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Gonna lose?! Itās GojÅ Satoru!!
Karma and consequence in Jujutsu Kaisen
With the release of chapter 235 of Jujutsu Kaisen, the King of Curses has been defeated and GojÅ Satoru has cemented his title as the 'Strongestā. The war isnāt over yet, but the battle is won, and I think the outcome of this fight is by far the most interesting for both characters.
Truthfully, at the start of the Shinjuku Showdown arc, I wasnāt particularly rooting for GojÅ or Sukuna to win. However, as the fight developed (alongside the release of the anime adaptation of Hidden Inventory/Premature Death), I found myself becoming more and more invested in GojÅ Satoru as a character and, consequently, theorising about what a āsatisfying conclusionā to his story might look like.
Shortly after the release of chapter 232, I saw an interesting post suggesting that āgain and lossā is the theme of the GojÅ vs Sukuna fight. Of course, āGain and Lossā is the title of chapter 221 when GojÅ finally gets out of the Prison Realm only to learn that Sukuna has taken over Megumiās body. Iād like to go a step further and suggest that āgain and lossā ā and by extension, karma and consequence ā is actually a key theme of GojÅās character (and maybe even Jujutsu Kaisen on the whole).
For full disclosure, I wrote about 90% of this before chapter 235 was released, operating on the belief that GojÅ would eventually win this fight. It is a long post, so buckle up and letās get into it!
Gain and loss in Jujutsu Kaisen
The idea of gain through loss was developed very early on in Jujutsu Kaisen with the introduction of binding vows. From Nanamiās āovertimeā to Sukuna's open barrier domain, a self-imposed binding vow offers a sorcerer an advantage in combat in return for an increased level of risk. In other words, sorcerers can āgainā strength in exchange for a ālossā of security. When it comes to binding vows, the bigger the risk the bigger the reward.
The idea of gain through loss was further developed through the introduction of Heavenly Restriction. Similar to a binding vow, a person with a Heavenly Restriction is āgiftedā with enhanced abilities in one area in exchange for limitations in another. However, unlike a binding vow, Heavenly Restriction exists from birth (although it remains unclear whether it occurs due to mere chance).
There are numerous powerful examples of both binding vows and Heavenly Restriction throughout the series. For Gege Akutami, they are key to maintaining a balanced power system where intelligence and tactical thinking can lead an underdog to prevail in the face of a more powerful opponent ā think YÅ«ta beating GetÅ or Toji beating GojÅ. Through these mechanics, we can deduce that understanding gain and loss, give and take, risk and reward ā however you want to put it ā is crucial to mastery of jujutsu sorcery.
Naturally, if gain and loss are embedded in the laws of the Jujutsu Kaisen universe, it makes sense that the theme exerts a heavy influence over the narrative, too. Of course, consequences are an important way to create compelling characters in any story, but this rings especially true for Jujutsu Kaisen which draws deeply on Buddhist themes and traditions.
In Buddhism, karma is not a deterministic system of retribution, but the natural law of cause and effect. It is directly referenced in Jujutsu Kaisen when Fushiguro Megumi explains his personal ideology using āå ęā, a Japanese Buddhist term meaning ākarmaā or āfateā which can be more literally translated as ācause and effectā. The second kanji means āfruitā, hinting at the underlying agricultural metaphor behind karma in Buddhism: plant a seed, later receive a harvest ā or, to use a saying derived from another religion with an important role in Jujutsu Kaisen, āyou reap what you sowā.
However, an important characteristic of karma which is commonly misunderstood is that the relationship between a cause and its effect is not necessarily linear, but rather part of an intricate network that spans past, present, and future. In other words, the āconsequencesā of oneās actions might arrive much later.
This can lead to mistaking the effect of one cause for the effect of another, creating a reality where ābadā things happen to āgoodā people and vice versa. The resulting circumstances may make it easier to do ābadā deeds but, importantly, the freedom always remains to choose the path of āgoodā.
Thus emerges a system where liberation from suffering (in Buddhism, the endless cycle of rebirth known as samsara) is not determined by the judgement of some higher power, but by an individualās continued choice to do āgoodā. In other words, you can create your own destiny, but only if you understand karma.
The beginningless karmic cycle is rooted in actions performed in ignorance. Therefore, breaking free of it ā enlightenment ā can only be achieved through knowledge.
GojÅ Satoru: the embodiment of enlightenment
As a character, GojÅ Satoru is symbolically tied to these concepts. Weāre told that his birth altered the balance of the world, causing curses to grow stronger in response to the sudden injection of power into the ecosystem. However, while GojÅās birth might be the cause of the imbalance, his very existence is itself the effect of something else.
Supposedly, the Star Plasma Vessel, the Six Eyes, and Tengen are all connected by fate. However, the term that Tengen uses ā āå ęā ā is the same one that Megumi uses for ākarmaā, suggesting a cause and effect relationship. This is confirmed when Tengen implies that the Star Plasma Vessel and the Six Eyes always appear in response to the merger ā the irrepressible effect to the mergerās cause.
Kenjaku cannot contend with the immense strength of the Six Eyes nor the universal law of cause and effect. However, Fushiguro Toji, who possesses no cursed energy due to his Heavenly Restriction, is not bound by fate and is thus able to interrupt a cycle of cause and effect which has existed for at least a thousand years.
Tengen actually suggests that karma (å ę) and cursed energy are one and the same so ā if we take Tengenās words at face value ā Toji is an anomaly who is free from its bindings.*
However, the characters whose lives he touches are not. Toji sets another chain of cause and effect into action when the events of Hidden Inventory lead to GojÅās ascension to 'the Strongest'.
There is much debate in the fandom about whether GojÅās moment of āenlightenmentā is legitimate, especially in light of his fight with Sukuna ā the only other character associated with the phrase supposedly uttered by Buddha Shakyamuni at birth.
However, if enlightenment is understanding of reality that transcends conceptual thought, then GojÅ Satoru is its physical embodiment in Jujutsu Kaisen.
His given name, Satoru (ę), is a verb meaning āto knowā or āto understandā, and the root of the Japanese Buddhist term for āenlightenmentā. His innate domain ā a representation of oneās innermost self ā is a flood of infinite knowledge that constitutes the ātruthā of the universe. His Six Eyes are reminiscent of the all-seeing Eyes of Buddha or the Six Transcendental Powers or the Five Eyes ā or perhaps all three!
GojÅ is steeped in symbolism not only relating to Buddhist enlightenment, but to the founding Buddha himself, right down to his world-altering birth ā the divine event which sets the modern-day story in motion.
Although he may have spoken Buddha Shakyamuniās words in a moment of euphoria, the suggestion GojÅ had reached a higher state of being was never intended to be called into doubt. The pertinent question, instead, is why the unimaginable strength that accompanies his ascension to almost godlike status seems to bring GojÅ more loss than gain ā especially when, in a twist of irony, he was only able to gain that strength through loss.
āThe Strongestā : an allegory for enlightenment
As the two strongest sorcerers battled it out in Shinjuku, the question on everyoneās lips during the weekly chapter discussions was, āWho will win?ā However, Jujutsu Kaisen has already established that āwinnerā is not necessarily always interchangeable with āstrongestā. Perhaps thatās why, in the aftermath of the fight, the discussion has turned to arguments about which character is the strongest instead ā from cursed technique to battle IQ.
Even now, we donāt know much about Sukunaās abilities nor his character, so itās always been difficult to accurately judge his strength against GojÅās. However, a surprising number of people went into this fight believing that Sukuna would win without much trouble.
Some made the reasonable argument that āthe strongest sorcerer in historyā using the Ten Shadows technique while inhabiting the body of his dearest student presented a no-win situation for GojÅ. Others made the much less reasonable argument that GojÅās claims about his strength were little more than arrogance born from a cushy life in an era of āweakā sorcerers.
Indeed, Sukuna himself echoes that sentiment in chapter 230, going as far as to call GojÅ āunenlightenedā (å”夫) ā before being immediately humbled.
This isnāt the first time that Gege Akutami has directly challenged readersā assumptions through his characters. However, GojÅ in particular lends himself to reader speculation, because Akutami deliberately makes it difficult to know the character by maintaining a narrative distance from him that mirrors his Limitless technique.
This leads to a wonderful phenomenon where the reader falls into the same trap as the characters in the series by assuming that, while other sorcerers are struggling dreadfully, GojÅ is having an easy time of things ā because thatās what it looks like most of the time. Nanami might be right when he suggests that GojÅ could take care of everything by himself. However, just because he could do it, does that mean he should?
The problem is, with GojÅ kept at a distance, itās easy to forget how he became 'the Strongestā in the first place. Itās true that, even before he becomes a fully realised Six Eyes user, GojÅās abilities dwarfed those of any other living sorcerer. For people like GetÅ and Megumi whose techniques require a very steep learning curve to master, I can imagine that it feels like GojÅās unimaginable strength was handed to him on a silver platter at times.
However, both things can be true: GojÅ was born with innate strength that most sorcerers can only dream of and GojÅ is an exceptional talent in his own right.
We all saw the suffering and sacrifice that GojÅ went through on his path to becoming a sorcerer strong enough to face the King of Curses. In a series where the primary power source is born from negative emotions, perhaps it makes sense that tragedy promotes strength. Yet, GetÅ ā whose technique is the epitome of strength through negative emotions ā experienced the same tragedy as GojÅ. So why did they head in opposite directions after the events of Hidden Inventory?
If GojÅ is the embodiment of enlightenment in Jujutsu Kaisen, then GetÅ is his opposite. Where GojÅ achieves understanding, GetÅ is blinded by ignorance which shackles him to a cycle of suffering ā the marathon game of jujutsu sorcery.
In blaming non-sorcerersā inability to regulate cursed energy ā rather than the negative emotions that generate cursed energy in the first place ā GetÅ mistakes one cause for another. Following the natural law of cause and effect that is karma, the solution should lie in shedding negative emotions altogether ā just like GojÅ at the moment of enlightenment.
Sadly, in his quest to find liberation from suffering, GetÅ actually condemns himself to it. Where GojÅ chooses to let go of hatred and anger, GetÅ chooses to cling to them. This is ultimately why 'the Strongestā changes from plural to singular. However, all of this assumes that GojÅ did things the ārightā way when itās very possible that Gege Akutami actually seeks to criticise a religious doctrine that separates the āhonouredā ones from everyone else.
GetÅās response to the horrors he endured evokes sympathy because it feels fundamentally human. In contrast, enlightenment seems so unattainable to the average human being that it becomes almost inhuman ā the reserve of gods.
Indeed, GojÅ is often accused of having a āgod complexā, and Gege Akutamiās continued references to the divine donāt do anything to help. However, the series more often paints its strongest characters as closer to weapons of mass destruction or natural disasters, making the reality of āthe Strongestā less like reverence and more like dehumanisation.
Although GojÅ achieved āenlightenmentā, heās ultimately still a human being ā something thatās easy to forget. In fact, one of my favourite things about GojÅās character is how he exists on an almost metatextual level. Too often, characters and readers view GojÅ Satoru as 'the Strongestā first and a human being second ā a notion embodied by this notorious panel.
Thus, rather than having a āgod complexā, I interpret GojÅ as a character who struggles with his place in the world. His strength is what keeps him at a distance from the people around him ā from the literal distance maintained by his technique to the metaphorical distance that separates him from the āunenlightenedā.
Even the blindfold he wears to avoid discomfort hides his eyes, shutting off the āwindow to the soulā and making him a less approachable figure. Thus, the thing that makes GojÅ more comfortable around other human beings is ironically the thing that makes others less comfortable around him.
With the power at his disposal, GojÅ is frightening at times, and Gege Akutami goes to great pains to show us the brutal potential of such strengthĀ ā for example, in Shibuya when he ruthlessly dismantles 1000 transfigured humans with the precision of a machine in less than five minutes.
However, this display of violence comes off the back of GojÅās most compassionate moment in which he bends the laws of jujutsu sorcery to preserve as many human lives as possible. Each time the curses attempt to force his hand, he does the inconceivable, even going so far as to limit his own strength by fighting without his technique to avoid collateral damage to humans caught up in the chaos.
Importantly, he doesnāt agonise over his decisions like the curses expect. Instead, when presented with a choice between two options that fundamentally violate his ideals, he forces another path without thinking. This is GojÅās āoverwhelming sense of selfā. His commitment to upholding the āmeaningā he inherited from GetÅ is so unshakeable that itās instinctive; so engrained that itās unconscious.
Despite his inhuman strength, GojÅās actions in Shibuya exemplify his firm stance on the side of ordinary human beings. From his technique to his blindfold, he removes the physical barriers that separate him from the rest of humanity. The result is that, although his display of power in Shibuya is godlike, GojÅ never seems more human.
Of course, itās his humanity that ultimately makes him vulnerable to the Prison Realm, and many suggested that this āweaknessā is why he would lose to Sukuna ā a character who has wholly relinquished his humanity.
Humanity in opposition to strength
The unexpected appearance of his ābest friendā in Shibuya causes GojÅ to falter for a heartbeat, but itās long enough to make his brilliance look like foolishness in hindsight. His decision to save innocent people at B5F ultimately leads to the deaths of many thousands more over the course of October 31st and the following Culling Game. Among the casualties of the chaos are some of GojÅās friends, colleagues, and students ā as well as the Fushiguro siblings who were under GojÅās personal care.
Of the Hidden Inventory arc, Nakamura YÅ«ichi, GojÅās voice actor said:
āEven though GojÅ had power, he failed his mission, he failed to protect Amanai, and he lost his best friend. He lost everything, and the only thing he succeeded at was awakening his abilities.ā
So, it certainly seems true that GojÅās choice to hold onto his humanity has brought him more losses than wins. In fact, at this point in the story, can we honestly say that GojÅ has ever truly āwonā?
Despite this, the characters in the series never stop thinking of GojÅ as āthe Strongestā. The narrative doesnāt ridicule him for his sentimentality in Shibuya, because itās perfectly reasonable in the face of Kenjakuās mind-boggling scheme. Even Sukuna recognises GojÅās strength in the immediate aftermath of the event.
Aside from Kenjaku themselvesĀ ā who has never suggested that GojÅ is anything but immensely powerful ā no one has ever criticised GojÅ for his humanity. In fact, even prior to the Shinjuku Showdown arc, Iām not convinced that humanity is ever reliably situated in opposition to strength in Jujutsu Kaisen.
Many point to Uro Takakoās conversation with Okkotsu YÅ«ta as evidence that tossing out oneās humanity is the only way to achieve ultimate strength. However, putting aside the fact that the translation warps Uroās meaning somewhat, itās unwise to assume that Sukunaās is the only way to reach that level, simply because heās the only example in history of a sorcerer with comparable strength to GojÅ.
This is even more true when you take into consideration that everything about the context surrounding Uroās assertion suggests otherwise. After all, this prideful, vicious sorcerer has just been beaten by a teenage boy who fights solely to protect the people he cares about.
āOverwhelming sense of selfāĀ ā the more accurate translation of the above panel ā is about having absolute conviction in who you are as a person. The quality of your ideals is irrelevant as long as your commitment to them surpasses all else, and this has never been GojÅās issue.
To say that GojÅās humanity makes him weak misses the point, because itās never been a question of strength. Thereās no need to invent a weakness in the form of his humanity, because we already know his weakness ā he told us himself.
Perhaps this starts to get at the the truth of āthe Strongestā and the solitude that comes with ultimate strength. In GojÅās own words, āWhen granted everything, you can't do anything.ā Despite being strong, he simply cannot save everyone. So, if being āthe Strongestā doesnāt help GojÅ towards his goals, then whatās the point in his strength?
Of course, this is why GetÅās parting words hit GojÅ so hard. When the boy who taught him that āprotecting the weakā is important tells GojÅ that he has the power to commit the biggest act of genocide in history, the title of 'the Strongestā is transformed from a blessing into a curse. I canāt imagine that GojÅ ever feels more powerless than when he realises that heās trying to save people using a body thatās built to destroy ā a contradiction thatās illustrated to us in our first introduction (chronologically) to GojÅ as a character.
If that wasnāt enough to cause an existential crisis for GojÅ, GetÅās follow-up question guarantees it. In challenging GojÅās assertion that GetÅās goals are impossible to achieve, GetÅ simultaneously questions GojÅās identity beyond āthe Strongestā, unintentionally (or perhaps intentionally) dehumanising GojÅ by reducing him to his strength. This is especially painful coming from GetÅ of all people.
By the end of the conversation, GojÅās entire worldview has been called into question by the person he trusted most. GetÅ, who always impressed upon GojÅ the importance of meaning, leaves GojÅ searching for the meaning in his strength ā and, over 200 chapters after GetÅ asked the question, the answer still isnāt clear. This, I believe, is where the Shinjuku Showdown arc comes into play.
A reason to fight
From a narrative point of view, GetÅ isnāt entirely wrong to insinuate that GojÅ lacks an identity beyond āthe Strongestā. His primary role in the story has always been to act as a power ceiling from which the reader can extrapolate information about Gege Akutamiās world and its mechanics. Even his absence from the story is meticulously set up to illustrate the anarchy that breaks out due to the power vacuum he leaves behind.
Prior to the Shibuya Incident, GojÅ Satoruās overwhelming strength presented an obstacle to other charactersā growth. In order to create a more balanced playing field and an opportunity to explore creative techniques and fights on a previously unseen scale, itās understandable that Akutami needed to get GojÅ out of the way ā at least until Sukuna could join the story as a fixed member of the cast.
As expected, even the strongest sorcerers we encountered during the Culling Game pale in comparison to the prowess on display during the Shinjuku Showdown. It all serves to show that GojÅ and Sukuna are on an entirely different level ā to the point that, even after GojÅ burns out the part of his brain responsible for his domain, his strength still doesnāt dip below that of Okkotsu YÅ«ta and Hakari Kinji.
To paraphrase Megumi, I shouldnāt try to find logic in a powerscalerās behavioural patterns, but I canāt deny itās immensely frustrating that week after week fans get caught up in arguments about who is the better sorcerer when itās the least interesting thing about this fight.
The only reason āthe Strongestā even existed as a neatly defined category up until this point was because of the lack of any viable opponent for GojÅ. Now that heās fighting someone on his level, comparing these two behemoths of jujutsu sorcery is the same as any other powerscaling exercise: reductive, vulnerable to bias, and ultimately missing the point.
Gege Akutami has never written a fight simply for the fun of seeing two characters go at it. Thereās been a greater purpose behind every carefully created match-up in the series, either in the form of high stakes or an important lesson for the characters involved ā or sometimes both.
While Akutami clearly enjoyed writing this back and forth between two masters of their craft, carefully balancing the scales to ensure that neither gained the upper-hand for too long, there is a great deal of character development staked on the outcome of this fight.
There are parallels between GojÅ and Sukuna as characters but, more than anything, the Shinjuku Showdown arc has exposed some fundamental differences between the two ā namely, why they fight in the first place. While itās true that GojÅ is fighting Sukuna partly because thereās no one else who can, itās also true that the stakes have never been higher for GojÅ. He has a lot to gain and a whole lot more to lose, so his reason for fighting feels tangible to the reader.
Conversely, Sukunaās reason for fighting is considerably less clear. While we donāt know the nature of Sukunaās binding vow with Kenjaku ā or anything about his motivations in general ā it doesnāt seem like thereās much at stake for Sukuna except for, perhaps, his pride. Beyond advancing the plot, this poses a lot of interesting questions about what Sukuna would have to gain from winning this fight.
Since GojÅās return, Sukuna has recalled Yorozuās words about love multiple times. Their purpose ā and Sukunaās initial reaction to them ā are still shrouded in mystery. However, through GojÅ, we can learn something about āloveā and how it relates to the āthe solitude of ultimate strengthā.
GojÅ never wanted to be āthe Strongestā alone. In fact, his entire motivation as a character is raising up āstrong and intelligent alliesā, constantly chasing the companionship he felt as one half of the strongest duo and trying to ensure that his students never feel the same isolation thatās plagued him and GetÅ before him.Ā
In the recent chapters of the manga, Gege Akutami has made it clear that GojÅ isnāt really alone at all ā ShÅko reminiscing on their friendship in chapter 220; GojÅās comrades rallying around him during the send off in chapter 222; the wonderful āmy students are watchingā callback in chapter 230.
Whatās more, for the first time in his adult life, we see GojÅ ā whoās famously in his element when heās alone ā start a fight with people at his side, leaning on three characters who weāve previously been led to believe he looked down on.
The distance thatās always existed between GojÅ and the people around him is closing. He has removed his mask and he is open to the world ā the blindfold is gone; the shapeless, oversized jacket is gone; GojÅ even removes his technique to let people in during his sendoff. Akutami makes it explicitly clear that GojÅās allies have got his back, and heās got theirs in turn ā theyāre his reason for fighting.
On the other hand, his opponent only has a single ally in all the world and, although Uraume is a devoted servant, there is no suggestion that they would tag in when the going gets tough. Sukuna has already told us that, for him, losing and dying are the same thing ā a curious contrast to GojÅ who does not put āwinningā and ādyingā in opposition, and this creates an interesting situation where both fighters could āwinā by their standards.
If GojÅ saves the people he cares about (and the world at large) but dies in the process, he wins. Equally, if Sukuna is the sole survivor of the fight, he wins ā but what would that actually mean for him?
One approach embodies overwhelming selfishness, the other embodies overwhelming selflessness, but only one of these approaches has been established as the most powerful form of binding vow in Jujutsu Kaisen. With all that said, many people believed that GojÅ dying to win was the most likely conclusion to the fight ā but thatās what a small fry would think!
In Jujutsu Kaisen, it has always come down to one question: how much are you willing to risk ā not sacrifice ā in order to win? This is the lesson that GojÅ impresses upon Megumi, and itās why I was always in the camp that believed GojÅ would win and survive. I didnāt expect his victory to be quite so clear cut, but it seems obvious in hindsight ā and itās all thanks to the power of love and friendship.
In chapter 234, Kusakabe suggests that Sukuna is keeping something in reserve, because he knows that if GojÅ loses, heāll immediately have to fight a number of other powerful sorcerers. GojÅ knows that there are strong allies ready to back him up if he fails, so he can go all out.
Meanwhile, Sukuna is truly alone ā to the point that he has to create allies in the form of shikigami in order to contend with GojÅ. In the end, the explanation for GojÅās victory is simple. Where GojÅ gave it his best, Sukuna didnāt ā and that was a grave underestimation of his opponent for which he paid the price.
So, the Shinjuku Showdown arc has come to an end and GojÅ has reaffirmed that he is, in fact, 'the Strongest'. However, his story isnāt over yet, so what would a satisfying conclusion to his character arc look like?
Are you GojÅ Satoru because youāre the Strongest?
Although Itadori YÅ«ji is the main character of the series, GojÅ Satoru is foundational to the story ā despite how much Gege Akutami jokes about hating him. GojÅās story is the thread that ties the series together, so landing the ending is crucial for completing not only GojÅās character arc, but also that of many other characters. For GojÅ, everything consistently comes back to GetÅ Suguru and Fushiguro Toji, but there remain unanswered questions regarding both.
Tojiās presence during the clash of the strongest sorcerers is too large to ignore. Aside from the allusions to Toji himself, his son plays a pivotal role in GojÅās story as the human representation of gain through loss ā the blessing born from GojÅās curse. Taking Megumi under his wing marked GojÅās first step towards a brighter future after the tragedy brought on by the failed Star Plasma Vessel mission, but thereās one major plot thread left unresolved.
I wouldnāt have thought that Megumi learning the truth about his father was important after he dismisses GojÅās attempt to tell him during the Hidden Inventory arc. However, the combination of Megumiās interaction with Toji in Shibuya, his visible cluelessness when Tengen mentions Toji, and the numerous ways GojÅ references Toji during the Shinjuku Showdown arc has convinced me that Akutami plans to follow this up at some point.
Right now, Megumiās fate is still hanging in the balance. Although many people are waiting for something terrible to befall GojÅ ā losing his Six Eyes; burning out his technique permanently; dying ā Iād like to believe that, if we look at Jujutsu Kaisen through a karmic lens, GojÅ isnāt owed any more losses. At the very least, he certainly doesnāt have to die to progress the story as some people have suggested.
Our heroes, including GojÅ himself, have been on a major losing streak for a long time now. GojÅ being freed from the Prison Realm represented a shining beacon of hope at the lowest point in the series. To extinguish that light by killing GojÅ almost immediately after heās returned to the story would be another major blow to the characters and the readers.
I wouldnāt put it past Akutami to send some more pain our way before the end of the story, but if GojÅ is going to die on December 24, I donāt think itās before a number of other things happen.
If GojÅ inherited GetÅās ideals in a symbolic āpassing of the torchā, then his death before he has confirmed the safety of the people who depend on him is a depressing end to his best friendās legacy. Additionally, up until now, GojÅ has never had the opportunity to answer GetÅās question once and for all.
I would argue that GojÅ has proven multiple times during the fight against Sukuna that heās 'the Strongest' because heās GojÅ Satoru, but is he GojÅ Satoru because heās the strongest? He canāt discover that unless he experiences what itās like not to be 'the Strongest' ā either by losing his strength or by sharing the burden with the strong and intelligent allies heās been raising for the entirety of his adult life.
Of course, thereās one more glaring thread to tie up, and it might be the most important of all when it comes to the completion of GojÅās character arc. His first thought when he bursts out of the Prison Realm is a desire to lay GetÅās body to rest ā a desire to rectify the mistake which threw the entire world into chaos.
As weāve already discussed, despite his strength, GojÅ has racked up a collection of costly failures. Thus, his entire character arc is about learning from the mistakes of his past. Heās taken every cruel loss that the universe has sent his way and, instead of lashing out with all that power at his disposal, he has grown from his experiences and chosen the path of āgoodā time and time again.
If GojÅ dies before retrieving GetÅās body from Kenjakuās clutches, he has failed his best friend at the very last hurdle, and this would be a truly bleak way to end his story.
Concluding thoughts
At the conclusion of the Shinjuku Showdown arc, Iād like to see GojÅ Satoru step back from the fight after inspiring hope in his students by delivering a final lesson in the form of his win. It is impossible to predict what Gege Akutami will do next, but I would like to see the reins handed back to the students for a while, as I feel GojÅ has played his part against the King of Curses.
It is Sukuna, not GojÅ, who presents the most interesting possibilities for character development after the conclusion of this fight. I am genuinely excited to see how he grapples with this loss that has the potential to challenge his entire view of himself and others. He disrespected Yorozu and treated his fight against her as a ātest driveā, and thought he could get away with treating GojÅ the same way. I think RyÅmen Sukuna might be about to learn some important lessons, and I would love to see him in conversation with GojÅ before the latter bows out of the story.
Of course, we can always trust Gege Akutami to surprise us, and itās entirely possible that the story will veer in a completely different direction than I expected. However, I have faith that he will deliver something profound, no matter what lies ahead.Ā
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*This is a very interesting concept in and of itself, especially in relation to the goal of the Culling Game, Yuki and Kenjakuās battle of ideals (i.e. ābreaking free fromā versus āoptimisingā cursed energy), Makiās āenlightenmentā in the Sakurajima colony, and the understanding that true enlightenment lies in breaking free from all karma ā both good and bad. After all, golden shackles are still shackles. Perhaps Iāll write about this another time.
#jujutsu kaisen#jjk#jjk 235#åŖļæ½ļæ½ļæ½å»»ę¦#jjk meta#jjk analysis#jujutsu kaisen meta#jujutsu kaisen analysis#jjk spoilers#jjk manga spoilers#jujutsu kaisen spoilers#gojo satoru#sukuna#ryomen sukuna#fushiguro toji#fushiguro megumi#geto suguru#kenjaku#can you see why this took so long???#it's almost 6000 words š#and maybe it's all bullshit haha!!#but i'll hate myself if i wasted all that time for nothing#so enjoy i guess!!
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