
In the past, I used to get depressed reading stories about young women, but now that I look at it, the debtors are actually quite worse, seriously…
In the final episode, Ushiijima turned out to be a really kind guy, which was different from the impression I had.
However, the character I found scary was not Ushijima, Suberikawa, or Shishitani, but Takemoto!
No, what is it? Is it some kind of doomed person with goodness? There’s no way they survived after that.
>>1A guy like a modern Jesus.
>>6Those who got involved with this guy are mostly heading towards ruin…
No matter what happens next, I am spared from suffering terribly.
Brainwashing-kun was actually the toughest.
Unlike the initially messy drawings, the later half gradually gained a sense of cleanliness, and while it lost some of its impact, I think it became easier to read.
There must be some kind of standard within Ushijima himself.
Because the gentle mode and the squeezing mode switch depending on my mood.
I couldn’t quite hold onto the feeling that they were unexpectedly kind.
I can’t believe I’ll die just like that.
It seems like they would be dead as a moneylender, so they are probably making a living drawing moe illustrations while having money, using Skeb.
>>5I might be receiving Super Chats from the rabbit’s 24-hour broadcast.
I don’t think he’s a dark hero.
I feel like there are serious losers like Dakie.
The yakuza big brother is depicted too coolly in the spin-off.
In reality, going bald and becoming fat has erased any resemblance, hasn’t it?
Toshiaki-kun ①
>>12Hey! Toshiaki-san! What are you going to do about the interest?!
I felt that every part had a beautiful conclusion, which is why I was disappointed with the final episode.
I feel more of a limit with the author than with Ushijima.
When you want to feel refreshed, reading the “Gyaru Kitan” chapter will lift your spirits.
In the live-action version, it somehow looks like a good guy…
I also learned that to completely destroy a person’s bones, you can lay them over a ditch and jump on them.
>>15Is the live-action version quite different?
>>17There is a feeling that a childhood friend who is well-connected with other stories is present, and at the end, there is a slight sense of resignation that shows a certain purity.
>>19Will it change in the end, Dad…?
>>21Not much has changed.
In other words, the live-action dad is just as tidy in appearance, but he’s doing the same thing.
The text “ジッ…” translates to “Zzz…” in English.
In the first episode, he was just a frivolous guy, but Takada is getting really popular at an incredible pace, isn’t he…?
I thought Professor Kujo might be a little crazy, but when they suddenly started furiously using a ballpoint pen, I couldn’t handle it.
I’ll do that too.
Shishitani is way too crazy for getting into a direct fight with the 893.
Moreover, it was probably a time when the restrictions weren’t as strict as they are now.
Did Dad do something that bad to deserve that…?
>>23They have intentionally trapped us.
It’s a story about watching someone fall from grace, but it’s nice when there’s at least a little bit of hope in it, right?
The Paradise-kun arc is great, isn’t it!
Looking back at episode 1, Ushijima isn’t scary; the debtors are just so worthless that I can’t sympathize with them…
I should definitely refrain from getting into pachinko…
>>26If I quit pachinko, I’ll get bored and die!
Ushijima-kun is a loan shark, but fundamentally, it is the debtors who voluntarily agree to the contract, so the debtors who become the main characters in the episodes are basically scum.
KauKau Finance basically doesn’t engage in reckless customer acquisition…
>>27It’s amazing how they have a policy of only lending 50,000 to regular customers!
Watching episode 1 again now, Ezaki’s facial expressions are a bit funny, aren’t they?
When you read volume 1, you can really see how hard they worked on depicting women.
>>29Ushijima-kun is intimidating, saying “I’ll squeeze every last drop from the debtors who underestimate me!” but it’s not funny having debtors like cockroaches around.
What is it that suddenly starts with a refreshing summer episode about gay people…?
>>31The feeling of “What am I being shown?” is quite strong when it starts with me hanging out at a drag queen bar.
It’s quite incredible, but the expression of the way gay men speak and their behavior is so skillfully done that I can’t help but read it.
In the first place, getting involved with a loan shark means that you can no longer use banks or local moneylenders…
You don’t have to feel sympathy for the person themselves, but the people around them who become victims as a result of the collection efforts are suffering.
Why is the pachinko lady in episode 1 acting like a victim and glaring…? Isn’t she an idiot…?
>>35The fact that you’re going to borrow money in a place like that means you’re really in a tough spot.
It’s not so much that they’re stupid, but rather that they’re worthless, so there’s no helping it.
It felt like it ended because the story shifted from loan sharks to the yakuza, but still, I thought I would like to read something about the yakuza.
The live-action version has a female slippery river to begin with.
>>38Huh? … What?
>>44There is also a spin-off main character series.
>>49Just from seeing the preview, I thought, “This is Aizawa…” That’s amazing.
>>38It’s not Nagareyama.
Saihara dashi
It’s laughable that the stylish king seamlessly recommends drug dealers.
The live-action version has an original female character placed in a slippery position, but… well, it’s fine because she’s cute.
The lawyer manga ended up being like Ushijima-kun and it was no good.
Is Mizukawa TS for real?
Gal Kitan-kun, Ushi-Jima-kun also said that you’re really working hard, huh?
The gay boy chapter is not very harsh, so it might be my favorite.
Dad is seriously a rare honest guy who came to get involved with Ushijima-kun…
Gal Kitan is doing pretty well, but they are really bad at managing funds and are too involved with questionable people, so it can’t be helped. It’s become a place for applying tree sap for bug catching.
Dad, is that going to die like that…?
Ji…
Ugh.
The original guy from the Nagare kawa position lost a fight with Ushijima during his student days, and that wound caused him to die in another conflict, leading his girlfriend to hold a grudge against Ushijima and do something like what Nagare kawa did.
Is G10-kun actually alive in real life?
>>57I pretended to be dead after being buried with my teeth removed, but after the snake left, I crawled out of the ground, went to the hospital, and recovered fully.
>>67It’s too much of a power play!
>>67Is that a zombie?
>>67Yeah…
>>57The live-action emerged from the hole with determination.
Ramen N滑川 is on a past timeline.
>>68I think the ramen part is more of a parallel timeline rather than a chronological past.
Aizawa recovered after jumping in and is running a ramen shop.
>>80The couple that Aizawa raped turns out to be the final boss and they come to launch a robbery attack.
In the scene where he first appears, he seems like a strong character, doesn’t he, Dad?
Watching Ushijima-kun getting trapped, it seems like Yaminokari-kun was also putting in a lot of effort.
I should have just made a quick escape.
Dad has stylish handmade accessories, but…
Nigi… nigi…
It seemed like I was going to be reincarnated in another world, but I wasn’t.
The live-action version has no salvation for Salaryman-kun compared to the manga.
The sex worker who was robbed of 30 million is saved.
>>63How does it feel…?
Well, I mean, in the end, it’s revealed that the glasses were the work of the salaryman-kun, and everything was harmonious at home while being admired by his subordinates, but it’s a complete turnaround to the point where I missed an episode.
>>78Things like a happy family, being respected by subordinates, and actually being liked by the doctors have completely disappeared.
I just keep trying to live each day, and that hasn’t changed.
The gay edition probably resonates with those from Nishinari, as they can relate to this.
>>64I don’t know about the gay edition, but the depiction of young people trying to become trendy models is something that those who understand can relate to, and it makes you wonder what kind of world these models come from…
Since there’s nowhere left to squeeze, you could have just killed Dad right away, but giving him a chance really seems to acknowledge his effort.
It was unfortunate when the author was called in for a feature on dark part-time jobs on “Kurogen,” for some reason.
I’m not really an expert or anything… I decided to become a manga artist after reading Doraemon…
Ushijima-kun is kind to those who are doing their best.
I’ll steal your house.
>>71It’s bad that Utsui’s mother lost her savings in stocks.
Dad knows the background, so I feel a bit sympathetic.
From Ushijima’s perspective, they’ve caused a huge loss, so it’s understandable to be angry.
>>74It seems tough to think that they lost customer information… and were thinking about how much that single piece could have been worth there.
I was surprised that Seikatsu Hogo-kun was the first protagonist in this manga to succeed conveniently and smoothly.
>>76Rather, it’s incomprehensible that Ushijima is involved; he’s really just an acquaintance of the debtor.
I was confused, thinking, “Have you gone crazy trying to take something that has nothing to do with money?”
>>76This guy is seriously insane, they said.
A person who is overlooked by the thug?
The strange gags that occasionally pop up are oddly funny.
>>79The new weapon’s beam rifle was funny, but the Chinese-made LED with the limiter removed was seriously a beam rifle.
I quite like the guy from the juvenile detention center.
>>81I like Yakuza parts.
Juvenile detention part-time is subtle.
>>81I like them, but that fat guy with glasses is definitely dead in the main story.
The more I read the sequel, the more I feel that Aizawa being equal to those two is a lie!
>>82You’re a crazy person who kidnaps and rapes passing couples just because you’re irritated, Aizawa.
After going around in circles, the ordinary and interesting legend of the mamushi snake.
We don’t hold back against guys like Yamikon-Gari-kun who actively try to crush us; that’s only natural.
Honestly, there are times when the mobs who are being instructed to go wild are more abnormal and frightening than the named characters.
I thought it was surprising for Karazaki to do that on TikTok, but then I realized these guys are actually quite young.
>>90In the first episode, I was around 23 years old, but honestly, the timeline has jumped quite a bit.
Isn’t it in the late 30s in the final episode?
>>98Are you posting ridiculous videos on TikTok while being a slave to the yakuza at that age, Garasaki?
>>110My salary is paid in cash to avoid taxes, and I can’t do much with my income…
The juvenile detention part just ends up causing trouble in the juvenile facility no matter how hard you try, so the pattern is too similar…
Brainwashing-kun is seriously too graphic to read.
>>97It’s scary that the event we made a joke about with Brainwashing-kun during that time has manifested in reality just like Brainwashing-kun itself.
>>100Huh? Not a manga that resembles the incident??
Was that manga first…?
>>111There was an incident that became the model.
>>111I just reported on the incident and turned it into a manga, so of course the incident came first.
I can’t tell how much of G10-kun is a joke.
Oh, I want to eat duck soba.
The live-action version of Ms. Iisuki is seriously cool.
The feeling of “absolutely must not get involved” and the neck measurement are incredible.
The terrifying final chapter where everyone doesn’t really know what they want to do and all look like fools.
>>103It’s good to have a water cup! But in that part, the characters move a bit too much for the sake of the story.
>>103The final chapter has too much fiction in it, making it lacking in reality, which is not good.
>>112It would be a problem even if it’s realistic…
>>103Ushijima-kun coming back to his hometown is really too reckless.
>>117Even within the story, they’re adding jokes, and they’re making you wonder if that answer indicates something’s wrong with them.
I am writing a story to completely bring about Ushijima’s downfall.
The rabbits from Ushijima-kun and the Black Thunder from Kujo are cute animals, aren’t they?
I want to ask something; I couldn’t understand the leader of the group at Seiai’s house until the end, but what kind of person is that?
Do you have a mental disability?
>>106It’s a bottom feeder, but it’s satisfied just leeching off the group and has a decent flow of money because of that.
I returned to being a底辺 worker because the house of love collapsed.
That’s it.
I wonder if it was impossible to work in the era before mobile phones.
Yakuza chatting on Facebook is way too much; these guys love to talk too much.
The feeling of coming straight out of the live-action G10-kun’s manga is amazing.
Makagawa’s IQ is dropping too much… I mean, even if they don’t take him that seriously, he still ends up above Ushijima-kun due to his position anyway…
I thought the person whose legs were cut off in the octopus room was pitiful, but I like how it becomes clearer that they’re actually a real scoundrel.
But it’s still a level of craziness that barely qualifies as brainwashing.
I learned that I exist in reality.
I was shocked that Kanou was killed, and the way he was killed was brutal…
I was pretty sad.
>>118If something happened with the dryer, wouldn’t you pretty much die at that point?
A manga that seemed fully digital but was actually fully analog.
Smugglers are interesting, you know…
To those who have left evidence of abuse by a caregiver in the “Seven Deadly Sins of Kujou.”
Looking at the characters receiving punishment, I thought this author really likes punishment.
I have a vague and tough memory of a sex worker whose retort curry got stolen along with the money they had saved, leaving them broke.
When I first saw it, the person from FUZAKERUNA left the impression of showing resilience at the end, but looking back, that transformed into the image of someone who caused endless trouble and acted freely, ultimately dying satisfied on their own terms.
However, I don’t think it’s possible to just survive as it is with this subject matter, and I believe it could end in such a way.
I didn’t really understand how Masaru was managing to survive and do well…
GameCube Episode 1
The smartphone casually appears in the middle part.
The big sin of Kujou is that I’m only enjoying reading it for the Yakuza’s violence.
Eishuri! Eishuri!
>>131I was like, “Did I see this in Breaking Bad?”
>>131The violence towards that guy has become totally incomprehensible.
I’ll say this since I finished watching it, but Kanou gets caught way too much!!
Based on the conversation in the car when the president and Nami**kawa temporarily cooperated, I think that if the president had a personality that honestly accepts being subordinate to others, Nami**kawa wouldn’t treat him poorly.
A mysterious manga where you can find read-aloud stories on YouTube and plenty of ways to enjoy it for free.
>>137Don’t say “reading aloud”!
>>137Although it’s been a few years since it ended, I think it’s a great initiative because it seems to have a solid grasp of the preferences of the target audience.
If it had a style like “Ushijima-kun” where the villain is extremely wicked and doesn’t hesitate to kill yakuza, it might have been different.
Ushijima-kun himself makes fairly rational judgments, doesn’t take unnecessary risks, and tends to avoid conflict, so… well, it wouldn’t have felt too out of place even if he got stabbed and it ended there.
At least by the time the protagonist of Brainwashing-kun is released, Ushijima is still alive, but I’m not really sure about the timeline around that area.
In the final chapter, it really feels like all the characters’ IQs have dropped too much, or rather, they seem to be acting simply out of convenience.
I was surprised that being a modern yakuza in the story is treated as foolish.
Come over to eat okonomiyaki again.
My mom keeps nagging me to call Ushijima-kun.
The fact that Karasaki lured a president who was trying to work properly into the underworld loan business is truly a terrible plague spirit.
In reality, it was not the yakuza, but rather the semi-greeds that were ahead of the game.
A lone wolf will only end up getting arrested or dying, right?
Is Slip Skin really living in a hotel all the time?
It’s nice that the incapable salaryman, like in the story, can’t betray his partner at the very end.
The guy who got helped by Takemoto thinks that it’s better to work part-time than to commit a crime.
I like how easy it is to watch live-action.
Nigi
Nigi
What is that hopeless workplace called Sei Ai no Ie?
>>151The so-called “octopus room.”
>>151In modern times, the methods have changed a bit; they have people on welfare while taking a cut, and they target single elderly individuals receiving pensions to take all of their pension under the pretext of management.
Hey Siri
Brainwashed-kun was quickly taken care of when he appeared in Ushijima.
>>155I feel like I’ve been doing jobs lately that don’t match the price, like a viper.
DQN Buster is interesting.
It’s too sad that Aizawa is in a situation where she shouldn’t go against those three.
Like a subordinate middle school student…
>>157If it’s a spin-off, they’re running a ramen shop or time-leaping and surprisingly enjoying life, but the premise is that they’re kidnapping unrelated couples and raping them… that’s how it is.
You bastard, nameless!
Is it because it’s been quite a while since Ushijima-kun ended that you’re acting all carefree?!
What is that trashy spin-off of the pit viper?
It was good that I didn’t know what you were thinking, so it was scary.
>>161Lately, it seems like I’ve only become a mere hero of justice.
At the beginning of the spin-off, there was still an atmosphere like whether the client would kill or be killed.
Being thrown into a contractor’s “tako-beya” (a room for subpar workers) until the debt is paid off is seriously a possibility.
I don’t think there’s anything as terrible as that.
I somehow like that Super Taxi-kun continues to drive.
I feel like he was only in the early part, but did the financier of Ushijima reappear?
>>164From the very beginning, it felt like they were cutting ties with their financier during their debut episode, so they must have already quit being a financier.
I thought the new Aizawa spin-off was drawn by Itoman.
>>167“I laughed because it was too soon that the traitorous subordinate was killed for being an idiot who could only betray with words.”
The spin-off of the viper is no longer a monster…
After being released, my older brother Iwasawa Katsu suddenly changed his appearance.
Paradise-kun is too beautiful until the ending.