📖 MangaChainsaw Man Reze Arc: How Japanese Fans Read the Ending — "They Were a Few Dozen Meters from Being in Love"
Chainsaw Man's Reze Arc — the bittersweet bomb-girl love story from Part 1, now its own theatrical film — is the storyline English-speaking fans most often call the manga's emotional peak, and the most-liked Japanese reactions don't just cry over it. They dissect it. The thread that rises to the top fixates on the details Western readers tend to fly past: the flower symbolism (Denji's first white flower means "purity"; the single red gerbera Reze dies holding means "love at first sight" and "you are my destiny"), the perfect symmetry of a story that opens with Denji coughing up a flower and ends with him eating one, and a stack of anime-original touches — milk cartons drying at a school, a line about being "sixteen and studying for exams" — that only pay off on a second watch. The recurring theme is that the tragedy isn't an accident of bad timing but the point: even if Reze had made it to the café, fans agree, Makima was always waiting, so the one mercy the story grants is Denji's silhouette waiting for her at closing time. It builds to the kind of verdict only a Fujimoto reader would land.