Bruh
He/Him- 2,263
- 1,874
You kid but they might use that"Denji erased a star so he's star level"
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You kid but they might use that"Denji erased a star so he's star level"
Literally stated literally stated."Denji erased a star so he's star level"
The what devil?Haven't heard of the black hole devil either, wonder what happened![]()
I... I don't know... I can't rememberThe what devil?
"Give me Statements, or I retire!" vs "Give me Statements, or i retire!"Literally stated literally stated.
Yeah 6C Yuji because dust leveling + 10000c because something something Kashimo EMWIm feeling with DB track record they gonna make Yuji win since he has more impressive looking feats than Denji who aside from speed rely more on scaling for his other stats.
They left the fandom after the ending (they kill themselfs)JJK rep soldiers are too good, where are the CSM rep troops??
Was the CSM ending that bad?They left the fandom after the ending (they kill themselfs)
ClutchI was planning to take a trip to the Burj Khalifa, but I'm actually content in this ending. I thought Fujimoto would make some depressing unsatisfactory ending, with a hole left for the reader to fill.
But I can honestly live to read his next work.
Nah the fans are still here, we still love the story and the ending. Anyone who didn't is lowkey just not a fan and you can tell by their issues with the ending.Was the CSM ending that bad?
In spanish community you see more of a "Part 2 was a dream/not canon; Part 1 was decent""Part 1 and Part 2 didn't even matter, worst ending in Shonen history" is the main go to.
That reminds me of the fact that i cried for 10 minutes in my mother's arm (which saw the movie with me) because this peak series ending... it left me with a hole in my chestAnyone who did like the ending is lowkey not a fan, because no fan would ever be happy with the idea of the story ending
Guess you never had a bedtime story read to you.Anyone who did like the ending is lowkey not a fan, because no fan would ever be happy with the idea of the story ending
They were hoping for these type of panels. Instead its a bunch of "what happened to xyz" without realizing the story's about Denji, not the random hybrids/fiends.Depends. I read to understand the message Fujimoto was trying to portray through Chainsaw Man, much like his other works. Most reactions I see are from people who did not understand the message and did not get the casual ending they wanted. Or at least, that is my view on it.
I've seen them and I am not afraid to say that I loathe their slander. As much as they can shoot down the opinions of those who enjoyed the series, I can do vice versa. They never got the point of the story of Chainsaw Man if their opinion on Part 2 is that they were unable to figure out its point while they praise Part 1. Ridiculous to be frank.In spanish community you see more of a "Part 2 was a dream/not canon; Part 1 was decent"
BC mentioned
Sums up the minds of those who dog on the ending. To this day I have not had one constructive argument with someone who did not like the ending who was not disingenuous as **** or who could genuinely comprehend "Hey, I am reading a story about being better without something you hold dear, or else it will continue to take everything else away from you". That is actually a great concept and I see the point of it, yet no one gives jackshit just because Kobeni's ******* contract was not revealed or some dumb shit like, "Oh, I wanted Death to be the main antagonist of the story", not realizing that none of that shit was the point in the first place. It is just fan service that they yearn for.Have yall seen this?
I think my main issue with it is how much agency it takes away from Denji. Like we spent the entire part seeing him learn the weight of making decisions and wanting him to finally make a choice that wasn't by someone else, and the ending is Pochita making the choice for him.Sums up the minds of those who dog on the ending. To this day I have not had one constructive argument with someone who did not like the ending who was not disingenuous as ** or who could genuinely comprehend "Hey, I am reading a story about being better without something you hold dear, or else it will continue to take everything else away from you". That is actually a great concept and I see the point of it, yet no one gives jackshit just because Kobeni's ***** contract was not revealed or some dumb shit like, "Oh, I wanted Death to be the main antagonist of the story", not realizing that none of that shit was the point in the first place. It is just fan service that they yearn for.
This is actually one of the more reasonable arguments I have seen and I understand where you are coming from. But I think the issue is that this frames Denji's trauma as if the story is saying "Because this horrible thing happened to him, he became stronger so maybe it was necessary". I do not think that is what the story is saying at all. In fact we are shown the opposite.I think my main issue with it is how much agency it takes away from Denji. Like we spent the entire part seeing him learn the weight of making decisions and wanting him to finally make a choice that wasn't by someone else, and the ending is Pochita making the choice for him.
-cooly stepping in outta nowhere- Part of why Pochita made that choice in the ending is also because Denji having "the crappiest but best kind of brain" meant that no matter how much worse Denji's life would get by being tied to Chainsaw Man, he would still keep going and keep suffering through worse and worse tragedies, so while Pochita might have had his dream of a hug granted, Denji would never have the normal life and human connections he always wanted.This is actually one of the more reasonable arguments I have seen and I understand where you are coming from. But I think the issue is that this frames Denji's trauma as if the story is saying "Because this horrible thing happened to him, he became stronger so maybe it was necessary". I do not think that is what the story is saying at all. In fact we are shown the opposite.
Denji's life as Chainsaw Man traps him in a constant cycle of violence. He wants multiple things at once. He wants to live a normal life, have a family and still be Chainsaw Man. But the problem is that he cannot truly have that normal life while remaining tied to Chainsaw Man, because that identity constantly brings danger and death to the people around him. That is why he keeps losing people again and again. Instead of being able to choose the person he loves and protect a normal life, Denji keeps choosing Chainsaw Man or being dragged back into Chainsaw Man and then he loses the people he was trying to hold onto. Nayuta is the clearest example of that. He wanted both lives, but the Chainsaw Man side of his life made it impossible for him to protect the normal one.
So to me, the story is not saying Denji's trauma made him better. It is showing that his relationship with Chainsaw Man became unhealthy. It became something he clung to because it gave him attention and purpose then validation and a reason to keep going.
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- Denji choosing Chainsaw man over Nayuta's life.
But at the same time it was also the thing destroying his chance at the normal life he always wanted. We see this in early Part 2.
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That is why I do not fully agree with the "Denji lost agency" argument. I get the concern, but Denji's so called choices throughout Part 2 were not exactly healthy free choices either. A lot of them came from trauma and obsession as well as his need to be Chainsaw Man because he did not know who he was without it. Removing Chainsaw Man from that equation is not just taking away his agency but also gives Denji the chance to become his own person without being trapped by that identity forever.
Does this look like a person who is healing from his trauma in a healthy fashion?
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Denji says he will find another family. He says he can make a perpetual motion machine. That is exactly the problem he is having. He is trying to brute force his way through loss by repeating the same cycle again. Lose family, find another one. Lose that family, find another one. Keep moving, keep suffering and keep pretending it is fine.
And guess what the very concept of Aging responds with:
![]()
This is symbolic in the fact that the concept of getting older itself finds Denji's idea stupid, pointing out how clearly self destructive Denji's mindset is because as his life goes on, this will only become a living hell if he keeps trapping himself inside the same unhealthy loop. He cannot keep losing family after family and act like that is a normal or sustainable way to live.
And this is why It's important that we understand that not every trauma builds people up. Some trauma breaks people down even more, sometimes to the point where they cannot escape it on their own. You can see that in real life too. People do not always "grow stronger" from suffering and sometimes suffering just damages them more and more.
My view is that the ending is saying Denji's trauma was not necessary. It shows a world where Denji is no longer hunted and sought out because he is Chainsaw Man. He is not being forced to exist as a weapon or a target. He is just Denji, his own person, finally able to make decisions without Chainsaw Man constantly dragging him back into violence. And what matters is that it took Chainsaw Man himself to show him that.
Nah, i just like One PieceGuess you never had a bedtime story read to you.
I thought the main issue was the it was all a dream ending that most people have a problem with.This is actually one of the more reasonable arguments I have seen and I understand where you are coming from. But I think the issue is that this frames Denji's trauma as if the story is saying "Because this horrible thing happened to him, he became stronger so maybe it was necessary". I do not think that is what the story is saying at all. In fact we are shown the opposite.
Denji's life as Chainsaw Man traps him in a constant cycle of violence. He wants multiple things at once. He wants to live a normal life, have a family and still be Chainsaw Man. But the problem is that he cannot truly have that normal life while remaining tied to Chainsaw Man, because that identity constantly brings danger and death to the people around him. That is why he keeps losing people again and again. Instead of being able to choose the person he loves and protect a normal life, Denji keeps choosing Chainsaw Man or being dragged back into Chainsaw Man and then he loses the people he was trying to hold onto. Nayuta is the clearest example of that. He wanted both lives, but the Chainsaw Man side of his life made it impossible for him to protect the normal one.
So to me, the story is not saying Denji's trauma made him better. It is showing that his relationship with Chainsaw Man became unhealthy. It became something he clung to because it gave him attention and purpose then validation and a reason to keep going.
![]()
![]()
- Denji choosing Chainsaw man over Nayuta's life.
But at the same time it was also the thing destroying his chance at the normal life he always wanted. We see this in early Part 2.
![]()
![]()
![]()
That is why I do not fully agree with the "Denji lost agency" argument. I get the concern, but Denji's so called choices throughout Part 2 were not exactly healthy free choices either. A lot of them came from trauma and obsession as well as his need to be Chainsaw Man because he did not know who he was without it. Removing Chainsaw Man from that equation is not just taking away his agency but also gives Denji the chance to become his own person without being trapped by that identity forever.
Does this look like a person who is healing from his trauma in a healthy fashion?
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Denji says he will find another family. He says he can make a perpetual motion machine. That is exactly the problem he is having. He is trying to brute force his way through loss by repeating the same cycle again. Lose family, find another one. Lose that family, find another one. Keep moving, keep suffering and keep pretending it is fine.
And guess what the very concept of Aging responds with:
![]()
This is symbolic in the fact that the concept of getting older itself finds Denji's idea stupid, pointing out how clearly self destructive Denji's mindset is because as his life goes on, this will only become a living hell if he keeps trapping himself inside the same unhealthy loop. He cannot keep losing family after family and act like that is a normal or sustainable way to live.
And this is why It's important that we understand that not every trauma builds people up. Some trauma breaks people down even more, sometimes to the point where they cannot escape it on their own. You can see that in real life too. People do not always "grow stronger" from suffering and sometimes suffering just damages them more and more.
My view is that the ending is saying Denji's trauma was not necessary. It shows a world where Denji is no longer hunted and sought out because he is Chainsaw Man. He is not being forced to exist as a weapon or a target. He is just Denji, his own person, finally able to make decisions without Chainsaw Man constantly dragging him back into violence. And what matters is that it took Chainsaw Man himself to show him that.
yeaI thought the main issue was the it was all a dream ending that most people have a problem with.
Ignore my tone, seems that this made past me very upset.Sums up the minds of those who dog on the ending. To this day I have not had one constructive argument with someone who did not like the ending who was not disingenuous as ** or who could genuinely comprehend "Hey, I am reading a story about being better without something you hold dear, or else it will continue to take everything else away from you". That is actually a great concept and I see the point of it, yet no one gives jackshit just because Kobeni's ***** contract was not revealed or some dumb shit like, "Oh, I wanted Death to be the main antagonist of the story", not realizing that none of that shit was the point in the first place. It is just fan service that they yearn for.
-cooly stepping in outta nowhere- Part of why Pochita made that choice in the ending is also because Denji having "the crappiest but best kind of brain" meant that no matter how much worse Denji's life would get by being tied to Chainsaw Man, he would still keep going and keep suffering through worse and worse tragedies, so while Pochita might have had his dream of a hug granted, Denji would never have the normal life and human connections he always wanted.
I've seen a ton of the slander say Pochita was saying Denji was better in his shitty circumstances, or some 'deeper analysis' saying Pochita is saying Denji failed as a protagonist, but the whole point of that scene is Pochita apologizing to Denji, all the tragedies that fell upon him were BECAUSE he became Chainsaw Man, and Denji would never have abandoned Pochita even if it objectively would have made his life better on all fronts.
Don't ignore this as well, it's actually a magnificent point
The only thing I could not really understand completely is Pochita being Denji's heart. I get the logistics behind it, such as Pochita only eating a small part of his body, like his heart, instead of eating his own head, which would be impossible, or his complete body to completely erase the concept of chainsaws from existence. In turn, that would mean only enough was erased for chainsaws to still exist, but for Pochita himself to no longer have existed, but remain as Denji's heart. There is symbolism here but I am conflicted.plus people had been theorizing for ages about CSM being a timeloop style story and well. They were pretty darn close actually
Well! -yap incoming- The logistics aside (tbh i think the Pochita heart really is just his true form, he's always been a funny little dog), The story has always put a whole lot on emphasis not just on Pochita as Denji's heart, but what 'Denji's Heart' is supposed to represent, and how a lot of the characters give their different answers.The only thing I could not really understand completely is Pochita being Denji's heart. I get the logistics behind it, such as Pochita only eating a small part of his body, like his heart, instead of eating his own head, which would be impossible, or his complete body to completely erase the concept of chainsaws from existence. In turn, that would mean only enough was erased for chainsaws to still exist, but for Pochita himself to no longer have existed, but remain as Denji's heart. There is symbolism here but I am conflicted.
What do you think about it?
nah no probs i love to yap about critical analysis its funWow, you really know your stuff then, props. Earlier I was mentioning those who criticized Asa's character and asking if they knew anything about her purpose in the story. I do not want to keep you writing essays all day, but I am curious because your views honestly make more sense than any I have ever heard. Mine are broad but I imagine you could add alot that I would have ended up missing.