4 Answers2025-11-07 06:39:56
The finale of 'Chainsaw Man' still gives me goosebumps. I won't dodge it: Makima is killed by Denji — it's deliberate, brutal, and framed as the only way to end her control. She wasn't just one person; she had been using control to manipulate people and bodies as if they were puppets, so a straightforward assassination wouldn't have worked. Denji forces a situation where he destroys the body that actually houses her power, and the manga shows that destruction as final in that moment.
That said, 'final' in this series is never simple. The story later toys with the idea that devils and concepts can re-emerge in new forms, and you'll find a later character who reads like a thematic or literal rebirth of the Control Devil. Even so, the Makima we knew — her goals, her relationship with Denji, her manipulative persona — is ended in a painfully tidy way. I felt relieved and sad at once, like closing a toxic chapter but knowing the ghost of it might show up again in a different skin.
4 Answers2025-11-07 22:30:49
I got chills the first time I flipped back through the final chapters of 'Chainsaw Man' after watching the anime — not because anything huge was changed, but because the way the scene lands is so different when it's moving and voiced.
In terms of the plot, Makima's fate is the same: the manga shows the culmination of her manipulation and Denji's desperate, grim choice to stop her, and the anime follows that arc faithfully. What changes is delivery. The manga lays out Fujimoto's beats with stark paneling, unsettling quiet, and sudden violence; the anime layers sound design, color choices, timing, and vocal performances on top of those beats, which alters the emotional weight. Small things matter: a held shot, a musical sting, an actor's inflection — they can turn a chilling whisper into outright horror or make a moment feel heartbreakingly human.
So if you ask whether she dies differently, I'd say the facts don't change, but the experience does. I loved both versions for different reasons — the manga's raw subtlety and the anime's theatrical punch — and each made me rethink that ending afterward.
4 Answers2025-11-24 07:49:33
That finale punches you in the chest. In 'Chainsaw Man' Makima (the Control Devil in human form) is defeated — Denji kills her during the climax of the story. It isn’t a neat, heroic goodbye; it’s brutal, complicated, and fueled by decades of manipulation and trauma that Makima inflicted on everyone around her. Denji’s choice is violent and final in the moment, and the scene is written to feel like both revenge and heartbreak.
What complicates things is what comes after: the Control Devil’s power and essence don’t simply vanish from the world. A little girl named Nayuta shows up in the aftermath and is ultimately connected to Makima’s nature — effectively a rebirth or reincarnation of that same force. So yes, the Makima who held power and authority is killed, but the thematic cycle continues through Nayuta. For me, that bittersweet loop is what sticks — justice served, but the world keeps turning, and new problems rise from the ashes. It left me unsettled and strangely satisfied at the same time.
4 Answers2025-11-24 03:36:53
This pops up in every thread I lurk in — simple version: in the anime as it was released in the first season, Makima's ultimate fate from the manga is not shown. The TV adaptation covers only the early-to-middle beats of 'Chainsaw Man' and stops well before the climactic, spoiler-heavy chapters where her storyline reaches its conclusion.
If you want the full story, the manga goes further and yes, her arc ends in a way that dramatically changes the direction of the series (and it’s one of those moments that makes people argue in the comments for weeks). The anime leaves you on a major cliff, intentionally or not, so viewers who only watch the show won't see her full arc play out.
I get why people are impatient — Makima is central and chilling, and her resolution is one of those plot points that hit hard in print. I'm excited and nervous for the studio to tackle it when season two comes around; it's going to be wild to see that on screen.