Zom 100’s Finale Gave The Villains Their Weapons of Choice For an Important Reason

What do a chainsaw, a gun, a man-catcher and a notebook all have in common? They can and will be used as weapons when placed in the wrong hands. These are the weapons of Higurashi’s gang: the main antagonists of Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead’s Season 1 Finale.Zom 100’s unique blend of revolutionary themes and relatable humor made it one of the stand-out anime debuts of 2023, and that continued right up until its season 1 finale. The main villains of Zom 100’s finale served as the ideal final test to crystallize all the lessons Akira and his friends had learned over the course of the entire first season. Their backstories and personalities hammered home the concepts that would serve as the antithesis to what the heroes had fought so hard to become. Perhaps most interesting of all is how the villain’s weapons of choice personified the types of twisted ideologies that Akira, Shizuka, Kencho and Beatrix had to overcome to become the best versions of themselves.Additionally, chainsaws can represent industrialization and the destruction of nature. Humans destroy nature in order to take control and ultimately make the world a better place for humanity at the cost of making it worse for other living creatures. Where this ties in with Beatrix is that she is a person who truly loves and appreciates other perspectives and cultures — especially that of Japan. Instead of imposing the values of her own culture (that of Germany) on people from other countries, Beatrix loves Japanese culture as though it were her own, and would never dream of changing it. Juxtaposed with the backdrop of nature vs humanity, Bea’s message is that there is always another perspective, therefore there are different definitions of what is good for others. The notion of respecting and appreciating the ‘other’ can extend into the domain of humanity’s position of otherness in relationship to nature. Even if nature is something completely foreign to Bea, she can still seek to love and appreciate it for what it is without chopping it down. The belief that one person knows exactly what is best for everything and everyone else around them is what causes destruction, and thus giving Touko the chainsaw makes perfect sense.

What do a chainsaw, a gun, a man-catcher and a notebook all have in common? They can and will be used as weapons when placed in the wrong hands. These are the weapons of Higurashi’s gang: the main antagonists of Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead‘s Season 1 Finale.

Zom 100‘s unique blend of revolutionary themes and relatable humor made it one of the stand-out anime debuts of 2023, and that continued right up until its season 1 finale. The main villains of Zom 100‘s finale served as the ideal final test to crystallize all the lessons Akira and his friends had learned over the course of the entire first season. Their backstories and personalities hammered home the concepts that would serve as the antithesis to what the heroes had fought so hard to become. Perhaps most interesting of all is how the villain’s weapons of choice personified the types of twisted ideologies that Akira, Shizuka, Kencho and Beatrix had to overcome to become the best versions of themselves.

Additionally, chainsaws can represent industrialization and the destruction of nature. Humans destroy nature in order to take control and ultimately make the world a better place for humanity at the cost of making it worse for other living creatures. Where this ties in with Beatrix is that she is a person who truly loves and appreciates other perspectives and cultures — especially that of Japan. Instead of imposing the values of her own culture (that of Germany) on people from other countries, Beatrix loves Japanese culture as though it were her own, and would never dream of changing it. Juxtaposed with the backdrop of nature vs humanity, Bea’s message is that there is always another perspective, therefore there are different definitions of what is good for others. The notion of respecting and appreciating the ‘other’ can extend into the domain of humanity’s position of otherness in relationship to nature. Even if nature is something completely foreign to Bea, she can still seek to love and appreciate it for what it is without chopping it down. The belief that one person knows exactly what is best for everything and everyone else around them is what causes destruction, and thus giving Touko the chainsaw makes perfect sense.

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