Did Hikaru'S Death Impact Ai In Oshi No Ko?

2026-04-12 03:56:24 193

2 Answers

Ryder
Ryder
2026-04-13 16:18:08
The way Ai reacted to Hikaru's death in 'Oshi no Ko' was one of those moments that stuck with me for days. At first glance, she seems almost eerily composed, like she's shutting out the world—but if you pay attention to the subtle cracks in her performance, the way her voice wavers when no one's looking, or how she throws herself into work to avoid thinking, it's heartbreaking. She doesn't sob or scream; instead, the manga lingers on tiny details—her untouched meals, the way she stares blankly at scripts, even how she mechanically repeats cheerful catchphrases during idol events. It's grief wearing a smile, and that duality is what makes her character so painfully real.

What wrecked me, though, was how her relationship with Aqua and Ruby shifted afterward. She becomes simultaneously more protective and more distant, as if she's terrified of losing them but can't fully connect. There's this haunting scene where she hugs them too tightly, murmuring something about 'staying bright,' and it doesn't feel like reassurance—it feels like a plea. The story never spells it out, but you get the sense Hikaru's death stripped away her illusion of control, leaving her raw underneath the idol persona. It's masterful character writing because the impact isn't in dramatic breakdowns; it's in all the things Ai stops allowing herself to be.
Penelope
Penelope
2026-04-14 19:40:36
Ai's reaction to Hikaru's death fascinates me because it's the opposite of what you'd expect from someone in her position. Instead of openly grieving, she weaponizes her idol persona, using it like armor. I noticed how she starts overcompensating—her stage smiles get brighter, her public appearances more frequent—as if she's trying to outrun the sadness. The manga frames it almost like a self-destructive spiral; she's not processing loss, she's performing happiness to bury it. What really gets under my skin is how this mirrors real-life idol culture, where personal tragedy often gets swallowed by the demand for constant cheer. The story doesn't judge her for it, just shows how tragically human that coping mechanism is.
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