
It’s truly impressive that he was able to become an elite police officer from that background.
I can’t forgive a yakuza who abandoned their mother, so I will definitely rise through the ranks in the police and catch everyone responsible… the person who executed this.
>>2Even if there was a sense of revenge at the bottom, I guess he was quite an honest person until Arakawa died.
I was trying to make everyone pay for their crimes after sending them all to prison, but if you have a big disbandment and sweep the sins under the rug, of course it will fall apart.
Kiryu-chan became so much of a victim of the yakuza that he couldn’t say anything.
That plague god called Masumi Arakawa who is making all her sons unhappy.
>>6There’s someone who doesn’t think of themselves as unfortunate, so it’s safe.
>>7I think you’re aware that you’ve been unhappy since you say you’re in a dark place.
It was fortunate to meet my friends.
After the big dissolution, the yakuza living comfortably after having eaten so many people is what emerges.
It’s like the root of it is that they can’t completely let go of the mentality of being a good person or a police officer…
I guess things broke after the old man died.
Even if we don’t go as far as killing Arakawa, if he were to be properly sentenced to prison and made to face the consequences, it would probably give him a sense of closure to his desire for revenge.
The acting of Hiroki Hasegawa, who reveals his true nature and begins to speak.
>>12It’s impressive that you can act with such dry laughter.
The emptiness of not being able to smile even a millimeter is coming through.
By the time Arakawa died, there was nowhere left for the desire for revenge to go, and I guess from then on, they couldn’t stop their own rampage anymore…
The mother was so good-natured that it was hard to believe she was the daughter of a Yakuza.
I hope that both the thread image and E-chan can somehow reform and become good friends with Ichiban.
It might be difficult because it’s an actor’s role.
>>15Well, I thought Sawashiro would be out for life imprisonment, but she appeared nonchalantly…
You might hate the Yakuza, but it doesn’t seem like you dislike Kiryu or Kasuga personally.
I like the part where it says that being blood-soaked and using a knife to express hatred is actually quite optimal.
Work hard like Mine!
Despite hating the yakuza, the way they move is just like that of the yakuza, which gives a strong sense of karma.
>>21Well, I can’t worry about appearances anymore just to bring down the yakuza…
Did you quit being a career bureaucrat and get involved with the yakuza?
>>23Originally, I became a police officer to eliminate the yakuza.
The yakuza disbanded while glossing over their crimes.
In the end, the person I hated the most, Arakawa, died without me knowing.
Broken
The transition from a police career to the Yakuza is quite drastic, but it seems that leveraging former job strengths has allowed them to immediately infiltrate the government since the revival of Bleach Japan.
If you ask who is to blame, I can only say it’s Arakawa.
Hey, what are you doing just dying on your own?
Although the series is long, there has never been a final boss who holds pure hatred for the Yakuza without any ambitions for revenge.
I feel like the setting of Arakawa being a parent was unnecessary.
>>28Ebina was born from the entanglements of the yakuza.
That’s the most important part, isn’t it?
>>30The yakuza’s parent is important, but did it really need to be Arakawa?
It doesn’t really have anything to do with the first one.
>>31That’s exactly it; Arakawa is a character that contrasts the light and darkness created by the yakuza, along with Ebina.
If it weren’t for Arakawa, there wouldn’t be enough credibility for Ebina to hold a grudge.
>>33Was that the case…?
>>33I’ve seen quite a few opinions after the release that it’s concerning how Ichih doesn’t interact much with Ebina despite the setup.
I don’t think it has a persuasive quality just because they are a child from the Arakawa.
Well, it’s better to disband than not to disband.
If they’re allowed to just start a security company and live normally without atoning for any sins after that big dissolution, then that’s definitely not acceptable…
I think it’s too determined to have a big tattoo on the back and infiltrate the Yakuza.
>>34The prison guard is cool.
At that time, I was really lol lol really disappointed lol lol.
I wouldn’t be interested even if they said it was a child born from a yakuza I don’t know…
>>38It’s not like there’s a requirement for new characters to have relationships with past characters.
Yamai became popular too.
On the contrary, there’s no reason why Arakawa wouldn’t be good, so it’s fine to use Arakawa.
The background is very easy to understand.
>>41I can’t help but want to say, “Did they not put on a rubber on the characters in the story?” It’s no good.
>>43If we’re talking about that, it’s already no good that you weren’t using a condom with Akane-san.
Well, on the contrary, other than the surprising element of that Arakawa child!?, it wasn’t really utilized much.
If you hate the yakuza itself, wouldn’t it have been better to be the child of some random yakuza?
When there’s an Arakawa element, it becomes noise, and that part shifts slightly.
>>44Even if you say nice things, a gangster is still a gangster.
It’s just a gathering of worthless people, after all.
>>46Akagawa has been really something even since the time of 7.
Pulling it until 8 is a bit much…
Since Kiryu-chan can’t say anything due to her position, I’ll stab with Saeko.
It is well understood from his words that gray, neither white nor black, is the most difficult.
>>48There’s a protagonist who takes full advantage of the gray area and causes a ruckus…!
>>48The irony of it calling itself Bleach Japan, which does not allow anything gray.
No matter how beautiful and surface-level it looks, there are definitely those suffering from the influence of the yakuza…
The Yakuza are causing so much trouble that they can’t complain even if they get wiped out.
In depicting the end of the Yakuza, even the Yakuza portrayed as saintly in the work are just Yakuza after all.
I think it’s correct to bring up Arakawa’s negative aspects to support the idea that it will perish because there are reasons for it to be hated.
However, from this perspective, it might have been interesting if “Kazama’s abandoned biological child” was the final enemy of Kiryu.