Rurouni Kenshin- Meiji Kenkaku Romantan - Kyoto... Review
Kenshin must admit that he wants to live. To perform the technique, he must stop treating his life as payment for his sins. This is the emotional core of the arc: The Supporting Cast Steps Up One of the arc’s masterstrokes is how it handles the Tokyo crew. While Kenshin is in the mountains, Sanosuke, Kaoru, and Yahiko aren’t relegated to cheerleaders. Sanosuke’s confrontation with Anji the Destroyer (a monk who uses martial arts to channel his grief over dead orphans) is a philosophical gut-punch. Yahiko’s fight against the witch-like Raijuta proves he has the soul of a warrior.
The 90s Kyoto arc, while beloved, suffered from filler and stretched-out episodes. The 2024 Kyoto Disturbance is lean, brutal, and visually striking. The use of digital compositing makes Shishio’s flames feel oppressive, while the sound design—specifically the clang of the reverse-blade sword—carries weight. Rurouni Kenshin- Meiji Kenkaku Romantan - Kyoto...
The fire of the Bakumatsu never went out. It just changed shape. And in Kyoto, it burns brighter than ever. Kenshin must admit that he wants to live
Enter Seijuro Hiko, the 13th master of Hiten Mitsurugi-ryu. Hiko isn’t just a mentor; he is a god-like force of nature who treats Kenshin’s emotional baggage with disdain. The training for Kuuzu-Ryu Sen (the ultimate technique) is not about learning a new move—it is about abandoning the will to die. While Kenshin is in the mountains, Sanosuke, Kaoru,
The Kyoto Arc shatters this lie in the first chapter. The arrival of the ominous Kudogin (spy) and the revelation that Kenshin’s successor, Makoto Shishio, is plotting to burn Kyoto to the ground and conquer Japan forces a brutal realization:
5/5 Swords of Justice. Watch if you like: Vinland Saga (philosophical violence), Demon Slayer (historical sword styles), or Cowboy Bebop (melancholic heroes).