If you enjoyed Shohei Manabe’s previous work, Ushijima the Loan Shark , you’ll recognize the same gritty, uncompromising lens applied here to the Japanese legal system. The series follows Taiza Kujo, a defense attorney who lives in a blue tent on a rooftop and takes cases no one else will—defending Yakuza members, child abusers, and the seemingly irredeemable.
Kujo’s philosophy is simple: everyone deserves a defense, even "the devil". Chapter 27 forces the reader to confront whether Kujo is a protector of rights or an enabler of evil. If you enjoyed Shohei Manabe’s previous work, Ushijima
By the time you hit Chapter 27 (part of the "Nursing Home Fraud" or early "Kyogoku Gang" arcs), the manga moves past being a simple "case of the week" and begins a deep dive into: Chapter 27 forces the reader to confront whether
For a review of Kujō no Taizai (Kujo’s Deadly Sins) around chapter 27, it’s best to highlight its evolution into a deeply unsettling legal drama that challenges your sense of morality. Karasuma acts as the reader's moral compass, constantly
The tension between the stoic, clinical Kujo and his idealistic associate, Shinji Karasuma, hits its stride. Karasuma acts as the reader's moral compass, constantly questioning if "legal" and "just" are the same thing.