I think people get the reaction to Uvogin's death a bit wrong sometimes. The Phantom Troupe isn't really a family; they're a pack of predators. The initial reaction from the other members isn't overwhelming grief, it's cold, sharp anger and a shift in operational posture. You see it most clearly in Nobunaga—he's not crying, he's fixated, his entire vibe changes to pure hunting mode. He wants Kurapika's head, not because he loved Uvo like a brother, but because someone dared to kill a member of their pack. It violates their code, their superiority.
Chrollo's reaction is the most fascinating, and honestly, kind of chilling. He gets that distant, analytical look. He's not mourning a friend; he's assessing a new, serious threat. The requiem he holds is less about grief and more about a statement of power and remembrance for the idea of the Troupe. It reinforces their identity. Machi and the others are pissed, sure, but they compartmentalize it almost instantly because Yorknew is still a job to them. The real emotional fallout isn't a big melodramatic scene—it's in the subtle, increased ruthlessness afterward, the way they become even more untouchable as a unit. Their reaction proves they're not sentimental villains; they're a force of nature that just had its territory challenged.
Honestly, I was struck by how little overt emotion there was. I expected more drama. But that's the point, isn't it? They're not normal people. Uvo's death serves as the ultimate proof of their ideology. They're the ones who bring violence, so when it comes back at them, they don't get to be shocked or sad in a conventional way. They just get sharper and more deadly. Nobunaga's fixation is the closest thing to a traditional reaction, and even that is channeled into pure vengeance, not sorrow. It's a masterclass in showing a villain group's psychology through what they don't do as much as what they do.
Nobunaga's whole arc after Uvo dies is so underrated. Everyone focuses on the requiem or Chrollo's plan, but Nobunaga is the one walking around Yorknew like a live wire. He's not just angry; he's personally insulted. He considered Uvo a true friend in his own twisted way, and his desire for a 'fair' fight with Kurapika shows how he views the world through this warrior's lens. Uvo getting captured and executed wasn't a warrior's death to him, it was a humiliation. So his reaction is this mix of genuine loss and wounded pride. The others move on to the auction heist, but Nobunaga gets stuck, obsessing over the chain user. It's a great character detail showing that even within the cold calculus of the Troupe, individual bonds have different weights. His reaction is the most human, in a very messed up way.
The requiem scene is the key. It's not a funeral for a person; it's a ritual for the Spider. Chrollo's speech about the legs moving independently but the head living on perfectly encapsulates their reaction. Uvogin's death is a severed leg. It hurts, it's a loss of function, but the Spider survives and adapts. The other members' reactions vary by their personality. Phinks is ready to go smash things immediately. Feitan is probably inwardly pleased at the prospect of inflicting pain on someone new. Machi is pragmatic about it. But collectively, their primary reaction is to close ranks and eliminate the threat. Sentiment is a luxury they can't afford, and the story doesn't pretend otherwise. Their cold efficiency in the face of a member's death is what solidifies them as terrifying antagonists.
They barely react at all on the surface, and that's what makes it so effective. One of their heaviest hitters gets wiped out, and there's no weeping. There's a quiet, collective 'Oh, this is serious now.' It immediately raises the stakes for the Yorknew arc because you realize these people aren't playing around; they're professionals. The mourning happens off-screen, condensed into that requiem. The real reaction is how it fuels everything after—their pursuit of the chain user, their increased caution, Chrollo's own targeted interest. It's a catalyst, not a tearjerker.
2026-07-11 21:52:31
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I've seen a lot of talk about how Uvogin's death shows how dangerous the world is, and yeah, that's true, but the thing that really stuck with me was how it absolutely broke Kurapika. It wasn't just a cool fight; it was the moment Kurapika's revenge became completely, horrifyingly real. Before that, he was driven, but there was still a sense of him being a kid on a mission. Watching him chain Uvogin, listening to those terms, seeing the cold fury in his eyes—that was the point of no return.
It also sets the tone for the entire Phantom Troupe arc. The Troupe isn't just a scary name anymore; we see them mourn, we see their loyalty, and that makes them infinitely more complex. Nobunaga's grief is raw and persistent, which adds this layer of tension every time he's on screen later. It establishes a very personal grudge within the larger conflict. Kurapika proved he could kill one of them, but he also painted the biggest target on his own back.
The aftermath is what's often overlooked. His death is the catalyst that pulls Gon and Killua deeper into the mess, because they're trying to help their friend who's clearly in over his head. It shifts the arc from a straightforward revenge quest into this tangled web of personal stakes, moral ambiguity, and the creeping feeling that Kurapika might lose himself long before he loses a fight. That impact echoes all the way into the later Succession War arc, where his trauma is still defining his actions.
Uvogin's death was basically the moment the Spiders stopped feeling invincible. Like, before that, they were this legendary group that could crush anything, and Uvogin embodied that raw power. After he got taken out by Kurapika, the whole vibe shifted. Chrollo became way more cautious, almost paranoid, which you see in Yorknew when he starts gathering intel on the chain user instead of just brute-forcing it. The trust changed, too—they kept the rule about prioritizing the group, but the cracks started showing. Nobunaga's grief made him reckless for a while, wanting to avenge Uvogin above all else, and that put him at odds with the cooler heads like Machi.
What's interesting is how it forced specialization. They lost their frontline tank, so they had to rely more on strategy and each member's unique ability. It's like the loss made them sharper but also more brittle emotionally. You can see it later in how they handle threats; they're never quite as cavalier again. His absence left a physical and symbolic hole nobody really filled.