
It’s impossible; it’s too straight.
I’m too unsuited to not be able to kill.
Shall I show you a place that is properly managing a cabaret?
I have a feeling that we are about to go to full-scale war with Omi.
If you just become a yakuza, there’s no charm in that.
You can’t sit still in the chairman’s seat, can you?
I can do most things except for being a yakuza, so please don’t let it be that…
Manage a Pokécenter.
Should I get support from Nishiki?
The real estate agency is established…
I can totally see that the usual Tojo Clan meeting will definitely be all over the place.
>>12
What?
What did you say?
What does that mean?
Only those who have opposing opinions, come at me!
Maybe the Tojo Clan is still vigorously in conflict.
I cannot cut off my subordinates.
If you suddenly make someone who has never been in a gang and has spent nearly 10 years in prison the top leader, I think some of the old-timers will definitely complain.
>>16
That’s probably why they let go of it in just one day.
The recipient I handed it to was the worst.
A mini-game where you place or swap scary old men in a water trade island setting.
No matter which route you take, it’s absolutely impossible to go on with the yakuza personality-wise.
In the first place, the fact that all my younger brothers, my father, my best friend, and the woman I loved are dead has already drained my will to live.
If so, I’m not sure from which point I should start.
>>19
Nishiki properly follows through and goes to prison.
Kiryu-chan understands the importance of making a living to properly cover Nishi’s sister’s hospital expenses and maintain the Kiryu-kai, which is Nishi’s place to return to.
I can do anything just by touching it, and I can become indistinguishable from a professional.
To be honest, I think this person can’t settle down in any field.
It’s like a crazy strategy to have a former yakuza who just got out of prison take the position of president in the battle against the shrine.
Since Nishiki is at a stage where conventional treatment has been given up on, I think it would be impossible unless one encounters a very skilled doctor or a quack.
If it were possible to really exchange organs, it might have helped, or so it’s somewhat being said…
>>24
If you have a connection to Beautiful Eyes, it might somehow work out.
Isn’t it the case that if stolen due to user responsibility, you can’t do anything when other organizations are taking action?
I don’t have enough brains, I can’t judge people, and I can’t abandon my subordinates, so it’s impossible.
I wonder if I’m more suited to being like the Majima family, where the guys who look up to me are more like that than being at the top.
If we’re talking about the ability to judge people, Terada and Daigo are even.
At every opportunity, I have gained collaborators, and at the point of choosing Daigo, I have an eye for picking the right people.
Even Terada is not just a simple villain.
In the end, isn’t the conclusion that the yakuza are useless?
>>31
Ebina: “It’s better for the yakuza to die 😊”
>>31
At the initial point of 0, Kiryu-chan was thinking, “This is different from what I expected…”
>>40
I said I wanted to walk with the wind at my shoulders; was that just the folly of youth?
>>42
There must have been a longing for things like that, too.
Kazama’s greatest charm that attracts people is his unexpected sweetness for a yakuza.
Kiryu has perfectly inherited that aspect as well.
Continuing with the fourth generation means becoming the kind of person who would abandon Haruka in that state, which would end the character.
Raise Haruka as the daughter of the fourth president!
To be honest, when I look at the early works, it seems like killing people is actually quite doable.
>>35
Despite what others say in the later stages, the person’s trigger feels relatively low.
They’re turning people into a human bee’s nest with assault rifles without hesitation in the movie.
I’m not cut out for being a yakuza in the first place…
>>38
The memories of the bridge are so yakuza that they only consist of being thrown down by people.
Terada is not inherently evil, but that aside, he is one of the people who caused chaos in the Tojo Clan, which is a problem.
During Terada’s time as chairman, was there any movement from the Jingwon faction?
Basically, Kiryu-chan is an orphan without parents.
I think there was a longing to be a respectable man who lives boldly and earns the respect of society.
It’s wrong for Kazama to show such a side of himself…
>>45
It’s nice to see Kiryu-chan showing the Asagao kids an adult image that isn’t yakuza and achieving results…
“Only those who want to die, come at me!”
You’re enthusiastic, but it’s obvious you can’t do it.
To be a yakuza, you can’t be soft, and to live an honest life, there’s too much emphasis on violence and status.
Kiryuu-chan can manage backroom casinos and such, even if she isn’t really enthusiastic about it.
>>48
Even that is causing trouble for ordinary people, which is a bit concerning.
The mistake was wanting to become a Yakuza just because I admired the sweet side of my father.
I may be misunderstood as a muscle-brained person, but my skills in money management, land development, and consulting are top-notch.
Rather, if you work in that kind of field, the yakuza’s underworld image becomes an obstacle if you want to utilize your abilities in a quite legitimate way.
Well, I think they said that because they can’t directly say they want to help Kazama.
I want to walk while cutting through the wind with my shoulders.
When I got involved with the Jinguon faction in middle school, the unnecessary events actually became the catalyst for Kiryu-chan to enter the yakuza.