![]() ![]() I think I'd more easily believe Gojo would die if this weren't the very first thing he's doing after being freed, but given he hasn't even had a real conversation with Yuji on page, he just immediately went into this fight, it would feel exceptionally redundant. Almost every chapter surprises me in a good way. I don't think there was a reason to put so much emphasis on that in chapter 221 if it wasn't important for the rest of the story at all.īut I really don't understand why people think they know how the story is going to go. I don't think Gojo will be the one to fight Kenjaku, ofc, but he also wasn't the one to fight Geto and still got the emotional closure with him in vol 0. Gojo dying right here also ignores that his main character arc is tied to Kenjaku and his main motivation for fighting Sukuna is explicitly that Sukuna is a roadblock to get to Kenjaku, and the Megumi thing is secondary. Gojo dying here would literally just repeat the same plot line. Gojo dying so his students can take over side steps some of the biggest parts of his narrative arc.Īlso, Gojo already disappeared in Shibuya, leaving his students behind to fend for themselves. His story also includes how being the strongest is isolating and being the strongest isn't enough to solve all problems. In my opinion, Gojo's desire to teach students is only one part of his overall narrative. Is Gojo's character arc completed if he dies so that his students can learn in his absence? Depends how you interpret his arc. Rather than focus on plot points, to try to predict how the narrative goes, people should instead focus on character arcs and narrative themes. It's possible for Gege to write something else for Gojo to do (like dealing with a Shibuya type situation on a larger level). If Gege doesn't want Gojo to kill Kenjaku, then Gege can write it. If Gege wanted to have Miwa kill full-powered Sukuna, he could do it. Plot points can go in whatever direction the writer wants. People who say "Gojo can't win because of the narrative" have no clue how narratives actually work. ![]()
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