
No, it’s the foolish woman who ran amok that’s to blame.
>>1
It’s wrong for the entire family to treat someone in a way that causes them to go wild.
It’s a result of being oppressed as a family, so it’s just reaping what you sow, right?
I wonder if their personality was actually good.
>>3
According to the evaluation of the combat unit, they received a perfect score.
Even the relatively decent superior Jinichi at that house pauses his attacks for a moment when the thread image becomes tattered, suggesting it’s well-received.
Therefore, from the perspective of a sorcerer, it is probably the cream of the crop.
The fact that they’re managing to live in that house means their personality is terrible, right?
Maki Pai, you are trash.
If they were doing daily life scenes in the Zenin family, I think there would be natural depictions of looking down on non-sorcerers.
When it’s all over, is that house massacre necessary?
>>9
I need it because it feels refreshing.
>>9
They’re all the kind of people who might come back to kill you later if you let them escape.
I’m curious about what kind of attitude he had towards the women, but I suppose it was probably just relatively better than others.
I personally think that throwing a severed head into a pond is something you wouldn’t do unless you have a grudge.
>>12
If you have resentment against the house, you would do it even without it.
If it’s a scenario where it can be done
That house is crap, but the people, including the sisters, who are oppressed there have a really bad personality, which adds a nice touch.
I think Maki understands that what she did is not something to be praised.
I think it was such a deep-seated grudge that it didn’t matter what happened.
Even if this guy is a saint, it’s impossible to go against that family just because he’s somewhat strong.
Since they are already killing even the serious ones who were on a mission in the hell after Shibuya, I think at that point, for the senior, the cause doesn’t really matter at all.
Matoi, who was caught up in the mess caused by Papa Kuro and Paisen, feels like a victim of the family’s dysfunction, but honestly, Paisen had the chance to step up to the same level and it’s not entirely wrong to say that being weak is part of the problem.
>>19
That’s true.
The problem is that Mai was casually killed, and the senpai’s fate was a result of their talentlessness.
>>19
I think Senpai feels the same way.
Since Mai was taken away, I have no choice but to do everything.
>>27
If I don’t at least listen to my beloved little sister’s last wish, who I was trying to create a place for, I’ll truly be unworthy as an older sister.
The fact that the current Zenin clan still exists can be attributed to Zenin’s whims, as I am aware that I have been mercilessly bullied, and I also have the consciousness that Makipai has treated me in a similar way, as if to say, “That day, Zenin came!”
And instead of stopping or resisting, to say that you will kill here and now! That really shows the talent of Zenin.
>>21
I don’t know that it was Ougi’s doing.
The only ones who know the truth are Jinichi and the piece of crap, so everyone else thinks that the senior went mad and died from being stabbed in the toilet.
I wonder if the massacre by Paisen ended up with no consequences after all.
>>22
It was a state of anarchy.
>>22
In a jujutsu investigation, you can’t tell who the perpetrator is.
Even in areas where there is no talent, they are being oppressed by excessive verbal abuse and violence…
I saw the revised version of the animation when it was free, but it wasn’t originally pretty, so the impression doesn’t change…
If justifying the massacre includes not only those who were oppressed but also those who were not directly involved, then there are no villains.
It seems that the system centered around the three main families has collapsed since the Sukuna battle.
>>33
Zen Temple Annihilation
The Gojo family ended because Satoru died.
Kamo was taken over by Kensasaku, causing chaos, and it ended because that guy died.
The text provided is a hieroglyphic symbol and does not have a direct translation. Please provide text in Japanese for translation.
I wonder if there will be any additions if this area gets animated.
>>34
I don’t think there’s anything in particular.
As long as the battle scenes are done stylishly, I’m satisfied with this part.
>>34
It seems like Jinichi-kun’s success is going to be highlighted.
Was it really necessary to kill women and children, regardless of the situation with the thread images?
>>36
It’s for Senpai’s satisfaction.
After that, the fact that the senior who killed so many talented people was not helpful has been a point of complaint from readers.
>>36
It emphasizes that it’s not about justice or legitimacy, just that even those who weren’t home and were seriously on a mission were tracked down and killed.
>>36
There is a possibility of bearing a grudge or trying to revive what has been left behind, and it is not wrong.
It’s a common story to show kindness to a brat only to be repaid with ingratitude.
The temple is just a bunch of trash.
>>37
Everyone…
Aren’t I actually being treated better than just a foot soldier since I got into a technical college?
It’s tough that other characters are brushing off the morality of the massacre casually.
>>43
Are there any tough characters? Usually, they’re either the type who are like that or those who can’t say it.
>>43
Naoya was definitely ignoring orders and was coming to kill Itadori, so it must have been coordinated with Okkotsu.
It’s impossible to match everyone’s pace, and it’s actually appreciated.
>>43
Everyone knows the situation, so we can just leave it as it is.
>>141
If there are circumstances, then it’s understandable for there to be massacres… It’s crazy that there are so many characters who think like that…
Well, Paisen got a wonderful boyfriend.
The amount of time I dedicated to my senior, you know.
You were probably disliked by others too, right?
Disguise disguise Zao Sagasure?
Was it really necessary for Dobukasu to turn into a cursed spirit and come back to life…?
>>52
It was so obvious that this would happen, that’s why Maki-senpai went home to get the cursed tools but didn’t finish it off with the cursed tools, making her seem so foolish that I couldn’t get on board.
Honestly, I thought that the theme would conclude with Senpai receiving his just desserts and dying, so I was surprised by the ending.
>>53
Since the family received their due, that’s the end of it, right?
>>57
Is it okay to count Maki’s achievements like that?
I want to at least be allowed to point out that it’s quite ridiculous to massacre everyone, including non-combatants, and leave all allies untouched.
“At least let me have a turn to forgive.”
From the perspective of someone distant from the relationship, since it’s already been killed, they can’t blame it before the fight with Sukuna, and there probably isn’t anyone in Zenin who has feelings for the counterpart; those who are close would likely have nothing to say once they know about the sister’s murder.
I thought it was a depiction of a dark hero falling into darkness, but it was surprising that they joined in so calmly.
>>59
First, be scared of your older brother.
>>65
Well, my brother died after reflecting on it, didn’t he?
Clear noise in response to the answer given by Itadori.
It’s been said many times, but if the outcome is that I disappeared from everyone’s sight after the final battle, then that’s fine, even if what I did was that.
What are you thinking by staying in the organization, and how do those around you feel about it?
I’m imagining that just when my senior was about to be held responsible for the massacre, Otokotsu showed up and helped them out.
If Jinichi’s activities were exaggerated, it would essentially be the anime adaptation of Zaosaga.
Jinichi and Ranta have feelings of camaraderie typical of homosocial relationships, but whether they extend the same feelings to the women who cook and those who are not sorcerers is questionable because they are part of the Three Great Families.
Maki seems to have already forgotten about the massacre of the Zenin clan, right?
I understand how to treat a person who is incarnated, but I don’t really feel anything about this.
Since it’s already been done, blaming Maki won’t change anything.
I had resolved that I had completely become evil by killing everyone in the Zen temple, and I thought I would either die alone with dignity or at least live alone with dignity.
I wanted them to at least stop the casual atmosphere of the epilogue.
I thought everything would be complete if Maki died and everything was destroyed, but she’s just casually having kids…
>>71
I didn’t say to my sister to die.
If it hadn’t been for the Zaosaga not gaining popularity, I probably would never have started a thread on Ranta, so I’m grateful for that.
Although I’ve done almost the same thing as Geto, the outcome is completely opposite, which simply makes it look inconsistent.
>>74
In the first place, it’s a manga where Tsukumo says that’s acceptable.
>>74
Summer oil weasel…
>>74
It’s the same with Kunisaki and Sukuna, but there’s no notion that the outcome is like this because of their philosophy, for better or worse.
The strong ones, the ones who won, are doing as they please.
>>85
The ending of the work itself is primarily that.
>>92
Geto is crying too.
Popular with no name
Well, I think it’s quite distorted that Maki-san is in the same camp as Itadori, who has been carrying the burden of having killed people because of Sukuna.
>>76
Both are choosing to kill on their own, unrelated to Sukuna, so they’re the same.
When it comes to animating, I think it would be fine to significantly cut down on the senpai-related parts…
>>77
I’m here.
The cursed spirit Naoya is not that interesting, so I don’t really need him.
It’s too convenient for the plot that no one mentions the Zenin family after they regroup.
>>81
The current head of the household says it’s fine after all.
>>81
I wouldn’t touch it in real life; it’s too scary.
Did Senpai like Okkotsu…?
Did Okkotsu like Senpai too?
>>84
As for the bottom, let’s set that aside, but the top had been there since volume 0, right?
>>90
There should have been something below to stop Rika-chan from inflicting harm.
I wonder who should have inherited the Zenin family.
I understand that if everything isn’t killed off, it’s hard to make things feel neat after the story ends.
>>88
If we make Dobukasu into a cursed spirit, it might have worked out well to have him in charge of the massacre.
>>88
If Maki dies as well, I can understand that too.
If we merge as if nothing ever happened, it won’t change anything.
It seems like they are being made to engage in sexual acts like a child priest.
Makipai is a major criminal because he caused the Zenin family to be slaughtered, which led to Fushiguro’s spirit sinking and being used for Sukuna’s bath afterward.
>>91
Taking a bath would not have been a problem in another place as long as there was enough space, so that’s irrelevant.
I thought it was the protagonist from Zao Saga in the thumbnail, but it was the one with the eye technique.
Even if you are not complicit in bullying, the fact that you were a bystander who did not help is equivalent to being an accomplice from the perspective of those who were bullied.
>>96
Jinbei’s position is so pathetic for trying to massacre his classmates for similar reasons but ultimately stopping.
It seems that Okkotsu wouldn’t really blame them, and it’s also a bit hard to approach Noritoshi and others at home.
So, who else is going to touch it? Isn’t it just Aitsu?
>>97
It seems like Senpai Hara would tease me playfully.
>>97
Because it’s gentle, I won’t touch it.
>>97
Atsuya must be overjoyed that the opposing organization of the Shin-Inryu has been completely annihilated.
It’s no different from a shooting rampage at school.
I understand that you wiped out the Three Families to fold up the furoshiki, but what is the deal with that ending up being Atsuya as the head?!!
>>103
To be honest, do we really need things like the Gojo Three Families setting or the Kamo family?
>>109
It’s not necessary to utilize all the background settings in the main story, and that’s okay, right…?
There was a princess-like aura around Zen’in-san.
It’s terrible that after all that long enhancement event time, they don’t even perform well in the crucial final battle.
From the fact that the Okama’s techniques worked, it must mean that this guy’s eye technique also connected with Sukuna.
If you had someone like Hei, who is the pinnacle of combat-type sorcerers, we could have won much more easily.
If Senpai wasn’t doing anything there, eventually Naoya would be assassinated by Fushiguro.
If Fushiguro dies, the Death Painting Arc will become unfavorable, but Sukuna’s resurrection will disappear… well, is that okay…?
>>111
It didn’t work out with a normal happy ending.
>>111
It’s fine.
>>111
If Sukuna appears to protect Fushiguro and causes a big ruckus at the Zenin family, it might create a good connection with my senpai.
It’s amazing in a bad way that allies are doing things like killing people for reasons like “it’s not good to kill just because of that” like Geto and Jinbei.
The ethics of the allied side are broken.
“Why is this guy fighting the final boss (Sukuna)? It resonates with a fundamental aspect.”
It would have been better to refrain from the massacre.
I don’t even know if this guy is a good person or not…
>>116
Wasn’t there a discussion fairly early on about whether it’s okay to kill bad guys before that?
Honestly, isn’t the main reason for the upper management’s massacre to cover up Maki’s slaughter here?
I think if they had died in a nice way after the massacre, they could have covered it up, but instead, they’re happily going about their lives…
Shin In Baba and the upper management massacre have quite a bit of noise.
>>120
The higher-ups can die, right?
>>124
It’s an incredible hindsight, but following what the higher-ups said resulted in the least human damage.
It would have been better if Itadori and Fushiguro had died.
If these guys die, there would be too many people who could have been saved.
Considering that the senior is fitting in with a casual attitude, and looking at all the various depictions of the end, it seems that the privilege of those within the group to act as they please has simply resulted in a new power structure that appears to be just a change in the group’s composition.
Male readers have mixed opinions.
Feminists and fujoshis are praising it.
Were you expecting something like that?
If Makipai is just going crazy, it’s a personal issue.
When your ally accepts that, the psycho will spread to your allies as well…
The impression of Atsuya, who is clearly slacking off in Shibuya and seems to be neglecting some citizens, is worse.
I was told by Mai to break everything (in the Zenin family), and while I’m breaking it, being trapped by that action and dying is off-theme.
>>128
With Maki and Fushiguro still around, it’s not all gone at all.
>>140
Stop making excuses and come up with a better counterargument.
>>152
It’s so fluffy…
>>140
Does it look like Mai said that everyone, including her big sister and Fushiguro, should die?
Killing everyone up to the Zenin rice crackers is going too far, Neesan.
It’s weird to have another enhancement event right after the previous enhancement event.
>>131
On top of that, the fact that they don’t perform well is the most absurd.
Regarding the Zenin family, there were already hints leading up to the previous work about wanting to crush the Zenin family…
Well, the massacre is whatever, but I really wonder what the point of that part was.
>>133
Maki Pie’s Training Part
>>133
This chapter was interesting, so it definitely has meaning.
>>133
You’ve powered up in a way that’s easy to understand!
The fact that the jujutsu world is corrupt didn’t lead to any particularly interesting conclusions.
That’s because it doesn’t even appear in the story in the first place.
“I’ll kill them because they’re a bunch of guys who appear for the first time and are rotten, but so what?”
It’s not really the type of manga where you have to die as a consequence or karma or anything like that.
The protagonist just wanted to do that to themselves.
>>135
Isn’t it too unnatural that even the allied characters who have such feelings are completely ignored?
>>146
“I was told that my sister died, so I killed everyone in the house. What could Itadori even say to that?”
Even if you have things you want to say, you can’t say them, right? If it was something you were going to do from now on, you would have stopped it.
>>154
Isn’t the point that having no such conflict at all and being completely untouched by it is just too unnatural for storytelling?
>>166
Well, I wanted to see it, but I wouldn’t want to talk about Maki Pai any more than that.
I think it was not good to realize that even the Dead Lieutenant Corps members are nice guys in the original comic’s illustration.
Wouldn’t it have been better to go with the route of joining the Zenin family?
It’s not like there’s a particularly bad impression of the Zenin Three Idiots, whether it’s Shota or Naoya…
The performance in the Sukuna battle, with just the heart check and the black flash as a punching bag, leaves a pretty bad impression.
Looking back, the moment of highest speed was during the Zenin extermination arc.
The rationality of killing everyone in order to break the chain of curses can be evaluated positively.
Either way, I think that once you’ve used the fan, you have no choice but to kill everyone.
>>148
I seriously think I’ve fallen into a path where I can’t turn back after killing my father.
Before taking action against your family, resolve it through discussion.
>>157
It’s inevitable since they came over and tried to kill!
>>148
It’s simply this, isn’t it?
The story goes that after the assassination, the troops came for a purge, so I killed them, and then more elite troops arrived, and I kept killing, and there really was no end to it.
A manga with a development that’s a refreshing Japan amidst a massacre…
The scene in GANTZ where someone disguised as a black person goes on a killing spree has a sense of thrill, if not a sense of refreshment.
Maki Pai itself is just weak, but it has adapted quite well to the Zenin family’s survival of the fittest mentality and is the kind of person who wants to get stronger and prove them wrong.
It’s fine to say that the house was destroyed by a monster born from the poison of a shitty house, but isn’t that monster also just plain shit?
Even though there’s an awareness that the Zenin family hasn’t been wiped out due to Fushiguro’s father’s whims, they were still being bullied.
On the contrary, I think it takes a lot of guts.
Well, they were going to kill from the Zenin family.
It has become stronger in terms of specs, but…
Maki-Pai has made reckless solo charges and nearly died about five times throughout the story, so you can’t rely on her.
I was aware that what I was doing with Gojo wasn’t normal, so I felt like it was fine that I died.
Maki is just surviving normally, hmm…
I think it was an episode that embodied the idea of cutting off future worries.
To be honest, I really enjoyed getting excited about things like having an ugly personality or an ugly face…
First of all, it’s hard to understand how killing the lifespan-sucking old hag still allows things to function normally.
What is a constraint?
I thought that a thread image is like, in school, not directly bullying but having a feeling of being a loser who would agree if a bully said something like, “Isn’t that kid being bullied?”
I want to massacre the upper echelon of the Akuratsu, but that kind of thing is not allowed, right? That was Gojo’s stance, but in the end, he did massacre the upper echelon. It’s a manga where he immediately dies from the Wasuren and laughs while getting on the plane.
>>167
Since it was revealed that the upper management was taken over by melon bread, isn’t there no choice but to kill them?
I understand that Naoya was bullying, but he is also disliked by the Zenin family, and since there is no specific depiction of how the ordinary Zenin members treated those two, it leaves me feeling unsettled.
>>168
The important father is depicted in detail, you know.
>>168
It also seems that the other members of the Zenin family, except for Naoya and Ogi, don’t have such a bad reputation.
The head of the family is normally thinking about the twins and has exiled them.
It’s really funny to think about how much of a response battle was happening over Mr. Jiiichi.
The reason those sisters were mistreated in the first place is because they were weak in the Zenin family, which follows a survival of the fittest mentality.
The trigger was those sisters.
>>173
Is it true that the super-strong Maki-senpai can massacre everyone and it would be acceptable in the Zenin family, where the law of the jungle applies!?
If the reasoning that it’s okay to kill ○○ or that ○○ deserves to be killed is accepted in the organization created by the protagonists, then the future is bleak and it will quickly rot away.
The thread picture might fall under the category of good people by that household’s standards, but isn’t it true that they are not capable of stopping discrimination or bullying?
This manga looks very much like modern Japan, but people die a lot in everyday life, so I think it’s better not to measure it by the standards of modern Japan.
Did the thread picture get killed too?
Naoya, who used a technique to produce a condom and then threw it away to commit rape, is entirely to blame.
It’s not justified self-defense when you’re killing even those who were out on duty, so why are you making it impossible to make excuses?
The fan has no choice but to kill it.
What Maki wanted to eradicate were the ideas and customs of the Zen’in clan.
Therefore, even non-combatants who are not directly involved will be killed, and those who are not influenced by the ideology at Zenin, like Fushiguro, will be excluded.
You should understand this much, right?
I wonder if this area will be made into a visual adaptation.
>>187
I want to see the ugly woman’s hundred crack fists.
The image in the thread serves as a spice to make the readers feel a bit uncomfortable, and it is indeed having that effect.
If Summer Oil had won, it would have been forgiven.
Shonen manga tends to have all upper management wiped out.
Well, after Sukkun died, they definitely would have gotten carried away, so it’s better that they perished.
I thought it was going to be a dark fall development, but it wasn’t.
I feel that the part where it betrayed the readers’ expectations is the worst, more than ethics or anything else.