%e8%a6%aa%e6%84%9b%e3%81%aa%e3%82%8b%e5%83%95%e3%81%b8%e6%ae%ba%e6%84%8f%e3%82%92%e3%81%93%e3%82%81%e3%81%a6%2c%e2%80%93%2craw%2c%e3%80%90%e7%ac%ac82%e8%a9%b1%e3%80%91%2c%e8%a6%aa%e6%84%9b%e3%81%aa%e3%82%8b%e5%83%95%e3%81%b8%e6%ae%ba%e6%84%8f%e3%82%92%e3%8 【2025-2026】

Discuss how the author uses "lost time" (blackouts) as a narrative device to keep the audience and the protagonist equally uninformed. Research Resources

Explore how the manga uses DID to represent the internal struggle between being a "victim" of legacy and a "perpetrator" of current actions.

Detailed backgrounds on Eiji/B-ichi and his father can be found on the Fuji TV official drama site , which provides context for the 2022 live-action adaptation. Discuss how the author uses "lost time" (blackouts)

Analyze how the trauma of the father (LL) is passed down and manifests in the son's psyche.

If you are writing an academic or critical paper, consider these pillars: Analyze how the trauma of the father (LL)

The original Japanese chapters are available on Comic Days and Magazine Pocket.

The series, written by Hajime Inoryu and illustrated by Shota Ito , is a psychological suspense thriller focusing on Eiji Urashima, a college student who discovers he has Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). He shares his body with a second personality, "B-ichi," and must uncover whether he or his alter ego is responsible for a series of gruesome murders mirroring those committed by his serial killer father, "LL". Analysis of Chapter 82: "The End of the White Knight" He shares his body with a second personality,

A major theme of this chapter is the distinction between "justice" and "revenge." The "White Knight" arc concludes by revealing the depths of the trauma that created B-ichi, showing that his goal was never murder for pleasure, but a desperate attempt to find the truth about his father, Makoto Hachinoi.