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Jan 31, 2026
When you read a manga, as you’re reading, you steadily imagine what it could potentially turn into when animated. You fixate on the little details—the expressions, the movement, the creativity you build in your head—and then you stop yourself. You think, nah, that’s never gonna happen. You tell yourself not to think too far beyond the standard expectations of an adaptation. You limit your own imagination to 1:1 shots, minimal changes, and just hope it gets done right. You take the path of least burden toward the people adapting it and accept that it will simply be what it is in the manga.
What this adaptation
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stands for is a hallmark achievement, at least to me. This is the first time I’ve fully read a manga, known exactly what would happen, and still been completely floored by its delivery in animated form. This season is what you imagine Jujutsu Kaisen to be in your head. It’s the version you think of and then immediately dismiss with yeah, like that’ll ever happen. And yet, somehow, it did.
This isn’t just an adaptation—it’s an expansion of the original. An expansion that feels fresh and genuinely worth its weight. Every second added beyond the original 1:1 experience is meaningful. Every extra movement, extended cut, and subtle animation choice is not filler, it's care and intention put into showing who these characters really are. The fight scenes, especially, go far beyond what I ever thought the anime could realistically achieve as a manga reader.
Maki’s Heavenly Restriction is the perfect example of this. That moment in the manga has lived rent-free in my head for years. I imagined countless ways it could be adapted, but never once did I picture something like this. What we got is a love letter to film, a respect for animation as an art form, and a gift to every Jujutsu Kaisen fan. Every frame felt deliberate, it didn't just visualize the moment, it interpreted it.
What I have here is something that has never happened to me before. An adaptation that didn’t just exceed expectations, but completely shattered the bar of belief I had for what adaptations are capable of—especially for a story I care deeply about in these later parts of the manga. It redefined what “faithful” can mean, and proves that respect for source material does not require restraint.
And yeah, this is coming from someone who’s been deep in jujutsufolk. A fully brainrotted fan who’s seen all the memes, all the bullshit, slandered everything there is to slander, upscaled what shouldn’t be upscaled, and downscaled Yuta into potato-brain territory. Even with all that, I can honestly say that in every frame of this season, I felt love and admiration for the source material.
I’m proud of the people who worked on this. And I’m genuinely happy to be a Jujutsu Kaisen fan.
Reviewer’s Rating: 10
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Jan 5, 2026
I'm fairly surprised how lukewarm I felt after finishing this movie. Season 1 had me interested, this not so much, but here I am.
I can't escape the feeling that I enjoyed the art-style of the first season much more. It had a nice serene feeling and the slower pacing really made me more immersed and actually care more about the story and what was happening that even the manga failed. I also enjoyed how experimental it was in its nature with the Himeno scenes and in general its wholistic presentation.
As comparison the scene of Himeno and Denji almost having sex. It was such an experimental
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shot composition and framing, subtly hinting that something is wrong here while still letting the viewer see and let their interpretation stand for itself.
Does this art-style resemble more the style of the manga? I can't help but feel like I don't like it. Because it's not even really the manga art-style, it's some weird in-between of classic anime and the manga and I'd rather just go back...
Apart from that I didn't like the story of Reze in the manga that much. My favorite parts of the story come after... well I don't want to spoil the future of the story but Aki is my favorite character that's for sure.
This actually felt even worse than the manga though because it lingered even longer on the "romance" than the manga did and that was probably the weakest part of it. I mean you can tell it's forced, it's the artist's intention that it's bad for Denji....but here it's presented by the movie as some clever idea, while even Fujimoto knew that it was a trope and didn't hold on for too long...
The 2nd part of the movie is Boom boom, was quite fun, animation was obviously going to be insane. MAPPA have been constantly delivering and one upping themselves in animation and it clearly shows. They also expand the fight with fun ideas.
I don't hate this, I enjoyed it, I wish I enjoyed it more than I did.
I'm not going to enjoy this new style change. What I know I will is Fujimoto's writing. I hope the people making this anime from now on can have a more clear direction they want to go, at least the first season had and experimented accordingly. This is some half/half trying to please everyone, and while the producers might be happy, as a fan of what the first season tried, now I am alienated.
Reviewer’s Rating: 7
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Jun 16, 2022
This manga is written by a manga lover for manga lovers. It has references to popular works like Jojo's and Hokuto no Ken. It's respected by the author of Kingdom. On multiple occasions Araki Hirohiko drew illustrations celebrating the anniversary of the manga and Hara Yasuhisa made an illustration for the 10th anniversary. It's unbelievable how almost no one talks about this manga and how unknown it's kept while seemingly being this mega hit in Japan. Nevertheless I'm happy to have found my favorite story in all of manga.
Usogui is a thrilling ride. It never stops and continues flooring the gas pedal into absurdity. Each
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gamble keeps you turning the page, eager to see what'll happen. The mind games and creativity of gambles is nothing short of brilliant. It keeps one upping itself and constantly keeps you entertained. Oh he won a pretty big gamble, time to settle down right? Nope, time for an even more absurd gamble that was actually a plan to get this dude to come over and gamble with him in an even more absurd gamble which will give me this to be able to actually start my real plan. I'm deliberately not giving any details for even one would spoil the enjoyment.
For a gambling manga, it doesn't shy away from physical fights. The Referees which preside the matches have some of the best hand to hand combat in all of manga, the matches and assassinations are INSANE. When you think you saw everything, Sako Toshio simply flips the board. Remember the Greed Island arc in Hunter x Hunter, well, it'll be a ride to say the least.
Honestly the top part was just me gushing as a fan of this manga and the man behind it. But from an extremely technical level this manga just delivers everything. The dynamic of each and every character is polished and worked on in the manga. Nothing feels left to the table and every plot thread is resolved by the end which is an extreme plus for a long running manga. The main characters, referees and "villains" you'll get to know each of them quite well, and you'll end up loving every one of them. This series has the highest number of characters I love in a manga.
The art keeps evolving with each arc and funnily enough it's never consistently the same, but not in a bad, jarring type of way. It keeps slightly changing style which feels refreshing every chapter. Extremely high detailed drawings that rival Berserk and Vagabond with ease to these highly kinetic one on one fights. It's never afraid to change style and experiment, while it does suffer, it's never bad.
I'd say this is a must read if you're a fan of entertainment. As I said "this series is written by a manga lover for manga lovers". Each decision Toshio made feels perfect to me as a fan. I was never disappointed when something happened, I never had any questions or doubts about his decisions. It's like he was reading my mind and just consistently kept telling me "Don't worry, It'll be fun" and kept pulling my hand, not letting put down the manga until I physically had to stop reading because my eyes were hurting. Toshio clearly loves manga, he reads so much of it. It feels like I could talk to him about the manga we both read and we would both fangirl over everything. Usogui is the most wild and fun ride, the most fun story I have read. Thank you Sako Toshio for creating this Masterpiece.
Reviewer’s Rating: 10
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Jun 6, 2020
Baki 2nd season i believe is a step in the right direction in terms of the animation for the series,i quite honestly believe that if it continues to improve from season to season that it might get up there with one punch man,but as it is,it leaves a foul taste,sometimes when the characters are supposed to be walking or moving,the whole thing is so poorly done that it looks like they are walking in place.
Art style
Is in my opinion very good,i love the harsh black outline that depict's the harsh reality the characters are in and have to live in,but on the other hand it
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sometimes looks janky,but if we can keep this style and improve the animation in the season to come,it would be quite amazing,as it is now,its really good,but because we have this good art style,the animation quality suffers.
Story
To be honest,whoever comes into baki and expects a tightly written story,with 0 inconsistencies and plot holes,really missed the show he should be watching,that being said,the story is okay enough,its noting groundbreaking,and in my opinion the only saving grace here is Muhammad Ali Jr's arc,which in itself wasn't perfect and could have been done better.
Enjoyment
I had lots of fun watching this,all of the fights felt unique and at the very least they were all insane fun to watch,but i think that baki season 1 had more interesting fights
The main issue here
Its probably the length of the season,i feel as tho the ending was rushed,Muhammad's arc felt too short and rushed,the whole tournament felt rushed,i think a solid 24 episode's would have done great justice here and would have made for a much better season.
Overall
All in all this season is okay,if you love baki,you are gonna like this season,but i feel like we need something better,i think Baki deserves better,i would very much like to see improved animation quality and just overall presentation in the next season,the only reason im even giving a 8 is because i love this series but more importantly i want too support the anime with a good score to get another season.
Reviewer’s Rating: 8
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