2 Answers2025-01-17 20:16:44
Without dropping any spoilers here, 'Jujutsu Kaisen' fans would know that it was the antagonist group 'Geto's curses' that managed to seal Gojo. It's a monumental moment in the plot that certainly changes the team dynamics. The scene was a brilliant display of strategy and power, ensuring Gojo got sealed and setting the arc for the next intense turn of events.
There isn't much detailed beyond this without heading into spoiler territory. For full episodes and specifics, 'Jujutsu Kaisen' should be viewed in its entirety. It's an amazing story with rich plot dynamics.
4 Answers2025-01-08 15:32:48
As a devotee of 'Jujutsu Kaisen', the sealing of Gojo was a plot twist that left us all scratching our heads. As a cold-hearted betrayal from the special grade curse that is Getou, the forgettable arc began. Along with the dangerous curses Jogo, Hanami and Mahito, they used complete tactics. The Prison Realm, a "special grade cursed tool" primarily employed at this juncture, makes its captive’s cursed energy slip away, leaving him/her trapped in an inescapable void. The mastermind behind this plot was no less than director himself; while Gojo was under attack, Suguru Geto activated the Prison Realm in secret. Despite having that awe-inspiring power, Satoru Gojo finally stepped into the ambush set for him and was sealed inside Prison Realm by means of this special grade cursed tool.
2 Answers2025-01-10 11:21:07
Sukuna, also known as Ryomen Sukuna, is from the world of 'Jujutsu Kaisen', an exceptional manga and anime series created by Gege Akutami. This series features a darker theme and centers on protagonist Yuji Itadori who becomes the host for Sukuna after accidentally consuming a cursed finger.
2 Answers2025-09-08 04:28:19
Man, Gaara's backstory still hits me right in the feels every time! The whole Shukaku sealing situation was a political nightmare disguised as a 'gift' of power. See, the Sand Village was desperate to compete with the Leaf's Nine-Tails jinchūriki, so they shoved the One-Tail into their Kazekage's newborn son as a living weapon. The irony? Gaara's own father ordered it, then spent years terrified of his creation. The sealing ritual itself was brutal - they used a twisted version of the same technique that created Naruto, but without any of the safeguards. Gaara's mom literally died in the process, which explains why he grew up so emotionally stunted.
What makes this even more tragic is how the village treated him afterward. Unlike Naruto who had Iruka's support eventually, Gaara was completely isolated - even his uncle tried to assassinate him! The sand protecting him wasn't just Shukaku's power; it was his mother's lingering will. That detail from 'Naruto Shippuden' episode 260 always gives me chills. Over time, Shukaku's influence made Gaara's insomnia worse, which ironically strengthened the beast's grip on him. It's no wonder he became homicidal before meeting Naruto - the kid never stood a chance between the village's hatred and the tailed beast's whispers.
3 Answers2025-02-10 06:40:04
The impactful event of Gojo getting sealed occurs in the 'Jujutsu Kaisen' Manga Chapter 90. It's a high-stakes moment that left many fans in suspense.
3 Answers2025-06-13 14:40:50
Sukuna in 'Marvel I Am Sukuna' is an absolute powerhouse with abilities that blend cursed energy and brutal combat prowess. His signature move, the 'Dismantle' and 'Cleave' techniques, lets him slice through anything with invisible slashes—buildings, armies, even spiritual barriers. His 'Domain Expansion: Malevolent Shrine' is terrifying; it creates a radius where everything gets diced automatically. Physical stats? Off the charts. He regenerates limbs in seconds, shrugs off fatal wounds, and moves faster than most heroes can react. What makes him scarier is his tactical mind—he toys with opponents, adapting mid-fight. Unlike typical villains, Sukuna doesn’t rely on gadgets or magic items; his body *is* the weapon. The series amps up his Marvel version by letting him absorb other characters’ powers temporarily, like stealing Thor’s lightning or Wolverine’s healing for short bursts.
2 Answers2025-08-24 05:59:41
Funny thing — when people ask where Hagoromo’s chakra is ‘sealed’ after death, I like to take a step back and untangle the saga a bit because the truth is messier and way more interesting than a single sealed location. Hagoromo Otsutsuki, the Sage of Six Paths, didn’t end up with his power locked away in one neat place when he died. Historically in 'Naruto' he split the Ten-Tails’ chakra into the tailed beasts and established the whole cycle of reincarnation through his sons, Indra and Asura. So a big chunk of that original cosmic chakra ended up scattered: embedded in the bijuu, expressed through lineage as reincarnation, and later re-manifested in people who were born as those reincarnations.
Fast-forward to 'Naruto Shippuden' — Hagoromo actually appears (spiritually) and deliberately distributes portions of his Six Paths chakra to Naruto and Sasuke so they can face Kaguya and finish the war. That’s not a permanent sealed storage; it’s more like him lending them part of his essence so they can fulfill destiny. After the conflict, his presence fades; there’s no canonical scene where someone digs up a seal and finds “Hagoromo’s chakra” boxed away. Instead, pieces of his power live on in a few ways: the tailed beasts he once formed, the reincarnation lineages of Indra and Asura (which includes people like Sasuke and Naruto), and in the temporary blessings he gave during the war.
So if you’re picturing a jar or a scroll where Hagoromo’s chakra was sealed when he died — that’s not how it plays out. It’s dispersed, reincarnated, and shared. I love how it feels more mythic that way: power isn’t a trinket to be locked up, it’s a force that moves through people and time. Makes me want to rewatch the Sage’s meeting with Naruto and Sasuke all over again, because that scene really nails the passing of responsibility and hope.
3 Answers2025-08-27 06:39:21
When I think about sealing chakra in the world of 'Naruto', my brain goes straight to all the weirdly beautiful rules that fuinjutsu follows — it's not a one-size-fits-all. Sealing techniques absolutely can seal chakra: we see it with the Shiki Fūjin (the Reaper Death Seal) and with Kushina’s Adamantine Sealing Chains, and even with the custom seals Minato used to contain the Nine-Tails inside Naruto. So yes, chakra can be sealed in principle, even very powerful chakra like a Tailed Beast's, but there are a ton of caveats.
First, the nature of the chakra matters. Naruto’s chakra isn’t just his own energy — it’s a blend of ordinary chakra, Kurama’s tailed-beast chakra, later the Six Paths chakra, and Sage influence. Sealing a simple chakra flow is one thing; sealing a sentient, semi-independent reservoir like Kurama that can act back is another. Fuinjutsu often depends on matching signatures, drawing complex arrays, and sometimes literal sacrifices of life force. So a straightforward trap that works on a normal shinobi might fail or cost the caster dearly against Naruto when he’s tapping Kurama or Six Paths power.
Second, timing and consent change everything. Many canonical seals required precise rituals (or trickery) and moments of vulnerability. Later in the story Kurama chooses to cooperate, which makes sealing ethically and practically different than trying to forcibly lock him away. My takeaway? It’s entirely feasible within the rules of 'Naruto', but only with top-tier fuinjutsu, preparation, and usually a heavy price — or a clever plot twist. If you’re writing a scene, make the method and consequence feel earned rather than cheap.