Which Anime Episodes Adapt The Shibuya Incident Scenes?

2025-08-29 08:03:10 270

3 Answers

Quinn
Quinn
2025-08-31 17:49:44
Man, the Shibuya Incident is one of those arcs that made me put my headphones on and refuse to do anything else for an evening. If you’re looking for the anime adaptation, the bulk of the Shibuya Incident arc is covered in Season 2 of 'Jujutsu Kaisen'. If you follow the episode numbering that continues from Season 1 (Season 1 ends at ep. 24), the Shibuya scenes run roughly from episode 25 through episode 39 — so it’s basically the long, intense stretch after the 'Hidden Inventory / Premature Death' flashback arc.

When people talk about “the Shibuya episodes” they usually mean that whole block where the city gets locked down, Gojo gets sealed, and a ton of major battles and heartbreak happen. Different streaming platforms sometimes reset numbering by season, so you might see those same episodes listed as Season 2 episodes 1–15 instead — just look for the episodes after the Gojo flashback stuff. If you want specific moments: Gojo’s confrontation and sealing is early in the arc, the fights around the subway and X-mansion escalate through the middle, and the emotional fallout spreads to the later episodes in that block.

I binged that stretch twice — once for the animation and once more just to cry over the soundtrack — so if you need a pointer to which episode to start with depending on your service, tell me how your player labels seasons and I’ll map them directly for you.
Miles
Miles
2025-09-01 15:40:51
I’ve rewatched the Shibuya sequence a few times, and for clarity: the arc is animated in the second season of 'Jujutsu Kaisen'. If you keep the anime’s overall episode count (Season 1: 1–24), then the Shibuya Incident arc occupies the next chunk of episodes — roughly 25 through 39. That’s where the heavy plot beats happen: the city lockdown, multiple simultaneous fights, Gojo’s sealing, and huge character moments for a lot of the cast.

A practical tip from me: some services show Season 2 starting at episode 1 again, so don’t be confused if you see Season 2 episodes labeled 1–15 — those correspond to the continuous 25–39 numbering I mentioned. If you’re hunting for specific scenes, scan the episode descriptions for keywords like “Shibuya,” “sealed,” or character names (Gojo, Sukuna, Geto-related events) — those will point you to the right spots. And if you’re planning a rewatch marathon, queue up a playlist of that whole block so the pacing and music hit you the way they should.
Levi
Levi
2025-09-02 21:57:11
I get why people ask this — the Shibuya Incident is the kind of arc that changes how you view the whole series. In anime form it’s shown in Season 2 of 'Jujutsu Kaisen'. If you use continuous numbering it starts right after episode 24 and goes through about episode 39, so that span covers the major Shibuya scenes: the lockdown, Gojo’s battle and sealing, the subway/mansion skirmishes, and the fallout.

If your streaming site restarts counts by season, look for the long second-season block after the Gojo flashback instead. Watching it straight through is the only way to really feel the escalation — the animation, sound design, and timing make a huge difference compared to reading the manga panels alone.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

Behind the scenes
Behind the scenes
"You make it so difficult to keep my hands to myself." He snarled the words in a low husky tone, sending pleasurable sparks down to my core. Finding the words, a response finally comes out of me in a breathless whisper, "I didn't even do anything..." Halting, he takes two quick strides, covering the distance between us, he picks my hand from my side, straightening my fingers, he plasters them against the hardness in his pants. I let out a shocked and impressed gasp. "You only have to exist. This is what happens whenever I see you. But I don't want to rush it... I need you to enjoy it. And I make you this promise right now, once you can handle everything, the moment you are ready, I will fuck you." Director Abed Kersher has habored an unhealthy obsession for A-list actress Rachel Greene, she has been the subject of his fantasies for the longest time. An opportunity by means of her ruined career presents itself to him. This was Rachel's one chance to experience all of her hidden desires, her career had taken a nosedive, there was no way her life could get any worse. Except when mixed with a double contract, secrets, lies, and a dangerous hidden identity.. everything could go wrong.
10
91 Chapters
Betrayal Behind the Scenes
Betrayal Behind the Scenes
Dragged into betrayal, Catherine Chandra sacrificed her career and love for her husband, Keenan Hart, only to find herself trapped in a scandal of infidelity that shattered her. With her intelligence as a Beauty Advisor in the family business Gistara, Catherine orchestrated a thunderous revenge, shaking big corporations with deadly defamation scandals. Supported by old friends and main sponsors, Svarga Kenneth Oweis, Catherine executed her plan mercilessly. However, as the truth is unveiled and true love is tested, Catherine faces a difficult choice that could change her life forever.
Not enough ratings
150 Chapters
I ALWAYS FELT HORNY WHEN I WAS AROUND OUR NANNY
I ALWAYS FELT HORNY WHEN I WAS AROUND OUR NANNY
This is a thrilling and suspenseful romance story of a young adult guy by name Joshua who falls in love with the nanny his mom hired to take care of his younger sister - keeping his affair with her a secret, away from the prying eyes of his parents until something happens that threatens to reveal him.
10
26 Chapters
Unwanted
Unwanted
BOOK 1 & BOOK 2 Gwyneth's pack was attacked and absorbed by the Eclipse Pack. Her father being the delta of the pack, had to hand over the pack to Alpha Marcus. He had to do this because the alpha, beta, and gamma, had been killed in the struggle. To make the submission complete, Gwyneth was married off to Alpha Marcus against her will. Alpha Marcus was a widower who did not want to get involved with anyone after the death of his mate. Although he is married to Gwyneth, there is no love or desire in their union, and he has also vowed never to touch her or develop feelings for her. Gwyneth is not a soft cookie either, and she refuses to allow him to tame and control her. Her drive is so strong that she frustrates and challenges Alpha Marcus at every given opportunity. Would she be able to blame and despise him for long? Would Marcus be able to keep his vow and never fall? *Warning* Book is rated 18 because it contains sensual scenes and violence (fighting and pack wars), if it is not your cup of tea, kindly walk away from this one and try the other books. 'wink wink' Thank you*
8.9
242 Chapters
Chosen By The Moon
Chosen By The Moon
This book is authored by izabella W. "Mate!" My eyes bulged out of my head as I snapped up to regard the guy who is obviously the king. His eyes were locked on mine as he began to advance very quickly. Oh great. That's why he looked familiar, he was the same guy who I bumped into only an hour or two before hand. The one who claimed I was his mate... Oh... SHIT! *** In a dystopian future, it is the 5-year anniversary of the end of the earth as we knew it. A race of supernatural creatures calling themselves the lycanthrope has taken over and nothing has been the same. Every town is split into two districts, the human district, and the wolf district. The humans are now treated as a minority, while the Lycans are to be treated with the utmost respect, failure to submit to them results in brutal public punishments. For Dylan, a 17-year-old girl, living in this new world is tough. Being 12 when the wolves took over, she has both witnessed and experienced public punishment firsthand. Wolves have been domineering since the new world and if you're found to be the mate of one, for Dylan it is a fate worse than death. So what happens when she finds out she not only is a lycan’s mate but that lycan happens to be the most famous and the most brutal of them all? Follow Dylan on her rocky journey, combatting life, love, and loss. A new spin on the typical wolf story. I hope you enjoy it. Warning, mature content. Scenes of strong Abuse. Scenes of self-harm Scenes of Rape. Scenes of a Sexually explicit nature. READ AT YOUR OWN RISK.
8.7
453 Chapters
Wild Epic Desires
Wild Epic Desires
WARNING: This Book Contains Explicit scenes And Adult Languages Do you like reading steamy, naughty, dirty, and filthy romances?? If your answer is yes, get ready for the ultimate erotic excitement that will get your blood pumping and your ovaries twitching. This novel is a collection of short erotic stories. It contains all manner of sexual explicit including StepSister And Brother sex,, Office sex, Lesbian sex, Teacher and student sex, Doctor and patient, Bondage And domination, Gang sex. Etc.
9.6
318 Chapters

Related Questions

What Are The Biggest Deaths In The Shibuya Incident Arc?

3 Answers2025-08-29 06:08:17
There are a few deaths in the 'Shibuya Incident' that still make my chest tighten when I think about them. Reading through that stretch of 'Jujutsu Kaisen' on a rainy weekend, I kept having to put the book down and stare out the window—it felt like the series shifted gears and refused to look back. The two biggest, emotionally and narratively, are Kento Nanami and Nobara Kugisaki. Nanami’s death landed like a gut-punch because he’d been such a steady, grounded presence—his last scenes underline how weary but principled he was, and losing him felt like losing a moral compass for the younger sorcerers. Nobara’s loss hit differently: it’s about potential and voice. She was loud, fierce, and unapologetically herself, and watching what happens to her is one of those moments that changes the tone of the whole story. Beyond those two, the arc piles up so many smaller, yet devastating, losses—civilians trapped in the chaos, police caught in crossfire, and a handful of supporting sorcerers whose fates are either confirmed off-panel or left ambiguous. The scale matters: part of why Shibuya stings is not just who dies, but how many ordinary lives the battle swallows. Also worth noting is how the arc treats Satoru Gojo—not a death, but his sealing feels like an emotional death for the world of the series. It creates the same sort of dread and emptiness that a physical death would, and that’s why people often bundle it with the big tragic moments from Shibuya. Even now, when I reread those chapters, the mixture of grief and lingering questions keeps pulling me back.

Which Chapters Cover The Shibuya Incident In The Manga?

3 Answers2025-08-29 06:04:35
There’s a massive chunk of the manga that’s commonly called the 'Shibuya Incident' arc — it runs from chapter 79 through chapter 136 (inclusive). I got sucked into this stretch like a late-night binge; it’s basically the most consequential sequence so far in 'Jujutsu Kaisen', with the citywide setup, huge reveals, and a lot of characters getting thrown into chaos at once. If you’re skimming, know that this arc contains the sealing of a major figure, terrifying battles on the streets of Shibuya, and a tonal shift that makes things much darker and more urgent. Reading it straight through felt like riding a rollercoaster that kept dropping and then pulling you through tight loops — the pacing alternates between long, atmospheric panels and frantic fight pages, so I often had to pause to breathe and let scenes sink in. Pro tip from my late-night reading sessions: read with a reading guide or chapter list handy so you can track which events correspond to which chapters. Some moments are spread over many chapters and reward slow rereads; other bits are small but pivotal and pop more on a second pass. If you want to know which exact chapter contains a particular fight or moment, tell me which scene and I’ll point you to the specific chapter.

How Did The Shibuya Incident Affect The Series' Timeline?

3 Answers2025-08-29 23:07:36
The Shibuya Incident is the kind of narrative earthquake that reshapes everything afterward — in my view it literally cleaves the series into 'before' and 'after'. Before Shibuya the story still feels like an escalating conflict between ghoul investigators and ghoul groups, with personal stakes and a creeping sense of doom. After Shibuya the world itself has shifted: politically, socially, and emotionally. The CCG is battered and exposed; you start seeing power plays that were simmering in the background suddenly take center stage. Practically speaking, that arc triggers a timeskip and a tonal reset where the consequences of those days ripple outward — new leadership, new policies, and a more oppressive atmosphere toward ghouls. On a character level the timeline changes are huge. The incident scatters people, kills or maims many, and creates the conditions for Kaneki’s identity break and eventual rebirth as a different figure in the later chapters of 'Tokyo Ghoul'/'Tokyo Ghoul:re'. It’s also the moment where hidden manipulations (political puppeteering, V’s machinations, Furuta’s climbs) start to make sense in retrospect; events that seemed isolated before get tied back to Shibuya. Structurally the author uses non-linear flashes a lot after this point, so you get pieces of the past revealed later — but the anchor point remains that catastrophic week in Shibuya. For me it’s one of those rare arcs that legitimately reorders the series’ timeline and forces you to reassess character motivations and the stakes going forward.

How Did Fans React To The Shibuya Incident Ending?

4 Answers2025-08-29 20:11:52
I still get a knot in my stomach thinking about the chaos that followed the 'Shibuya Incident' ending in 'Tokyo Ghoul'. When the final beats hit, a lot of us felt this weird mix of grief and awe — like watching a gorgeous train wreck. My timeline filled with frantic caps, spoilers, and long, heartfelt posts. People were dissecting panels, comparing blood-splattered frames, and sharing artwork that turned the darkest moments into something almost reverent. I stayed up way later than I should have just scrolling through discussion threads, clutching a cold drink and feeling oddly proud of a story that could move so many people at once. But it wasn't just sadness. Fans also sparked intense debates: some praised the author’s daring choices and emotional payoff, others criticized pacing or felt certain character beats were rushed. There were creative outbursts too — AMVs, cosplay shoots of the most harrowing scenes, and theory posts predicting how the fallout would change the world of 'Tokyo Ghoul'. I also noticed a divide between manga purists and anime-only viewers; the adaptation’s handling left some confused or upset, which added fuel to spoiler arguments. Overall, the reaction felt alive and messy in the best way — a community processing trauma, beauty, and plot mechanics all at once — and it made me want to reread the arc with a notebook and a warm blanket.

What Merchandise Features Scenes From The Shibuya Incident?

4 Answers2025-08-29 05:24:48
I still get a little giddy thinking about the merch drop I grabbed after seeing the 'Shibuya Incident' arc unfold in 'Jujutsu Kaisen'. I stumbled on a huge poster of the Shibuya crossing scene at a con booth and it felt like owning a piece of that chaotic day — so many products use that visual as a backdrop. You’ll find posters, wall scrolls, and art prints that recreate the crowded streets, dramatic lighting, and key character moments from the arc. Aside from wall art, collectible options are everywhere: clear files and postcards that reproduce iconic panels, enamel pins and acrylic keychains showing battle snapshots, and T-shirts or hoodies with stylized Shibuya designs. Figures (from prize figures to scaled statues) often capture fight poses or battle damage from the arc, and some Nendoroid variants lean into the more dramatic expressions and accessories tied to those scenes. If you like physical books, the tankōbon volumes that contain the arc include colored spreads and cover art that are frequently reprinted as posters or included in special editions. I usually check official shops and convention exclusives first — those are the pieces that tend to capture the arc’s tone most faithfully — and then hunt for signed prints or limited runs online. It’s a little expensive sometimes, but having that Shibuya street print above my desk still makes me smile every time I walk in.

Which Directors Staged The Shibuya Incident Anime Episodes?

3 Answers2025-08-29 00:14:59
I geek out every time the credits roll on 'Jujutsu Kaisen' because the Shibuya Incident sequences are such a masterclass in staging, but the truth is that the arc was put together by MAPPA’s directing team rather than a single lone name. Sunghoo Park is the series director for 'Jujutsu Kaisen', and the studio organized a rotating crew of episode directors, storyboard artists, and animation chiefs to handle each intense episode — especially for the Shibuya Incident scenes. If you watch the end credits closely you’ll see different names on storyboards and episode direction credits from episode to episode; that’s normal for big action arcs so each segment can get the specialist attention it needs. If you want a tight list of exactly who directed which Shibuya episode, the practical route I use is simple: check the episode’s end credits or look up the episode staff pages on official sources like the show’s website, Crunchyroll’s episode pages, Anime News Network, or MyAnimeList. Those places will show the episode director, storyboarder, and sometimes the animation director for each episode. I’ve paused Blu-ray menus and streamed versions just to scribble down names — it’s a small hobby of mine — and you can learn a lot about why a particular shot felt different by comparing who storyboarded it. So, no single director “staged” the Shibuya Incident episodes; it’s a collaborative product of MAPPA under the series director’s supervision, with individual episode directors and storyboard artists handling the nitty-gritty. If you want, tell me which episode number you’re curious about and I’ll point out where to find the credited director for that specific episode.

What Soundtrack Tracks Score The Shibuya Incident Battle?

3 Answers2025-08-28 22:36:43
Oh man, the Shibuya Incident sequence is such a soundscape feast — it’s stitched together from multiple cues pulled from the official soundtracks rather than one single track. When I first binged that arc late into the night, I kept pausing to hunt down the music because each moment seems to lean on a slightly different OST cue: mournful piano and low strings for the quieter, tragic beats; a brutal, brass-and-choir hit whenever Sukuna shows up; and tight percussion plus distorted electronics for the pure melee sections. If you want the exact names, the best move is to check the two official collections: 'Jujutsu Kaisen Original Soundtrack' and the second OST release. Most of the combat cues in Shibuya are from those albums. I also cross-reference episode end credits and YouTube uploads titled “Shibuya Incident OST” — the community there often timestamps which track plays at which fight beat. Shazam/AudioTag can catch some, but the mixes in the show are sometimes layered, so you’ll get the base cue rather than the full studio version. I keep a playlist with the mournful piano cue and the choir-brass motif because they remind me of Nobara’s and Itadori’s scenes respectively. If you want, tell me a specific episode or moment (like the train station clash, or the rooftop Sukuna beat), and I’ll try to map that exact second to a track title from the OSTs — I’ve spent way too many evenings doing that sort of obsessive digging!

In Jujutsu Kaisen, Is Gojo Dead After The Shibuya Incident?

3 Answers2025-08-28 13:18:12
Watching the Shibuya Incident unfold in 'Jujutsu Kaisen' hit me like a sucker punch — visually stunning, emotionally brutal, and absolutely devastating for the roster of characters involved. To be clear: Gojo is not dead after Shibuya. What happens is far crueler in some ways — he's sealed inside the Prison Realm, which leaves him alive but effectively removed from the board. That distinction matters a lot for the story: sealed means hope, rescue attempts, and other characters forced to grow without him; dead would close a lot of doors permanently. If you're someone who only watches the anime, that sealed status can feel like a death sentence because the visuals and reactions are so final in the moment. For manga readers, the aftermath is an extended period where the world wrestles with his absence; villains act bolder, and allies are forced into hard choices. The narrative uses his sealing to explore responsibility, legacy, and how a group functions without its strongest anchor. I still get chills rereading the arc — not just because of the chaos but because the writers made the implications meaningful instead of just using shock value. If you want to keep following the emotional fallout, the manga continues the story past Shibuya and shows how characters cope and change. Personally, I kept flipping pages with a weird mix of dread and curiosity, wondering what would happen if Gojo ever came back into play.
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status