Book Review
Title: Chainsaw Man Vol. 7 by Tatsuki Fujimoto
Genre: Manga, Fantasy, Horror
Rating: 5 Stars
Volume 7 continued where the sixth volume left off but added a lot more to it. While Reze is killed by Makima this doesn’t stop her getting the information out that Denji is the Chainsaw Devil which means there are devil hunters all over the world contracted to the gun devil or private hunters looking for a massive pay-out heading to Japan with the sole mission of killing Denji and taking his heart.
Denji is soon aware of this situation and how he is being used as bait in order to draw these devil hunters out but he is also thinking about why these hunters and the gin devil want his heart so badly and what secrets Pochita could have had. He has also begun having dreams of being a child again and hearing Pochita tell him from behind a door to never open it meaning something dangerous, evil or both is lurking behind it. Denji is looking into his abilities and how he can use and understand them better and he seems to be getting the hang of it now and it isn’t a moment to soon as we see at least 4 different teams of hunters heading to Japan.
The first team get taken out pretty easily except for one, another duo have the power of the curse devil and only need to stab Denji one more time as they stabbed him three times without him noticing as they are small and relatively painless. The third uses a puppet demon of sorts and has the nickname Santa Claus and the final one is from China, Quanxi and she seems to be the one we know the least about. The only one to get close to Denji is Quanxi but the devil hunter who trained him and Power is there and also seems to know this hunter. Through there conversation we learn that the hunter whose name we still don’t know knows Makima is listening to their conversation and knows a way to stop Makima for good if she wants but Quanxi doesn’t seem to want any part in that claiming ignorance is bliss and so the fight begins.
Buy it here:
Paperback/Hardcover: amazon.co.uk amazon.com
Kindle Edition: amazon.co.uk amazon.com
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