Kujo no Taizai (九条の大罪), also known internationally as Sins of Kujo , is a gritty and thought-provoking seinen manga series. Created by the acclaimed author —the mastermind behind the dark classic Ushijima the Loan Shark —this series has carved out a unique space in the world of legal dramas.

As Kujo digs deeper into cases involving organized crime, the physical danger to himself and those around him escalates. This chapter will likely escalate the underlying tension between legal battles and street-level violence. 3. Deeper Character Psychological Toll

A significant portion of Chapter 120 revolves around a specific piece of evidence or testimony that threatens to blow a current case wide open. Kujo utilizes a loophole that leaves the prosecution scrambling. Non-Japanese speakers analyzing the raw text will notice the heavy use of legal terminology, emphasizing that this battle is being fought with brains and bureaucracy rather than brawn. 3. The Shadow of the Underworld

Living in a tent on a rooftop due to his "difficult" personality, Kujo is assisted by Shinji Karasuma, a brilliant lawyer from the University of Tokyo who acts as a live-in apprentice. Together, they navigate cases involving fatal hit-and-runs, nursing home fraud, and drug crimes, blurring the lines between morality and the law. The series is renowned for its raw, realistic approach to storytelling, creating a tense and immersive atmosphere that has gripped readers since its launch in Weekly Big Comic Spirits in October 2020.

, a brilliant but controversial lawyer who employs any means necessary for his clients. The Antagonist Detective Arashiyama

The story in this chapter centers on the escalating tension between Kujo’s cold, analytical approach to the law and the messy, violent reality of his clients' lives. As a "guardian of darkness" in the Reiwa era, Kujo often finds himself at the intersection of legal loopholes and moral bankruptcy. Underworld Ties

Searching for is a specific mission for a specific type of fan: the impatient, the purist, and the theorist.