Who Is Responsible For Megumi Death In The Series?

2025-11-07 06:59:13 110
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3 Answers

Spencer
Spencer
2025-11-11 21:43:45
That moment in the story hits like a gut punch, and if we're talking about the direct cause of Megumi's death in 'Jujutsu Kaisen', the immediate responsibility falls on Sukuna. In the scenes where everything collapses, Sukuna is the one who executes the kill — he isn’t a passive force; he actively makes the choice in front of the other characters. That blunt fact is what most people point to first: Sukuna did the deed, and the panels don’t mince that reality. But I can't stop there because responsibility in that series rarely lives in a single fist. Kenjaku’s long game, the manipulation of events, and the way curses and humans are pitted against each other created the battlefield where such a thing could happen. Gojo’s sealing earlier, the political inertia, the moral compromises by other sorcerers — all of those threads are part of the ecosystem that made an outcome like this possible. So while Sukuna is the hand that struck, the system, the schemers, and the narrative setup are complicit. On a personal level, I find this multiplicity of blame compelling and cruel. It’s not clean justice or a simple revenge plot; it’s tragedy layered with choices, negligence, and inevitability. That makes the scene land so hard, and it makes me keep turning pages even as I dread what comes next. I still keep replaying a few panels in my head — the art, the silence, the reactions — and it's one of those moments that lingers long after the chapter ends.
Hudson
Hudson
2025-11-12 19:22:38
If we're being concise about responsibility in 'Jujutsu Kaisen', Sukuna is the one who directly kills Megumi in the pivotal moment; he performs the act and bears the most direct culpability. Saying that, though, feels like only half the story. The environment that allowed this to happen — Kenjaku’s machinations, the way the sorcerer world is structured, and the sequence of strategic errors and fortunate/unfortunate timing — all share blame in a moral sense. I also find myself blaming narrative inevitability a little: characters written into impossible corners by circumstance and plot devices often have tragic exits, and in this case the author’s choices shaped the path to that end. So while Sukuna is the immediate perpetrator, responsibility fans talk about tends to be shared among the villain, the manipulative forces behind the scenes, and the battlefield logic of the series. Personally, I keep coming back to how effectively the story makes you feel that mix of rage and sorrow — it’s brutal, and it sticks with me.
Victoria
Victoria
2025-11-13 21:15:51
Seeing it from another angle, I look first at intent and consequence: Sukuna is the one who actually kills Megumi in the crucial sequence of 'Jujutsu Kaisen', so he carries the immediate moral weight. He acts with deliberation and a terrifying clarity that makes him the face of that death. That’s the blunt truth in terms of causality — the villain stepped up and took a life in front of everyone. But digging a little deeper, I can’t help but blame the architecture around the characters. Kenjaku’s manipulations and the centuries-long cruelty of the curse system set everything into motion. Without those manipulations, Sukuna might never have been unleashed in the way he was, and the chessboard would look very different. I also think about the human errors — miscalculations, trust placed in the wrong people, and even the pressure on youth like Megumi to carry unbearable burdens. Those are softer, systemic responsibilities that don’t absolve the killer but broaden who we hold accountable. Emotionally, it’s a raw mix of anger at Sukuna and a hollow frustration at the whole damned setup. That combination — immediate violence plus structural rot — is what makes the scene so devastating to read. It leaves me unsettled and oddly obsessed, replaying motives and missed chances in my head long after I close the manga.
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