- Joined
- Oct 6, 2022
A new month means new Boruto TBV. Ch 28 is out and let's go.
We open with a cover of Sumire carrying Boruto's new sword. It's..a fine cover I guess. Serviceable enough. We open with Inojin practicing this new jutsu he's doing. He's pretty much done with it and has mastered it in...a...single day. Hey remember when it took an entire arc to learn a new jutsu? Well Inojin learns this in one day. Great. Ugh, whatever. Inojin says he's only here for Himawari's sake and he hasn't forgiven Boruto. Boruto, also says he hasn't accepted Inojin yet. In probably his only funny line of the entire series to date, he says if he ever makes Himawari cry, he'll shave off his ridiculous haircut. Well, say what you want about Inojin's hair, Boruto. At least Ikemoto can keep his consistently on model.
We jump to the interrogation room where Konohamaru is let go. It's Mitsuki's turn now. However, Sai makes a telepathic request to the sensory unit. He asks them to see if Konohamaru has received any telepathic communications. When they say no, he confirms that someone is using outside channels. So far this is more than he's done in the War Arc and we'll see where this goes.
Boruto gets his new sword from Sumire. Which she also...Wait, when did this take place? It says Inojin mastered his new jutsu in a single day. Was this a flashback? Mamushi invades several days later from the last chapter after Sumire is given Boruto's sword. Inojin just mastered his jutsu in a single day, so was that first scene in this chapter a flashback that was just never addressed? Or did we wait several days when there was already a two week time limit for Inojin to begin practicing his new jutsu for some retarded reason? So either the first scene in this chapter is a flashback and the fucking comic book didn't bother telling us this, or they waited SEVERAL DAYS WHEN THEY ONLY HAVE TWO WEEKS, to start practicing Inojin's new jutsu. Which is absolutely confounding and retarded!!!! WHY?! What is wrong with you people?! Bug is coming in two fucking weeks and you have a psychic telling you this but you waited days to bother letting Inojin practice this new vital technique which is critical for your success?! What, could he not miss his ninja cat catching mission to work on a village saving power? Or is Ikemoto just incompetent or lazy and didn't bother to flesh out the actual timeline of this? I'll go with the latter and assume they waited because at least it gives Sumire's part in this time to at least make a little sense. Little inconsistencies like this always bug me in comics because time isn't a difficult thing to keep track of. You have to go out of your way to make events not flow right.
ANYWAY, Boruto's new sword...Yeah it can use the Hagoromo Style Jutsu Sasuke uses to keep it sharp and durable and prevent it from chipping on its own at the cost of slightly draining Boruto's chakra. Sumire also decided to make this chakra drain a security feature and make the sword rapidly drain chakra of anyone who tries to hold it that isn't Boruto, Sumire, or Sasuke. It also has some unknown special material in it, but we'll see about that later. If Ikemoto were a good writer, he'd use that chakra drain for dramatic tension like Sarada grabbing the sword to save Boruto despite it putting her at risk and harm. Will he do that? Probably not. It's probably another loaded Chekov's gun that he'll never fire.
Shikamaru is having a discussion with Shikadai that he's assigning him to a special operation that's secret. Shikadai pieces together this is to help Boruto, and while despite wanting nothing to do with it and hating Boruto, Inojin and Cho Cho already want to help Himawari and he won't abandon them. Shikamaru assures him that Boruto's help is absolutely necessary. Shikadai reluctantly agrees to help.
We cut to Inojin and Koji. This is probably the portion I looked most forward to talking about because finally, at long last FINALLY, someone asks Koji the obvious question. Inojin asks Koji why he only gives them bits and pieces of intel. Thank you, Inojin. Koji responds by telling him that small outcomes can have chain reactions. If Inojin knew he would probably die saving Himawari, would he have done it? Or would he hesitate? And assuming he didn't do it, would Himawari's powers with Kurama have awakened? He's of the opinion that even something told in good intentions could lead to bad outcomes. If the future is ideal, it's better that fewer people know about it in his opinion.
If I read between the lines a bit here, Koji doesn't seem to really grasp his own power very well. He seems to almost fear changing too much and he's very careful about what he does and doesn't do. Hence why he's fine with sacrificing people's lives if it means making a better tomorrow, even if a better possibility could present itself by that outcome. He'd rather play with the future he sees before him than deal with uncertainty even if that future isn't entirely ideal which is the real devil in the details here. Maybe there was a future where Yodo didn't die, but Koji would rather the future where she does if it guaranteed the outcome as opposed to saving her and risking one that ends in failure.
If that sounds well thought out and put together, don't worry. We get stupid again real soon.
Koji goes on to explain that the more people that know the future, the harder it is to control. The more singularities, or people who know the future, the more the future branches out. These people cause wild and radical changes in the potential outcomes. Eventually these changes become so radical, it nullifies having the vision of the future completely. He has to be cautious about who he speaks to in order to secure an ideal future. Inojin asks then, if they just go with the flow Koji wants then, they can assume that he's guiding them to the best future possible. Only for Koji to reply with........He never knows if his choice is the right one until he foresees the outcome.........Then why bother having it all?!?!? We're shown a glimpse of the future where Eida is dead and Himawari is also dead. He says a future where Eida and Himawari survive is worth it.
If you don't know whether the future is the right one or not, why bother sacrificing anyone at all? Alright. I get what they're going for here, I think. I think the dynamic at play is that Koji wants the most ideal future he can foresee. Boruto, doesn't have this power so he wants the best future possible period. He doesn't care if it can be foreseen. So if he changes it radically, so be it.
Shikamaru telepathically reaches out to our cast. He tells them this is an unofficial mission that Mamushi will attack the village. Inojin's new jutsu allows him to detect movement and vibrations by turning the person in range into a receiver to detect said vibrations. He'll use this to pinpoint the Mamushi clones. He tells them all that he selected them for this mission as they are not hostile to Boruto and will need to defend him from the village's forces as he wipes out the Mamushi clones. Honestly, it's nice to see them operate as a military again. Anyway, Shikamaru is about to disclose Mamushi's powers to the group before getting cut off. Mamushi has arrived in the village. He warns everyone their target is Eida and to be on guard. Boruto heads out to engage some of the clones, slicing through them easily. However, when Mamushi shoots out fire and begins burning buildings, Boruto absorbs it revealing his Karma.
I think I've said enough about this chapter already. We get some fun moments, but there's a lot of dumb things too. It's nice to finally get an explanation to what Koji's deal is. It makes Presience virtually worthless though, but it does raise some tension. The Ten Directions isn't perfect or all it's cracked up to be, so the idea that they're operating on a knife's edge feels a bit more fleshed out now. The story is still dumb, and it's not one of the better chapters though.
We open with a cover of Sumire carrying Boruto's new sword. It's..a fine cover I guess. Serviceable enough. We open with Inojin practicing this new jutsu he's doing. He's pretty much done with it and has mastered it in...a...single day. Hey remember when it took an entire arc to learn a new jutsu? Well Inojin learns this in one day. Great. Ugh, whatever. Inojin says he's only here for Himawari's sake and he hasn't forgiven Boruto. Boruto, also says he hasn't accepted Inojin yet. In probably his only funny line of the entire series to date, he says if he ever makes Himawari cry, he'll shave off his ridiculous haircut. Well, say what you want about Inojin's hair, Boruto. At least Ikemoto can keep his consistently on model.
We jump to the interrogation room where Konohamaru is let go. It's Mitsuki's turn now. However, Sai makes a telepathic request to the sensory unit. He asks them to see if Konohamaru has received any telepathic communications. When they say no, he confirms that someone is using outside channels. So far this is more than he's done in the War Arc and we'll see where this goes.
Boruto gets his new sword from Sumire. Which she also...Wait, when did this take place? It says Inojin mastered his new jutsu in a single day. Was this a flashback? Mamushi invades several days later from the last chapter after Sumire is given Boruto's sword. Inojin just mastered his jutsu in a single day, so was that first scene in this chapter a flashback that was just never addressed? Or did we wait several days when there was already a two week time limit for Inojin to begin practicing his new jutsu for some retarded reason? So either the first scene in this chapter is a flashback and the fucking comic book didn't bother telling us this, or they waited SEVERAL DAYS WHEN THEY ONLY HAVE TWO WEEKS, to start practicing Inojin's new jutsu. Which is absolutely confounding and retarded!!!! WHY?! What is wrong with you people?! Bug is coming in two fucking weeks and you have a psychic telling you this but you waited days to bother letting Inojin practice this new vital technique which is critical for your success?! What, could he not miss his ninja cat catching mission to work on a village saving power? Or is Ikemoto just incompetent or lazy and didn't bother to flesh out the actual timeline of this? I'll go with the latter and assume they waited because at least it gives Sumire's part in this time to at least make a little sense. Little inconsistencies like this always bug me in comics because time isn't a difficult thing to keep track of. You have to go out of your way to make events not flow right.
ANYWAY, Boruto's new sword...Yeah it can use the Hagoromo Style Jutsu Sasuke uses to keep it sharp and durable and prevent it from chipping on its own at the cost of slightly draining Boruto's chakra. Sumire also decided to make this chakra drain a security feature and make the sword rapidly drain chakra of anyone who tries to hold it that isn't Boruto, Sumire, or Sasuke. It also has some unknown special material in it, but we'll see about that later. If Ikemoto were a good writer, he'd use that chakra drain for dramatic tension like Sarada grabbing the sword to save Boruto despite it putting her at risk and harm. Will he do that? Probably not. It's probably another loaded Chekov's gun that he'll never fire.
Shikamaru is having a discussion with Shikadai that he's assigning him to a special operation that's secret. Shikadai pieces together this is to help Boruto, and while despite wanting nothing to do with it and hating Boruto, Inojin and Cho Cho already want to help Himawari and he won't abandon them. Shikamaru assures him that Boruto's help is absolutely necessary. Shikadai reluctantly agrees to help.
We cut to Inojin and Koji. This is probably the portion I looked most forward to talking about because finally, at long last FINALLY, someone asks Koji the obvious question. Inojin asks Koji why he only gives them bits and pieces of intel. Thank you, Inojin. Koji responds by telling him that small outcomes can have chain reactions. If Inojin knew he would probably die saving Himawari, would he have done it? Or would he hesitate? And assuming he didn't do it, would Himawari's powers with Kurama have awakened? He's of the opinion that even something told in good intentions could lead to bad outcomes. If the future is ideal, it's better that fewer people know about it in his opinion.
If I read between the lines a bit here, Koji doesn't seem to really grasp his own power very well. He seems to almost fear changing too much and he's very careful about what he does and doesn't do. Hence why he's fine with sacrificing people's lives if it means making a better tomorrow, even if a better possibility could present itself by that outcome. He'd rather play with the future he sees before him than deal with uncertainty even if that future isn't entirely ideal which is the real devil in the details here. Maybe there was a future where Yodo didn't die, but Koji would rather the future where she does if it guaranteed the outcome as opposed to saving her and risking one that ends in failure.
If that sounds well thought out and put together, don't worry. We get stupid again real soon.
Koji goes on to explain that the more people that know the future, the harder it is to control. The more singularities, or people who know the future, the more the future branches out. These people cause wild and radical changes in the potential outcomes. Eventually these changes become so radical, it nullifies having the vision of the future completely. He has to be cautious about who he speaks to in order to secure an ideal future. Inojin asks then, if they just go with the flow Koji wants then, they can assume that he's guiding them to the best future possible. Only for Koji to reply with........He never knows if his choice is the right one until he foresees the outcome.........Then why bother having it all?!?!? We're shown a glimpse of the future where Eida is dead and Himawari is also dead. He says a future where Eida and Himawari survive is worth it.
If you don't know whether the future is the right one or not, why bother sacrificing anyone at all? Alright. I get what they're going for here, I think. I think the dynamic at play is that Koji wants the most ideal future he can foresee. Boruto, doesn't have this power so he wants the best future possible period. He doesn't care if it can be foreseen. So if he changes it radically, so be it.
Shikamaru telepathically reaches out to our cast. He tells them this is an unofficial mission that Mamushi will attack the village. Inojin's new jutsu allows him to detect movement and vibrations by turning the person in range into a receiver to detect said vibrations. He'll use this to pinpoint the Mamushi clones. He tells them all that he selected them for this mission as they are not hostile to Boruto and will need to defend him from the village's forces as he wipes out the Mamushi clones. Honestly, it's nice to see them operate as a military again. Anyway, Shikamaru is about to disclose Mamushi's powers to the group before getting cut off. Mamushi has arrived in the village. He warns everyone their target is Eida and to be on guard. Boruto heads out to engage some of the clones, slicing through them easily. However, when Mamushi shoots out fire and begins burning buildings, Boruto absorbs it revealing his Karma.
I think I've said enough about this chapter already. We get some fun moments, but there's a lot of dumb things too. It's nice to finally get an explanation to what Koji's deal is. It makes Presience virtually worthless though, but it does raise some tension. The Ten Directions isn't perfect or all it's cracked up to be, so the idea that they're operating on a knife's edge feels a bit more fleshed out now. The story is still dumb, and it's not one of the better chapters though.