
What kind of police can come back after all this…?
>>71
I haven’t committed any crimes…
If anything, even committing some crimes will only result in non-prosecution or a pay cut for the higher-ups, while the lower ranks can just resign voluntarily.
>>71
Because it’s a cage called the police.
So Nakagawa is the president, huh?
Isn’t it a bit strange that this was serialized weekly?
>>75
It’s really something that they’ve been able to continue this level of standalone stories without any breaks for several decades.
In foreign companies, you can be incredibly capable and earn a lot of money.
Ryozu can’t continue because he’s able to work at his own pace and also has very little human connection.
Well, if Nakagawa’s target isn’t actually him, he’ll totally lend his strength to Ryo-san…
Buying stocks directly from the head of the Nakagawa family is against the rules.
Even if you’re kicked out, the stocks you bought won’t disappear, right?
I’m just fueled by a competitive spirit against Nakagawa, so it ended here, but if I don’t get fixated, I could bounce back as many times as I want…
Well, it’s a meaningless assumption because without that motivation, I definitely wouldn’t be this motivated.
Nakagawa also interacts normally with Ryo-tsu’s business itself.
Buying scrap iron from derelict ships.
>>85
Especially when it comes to cars, they start to get really excited and synchronize.
>>96
Super rich people don’t really value their cars that much, and I totally understand that.
>>110
Sometimes when you go down the road, the Ferrari scrapes against the ground, Nakagawa…
It’s amazing how, while having the chaotic essence of Kochikame, it consistently maintains the core idea that shareholders are strong.
If a rich CEO like Nakagawa, who has his identity, is almost taken over just by saying “Let’s try stock trading,” then of course he would reject it.
If the goal is to make money, at some point you will get found out, and if the objective is to win like this time without caring about appearances, you may get to victory but won’t be able to sustain it, so the best strategy to avoid loss is to just take advantage of the momentum in the early stages.
An episode where Ryo-san’s expressions are overly rich in variety.
It will end up making a bad impression on Nakagawa, won’t it…?
>>90
I don’t think people who know Ryotsu until now would have their impression of him worsened by this level of defense strategy.
The ability to support is serious, you know…
Once you reach a certain point, you can just cut your losses and discard both sides to make a profit.
>>91
The problem is that if you discard it, you will definitely be revenged.
Maybe if the whole company can work together like during the patent time…?
During the electrocution days, it felt like “President Woah!” and everything was going really well.
Wow, isn’t the technology there amazing…?
Courage and toughness are like a Terminator.
Once the aim is directed this way, there is only fear.
In a household where family gatherings happen only once every few years, having a friend like Ryotsu, who has no vested interests, is important since I am also the president.
This story became extremely dangerous because of the conflicts of interest.
I never knew Akimoto Osamu could draw a story like this…
When Ryo-san competes in the stock showdown with Nakagawa, he is kind to let go of the plus points…
>>98
It’s just that the instinct of a competitor won, and I understand that the positive words of the advisor are correct in itself…
In terms of electric shock, he is an exceptionally skilled president.
Incredible sense of speed.
At the point of implementing scorched earth tactics, Nakagawa is also quite at fault for trying to kill them completely as enemies.
Both Ryō-san, who started to grow companies dramatically as a game, and it’s also bad.
I’ve been suspicious all along, and Nakagawa, who made Ryotsu’s name a mark, certainly understands well.
In the end, Ryotsu got kicked out, but either way, he must have received a fatal blow from Nakagawa.
What grudge do you have against Nakagawa…?
>>105
If I hear that I can make a rich person my pawn…
There’s definitely a wild fluctuation with an astonishing number of hangings happening…
>>107
If you’re going to hang yourself over the ups and downs of stocks, I don’t think you can survive in the world of Kochikame…
The fluctuations in stock prices in that world are way too extreme.
I think if Ryo-tsu had a goal before taking over Nakagawa’s company, he could have run the company normally.
The episode where Nakagawa says something like “It’s the senior…” is interesting.
>>111
When I thought he stopped showing his face at the police box after being scolded by the department head, he often says something unbelievable when he comes back.
Ryōtsu Loan is
Absolutely not normal!
If Ryo-san hadn’t been reading the economic newspaper at the police box, there might not have been any report at all.
If only Ryō-san could just use the part that explosively grows the target genre…
Aren’t the employees of the company that was acquired too much of a winner…?
Isn’t it just plain intuition × Kei BL?
It’s great to see such a full-on rejection response, knowing the amazingness of my senpai.
>>119
So that’s how it is… I’ve already taken countermeasures, so it’s really an intellectual battle now.
No, it’s the fear of stocks.
Since Ryo-san has become the president.
If you know about Ryousan’s drive, you have to do at least this much, or you’ll really lose…
>>122
Because I know, my judgment was quick and accurate… but there are times when there’s nothing I can do…
The money game can be played without seeing cash, so Ryotsu can go along without getting carried away.
But still, I can’t really feel like I’ve earned it unless I see the cash!
The mobile business that is being pulled along crazily in the trillion game is just one frame…
This time, Nakagawa should have directed Ryō’s attention elsewhere while helping.
Don’t confront it…
There are times when you want to do something not for profit but out of feeling.
It’s something you shouldn’t do with stocks.
It’s a grand senior-junior game, but the damage is huge!
>>128
Nakagawa’s company is definitely having an impact on the world.
>>140
It’s more like Nakagawa’s company is the world itself, having an impact on the world…
>>128
The remaining debts of Ryotsu Land and Ryotsu TV seem severe.
Mikame Matsu: “It’s like watching a live movie…”
When Ryotsu moves without considering money-making, it’s amazing in various ways.
It’s amazing even when it’s for the purpose of making money.
The rapid growth of the Ryotsu Fund can only be understood because of its smooth talk.
He’s the type of man who, once he gets motivated, will reach the top for a moment but then fall at an incredible speed afterwards.
As soon as they see an enemy, they cause damage with almost the same intensity as cancer cells…
>>134
Rude.
Even if they are on your side, they often end up becoming cancer cells.
I think Reiko is probably doing something similar, even if it’s not depicted.
When Ryotsu is moving in the extension of play, he can’t be stopped.
It’s better than the physical damage caused by Train GO.
Kiyotsu sometimes becomes stubborn because they escape right in front of him. If you ask what he should have done instead, he doesn’t know.
The fact that the takeover itself is successful is crazy.
When I started a car company in India, I gained power within the country, so I couldn’t disband and ended up not facing ruin.
Copying the company completely is the worst approach, but I understand that when dealing with Ryousan, you have to do at least this much.
If you get bored after growing a company and move on to the next one, then seriously, Ryousan could become a consulting god, he has the talent for it.
It’s an incredible police station that wouldn’t be surprising if media from all over the world swarmed in.
For the time being, if I can quietly reorganize the company and become a subsidiary of a large company, I can make a living as a management consultant.
>>149
The achievements of the successful companies and those that ultimately failed are shocking.
It was checkmate the moment I was targeted by Ryotsu.
It might be more frightening for someone to do it with a game-like mindset.
It just ended up falling apart because it was driven by revenge.
There are various reasons why Nakagawa continues to be friendly with his seniors while still holding them in high regard, but I think the main reason is that he instinctively understands, from a managerial perspective, the terrifying nature of turning them into enemies.
>>156
That’s true, but I think the main reason is that I’m a bit starved for family love due to my upbringing, so I like the seniors who invite me to hang out without worrying about it.
What’s scary about Ryo-san is that when he understands that something is bad and eliminates it, he inflicts even worse things out of resentment…
The department head said it was bad that you could take over the company if you obtained a majority of the shares.
>>159
The explanatory power of the kamishibai commentary is too high.
The story about Ryo-san’s stocks in volume 49, “The Person Who Saved My Life…”, is also recommended.
>>160
It’s about someone who was trying to commit suicide and the story of lending them the winnings from horse racing, right?
>>160
It’s a story about receiving stock certificates from the benefactor who saved me.
I like the episode where a copy of Ryōsan was created in the experiment.
I wrote that there’s a Ryo-san without desires, but in the end, his true nature was revealed through money, and I laughed.
I sold it because I wanted stocks! What is up with that relative who is trying to get involved…?
>>163
Usually, you know.
Selling a little won’t change anything.
Usually
>>166
38 percent is not a small amount!
>>163
He was raised in that family, so it’s no surprise that Nakagawa’s bad friends would also be sweet.
As soon as Nakagawa became a relative, the company at the end of the group started performing extraordinarily well.
When I was a child, I didn’t pay attention, but Nakagawa’s president’s office is too spacious!
Every time I review it, I find something new…
The department head is an understanding person towards Ryo-tsu, but he is still a superior and a stopper to Ryo-tsu’s special traits, so he seems to somewhat underestimate him.
Nakagawa understands Ryotsu’s quirks and behavior patterns better.
Nakagawa understands the hidden specs of Ryotsu, which is reflected in that expression…
>>169
Just a little involvement from the end completely understands this expression.
>>180
In the past, I just joined the end of the Nakagawa family’s family tree and actively utilized relatives to gather money…
Even if I had obtained information in advance and made sure to avoid touching the electric shock device, it would have sensed me and gotten involved somehow, so there’s nothing I can do now.
It’s amazing how Nakagawa and Ryo-san can remain friends even after going this far.
>>171
Precious Nakagawa is someone I can seriously fight with…
>>186
Where is that crew cut! It’s funny, but Nakagawa didn’t need to get that angry even if he couldn’t meet his father; he probably got so serious because it was against Ryo-san.
I also like the part where I was sent to a coffee plantation and built a coffee company to make a comeback.
If anything, Nakagawa often does things together with Ryotsu.
When things go wrong, it’s usually because Ryotsu is being greedy and self-destructive by himself.
Nakagawa’s company seems to produce outrageous wealthy individuals and sudden successes every few years due to its stock price crashing dramatically.
>>177
On the contrary, the rebound strength is also incredible, so it’s a strong candidate to buy at the right timing after a drop.
>>194
If something happens and it crashes, it’s just a buying opportunity…
It’s good that you were confident about coming here, right?
First of all, it’s strange that we have quietly become one of the world’s leading manufacturers with our technology.
Well, it’s no wonder since there are so many amazing people in this world, even among the extras.
Having learned a lesson from this story, Nakagawa thought that when Ryō-san launched an invasion against the company…
They took action to acquire by paying in cash all at once.
>>181
You’re smart… If you show them cash, they’ll definitely move.
When we were talking about how to buy up Nakagawa’s stock early on, Nakagawa was the only one that didn’t sound like a joke…
>>182
I think you’re joking, but if my senior is motivated, then I feel like I’m going to be taken advantage of.
>>188
Image from there.
It’s insane that Nakagawa is hitting on all the relatives the moment he realizes.
There are no misses in the episodes where Nakagawa goes crazy.
If you’re satisfied with Ryotsu TV…
A man who has been planning the Ryotsu birthday event for several years.
>>190
(The buzz cut that doesn’t come)
The other side is getting involved out of sheer amusement, and if I run away with all my strength, they’ll stick to me saying, “I’ll hit you!” so it’s really scary.
There is no compromise.
If Ryo-san knows when to back off, he will be the strongest.
>>192
There are some places where it is forgiven because it’s a mistake.
It’s a method I’ve used before, but at this point, the only option is to prepare a large amount of cash and buy back the stocks at a high price…
It’s seriously terrifying that it seems like they did it just for the fun of it, without any vision after taking over.
During the Nakagawa family’s reunion, Nakagawa is just pitiful.
>>200
What’s amazing is that each family member isn’t lacking in familial love; they truly have mutual affection for each other.
The story of winning on the next page after losing can only be seen in Kochira Katsushika-ku Kameari Kōen-mae Hashutsujo.
Last time, I didn’t misjudge when to back down; the coffee is right here with me, Ryo-san…
What’s amazing is that it makes Nakagawa think that once a bridgehead is established, they will definitely advance to the main keep.
>>203
If it’s a senior…
I’ll do it.
>>203
It’s a senior, you know?
I can do it.
This isn’t just about this time, but Plas is strange in the shadow of Ryo-san.
Can a super-rich person actually buy Nintendo and become president to create their favorite games?
>>208
I have management rights!
This story does not end here, as there is even an episode later where it becomes clear that some of the shares are still remaining.