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Catching the creditor is a fool’s errand.
If you can do that, then you should have just taken the money from the start instead of borrowing.
>>1
A life hack for gangsters to make easy money by using various means, turning those who can’t even squeeze out money into test subjects.
A creditor?! It’s the type of thing that makes you double-take.
If you take all the organs that can be taken, then nothing else will come out, right?
>>4
I’m not a debtor.
I am a creditor.
Considering normally, it’s just the debtor’s mistake, but calling the creditor trash and using them as a test subject is an exceptionally wicked and amusing thing to do.
>>5
If you were a debtor, ruby is not trash.
Kanetsuru
I will become a debtor.
>>48
There’s no way I would call a debtor, who endures the usurious cycle and becomes a cash cow, a loser.
Debtors who have nothing left to seize beyond their own bodies are often called garbage.
It’s that kind of world, so it seems like it’s simply referring to creditors.
Even readers who had gotten used to it were still thinking, “This is definitely a typo.”
I thought it was a typo, but it came as it is without being corrected.
The debtor won’t pay back unless it causes them a loss.
I think it’s not a good thing overall, but the words come from a feeling that it’s not something deserving this much.
If you’ve defaulted on your debts, that’s one thing, but there’s nothing to be gained from someone who is in the process of repaying their money and becomes unable to recover.
These guys care about their friends, you know.
It’s a typo, but rather amusing.
In this world, the Yakuza probably would have done something about it, so they left it as it was…
It ended up being like the reaction during the math class on the bus.
It’s a Yakuza thing… I was just letting it slide, but is it a typo? Well, either way it’s interesting.
To try to collect the money lent to the yakuza is just a heartless piece of trash!! Ordinary readers who aren’t ingrained with yakuza thinking might mistake it for a typo.
It’s common to make debtors guinea pigs…
Calling a debtor a “trash” and engaging in brutal collection practices is the way of the yakuza.
It is the yakuza who call creditors “lowly” and conduct human experiments.
A creditor!?
Why did you lend it?
>>21
You forcibly borrowed it, right?
>>31
I see, there’s no room for any gaps.
I don’t know the original source, but it’s probably from Young Magazine.
>>22
The magazine is somewhat correct, but…
By making the creditor a guinea pig, the debt can be neutralized, and it makes sense.
>>23
Isn’t it better for creditors to keep things alive and maintain a mutually beneficial relationship since they can make money from it?
>>45
If the gangsters forcefully lend all their possessions and earn it themselves, that’s fine.
>>23
Yakuza is too clever.
If the debtor has no ability to repay, there may still be a reason to sink them, but to sink someone who has done nothing wrong just because they borrowed money is a thought that only arises from someone involved in the underworld.
Trash.
The language of the yakuza is difficult.
I have to exterminate these guys…
Creditors are just scum who swagger around shaking down people’s money, so I never even thought of a typo.
>>27
Add “kus” to the end.
>>27
Are you a yakuza?
A line that distills the theory that the one who borrows more money is stronger, cooked down with blood and drugs.
A cerebral scene that tests how much the readers understand the world of the story.
I really like how common sense gets in the way, causing many people to think they are debtors.
A life hack that increases your money while using trash as a test subject.
Even though I have money, it’s just pathetic that the yakuza won’t lend it to me.
It’s worthless to try to collect money lent to gangsters.
I wonder how Kurita-sensei viewed something like this…
It’s a typo, but it feels like I left it as is because it’s more interesting this way.
There is a scene where the debtor is referred to as a debtor, so it’s not a mistake; they are indeed the creditor.
If you make the debtor a test subject, it would be a total loss.
If I can think like a yakuza naturally, I can never go back to the outside world…
A piece of garbage who insists on such a ridiculous theory as lending money and then demanding it back.
>>43
Well, if we use them as test subjects, we don’t have to refund the money and we can increase the number of guinea pigs, so it’s a good idea!
Are you crazy?
If you make the debtor a guinea pig, you won’t be able to squeeze money out of them anymore, but if you get the creditor hooked on drugs and take away their judgment, you can take the rights they hold.
>>44
I think it’s a more simplistic way of thinking that if the debtor is gone, they don’t have to pay back the money.
A guy who lends money to the yakuza is scum.
>>46
Then can I kill you…
Asking for the money I lent you back is heartless!
KA SU
Creditor
The text appears to be a combination of characters that does not form a recognizable word or phrase in Japanese. Therefore, it does not have a direct translation in English.
Debtor
Collecting from debtors is a serious job for the yakuza.
Don’t hack your life.
I saw a president driving a nice car.
I barged into the company and borrowed all the money I had.
I kidnapped them and used them as test subjects for drugs because they were yelling to give it back, you worthless piece of trash.
I think it feels like this…
Selling children’s organs is also part of the job.
It’s about the same feeling as abalone poaching in other gangster manga.
It’s the worst kind of inhuman to threaten those who are struggling to get by and clinging together bravely to pay back money, isn’t it!?
If a friend were sentenced to death just for running a red light, I might feel this way.
>>61
Just torturing ten women and children… no blood, no tears!
I only borrowed money, but they keep telling me to pay it back.
>>62
You’re the worst, debtors (scum)…
Not only do I get paid, but unsolicited test subjects come to me as well.
Yakuza Life Hack
Huh? Did you just say creditors?
You shouldn’t lend money to the Yakuza!
>>67
What the… just because they’re yakuza, they won’t even lend me money… There’s no humanity in people!!!
It is often misunderstood, but even the yakuza do not unconditionally kill ordinary people or use them as test subjects.
Even the yakuza are infiltrating other industries to earn money, exploiting through their work and shipping out from organ farms.
>>68
The yakuza in that world is… hmm…
The debtor is saying that they will squeeze everything out of you until you commit a family suicide…
The author’s reaction to users who responded like gangsters saying things like, “What? Is it not even allowed to say things like ‘die’ or ‘scum’?” in response to the news prohibiting defamation in relation to the Ninja Extremes was interesting.
There are only worthless people like creditors who come demanding money with a big attitude.
>>73
How cruel…!
>>73
I’m trying to get a big-time gangster to do some encoding right after this page, so it’s confusing.
These guys probably aren’t typos if you think about it normally.
Yakuza are like a different kind of creature, aren’t they?
Isn’t it possible that they can’t reproduce with humans?
>>75
I remember the term “homogodus” being mentioned a long time ago.
>>75
It’s like a new bloodline as they say in Neuro…
Ninjas are a race too…
The one who says “Give me back the money I lent you” is the scum!
I think it’s a creature in the same category as Neuroi and the Deep Sea Fleet.
I remember watching the attack on the official residence, but I distinctly recall how noble the authorities were…
Some miserable person says that those who live quietly earning a little money are the yakuza.
>>84
Yakuza is on the side of the demons, right? Are you out of your mind?
>>84
If you’re saying this as a joke, that’s fine, but there are sometimes people who really think what the yakuza in this manga says is correct.
>>93
Shadow jobs are in huge demand in Japan right now.
Those worthless people who demand repayment just because I borrowed money…
My brother Yumizawa, who only does the “Ore Ore” scam, is truly too much of a saint…
>>86
As a bonus, killing came after turning twenty.
Yumezawa-san is truly a model of humanity.
Yet those ninja guys… I can’t forgive them…!
It’s normal to make a debtor a guinea pig…
So this is what they call a trashy Japanese language.
They are developing a drug, so they’re probably the ones borrowing money, and it’s not a typo; they must have caught the person who came to collect.
Despite this, the desire of Dr. Kofu and the unrelieved medical team to help the patients they are attached to is truly genuine, which is frightening.
Was it this year for the children’s organs too?
>>96
About two years ago.
Was it the one that hinted in Dandadan?
We are the creditors, doing loan sharking.