How long will inuyasha live




















Anonymous asked: How does Inuyasha age? He's a hanyou, so does that mean he would outlive Kagome or does he age at the same rate? Jinenji for example is shown as a grown male, his mother- an old lady.

Both aged together. Shiori also, they mention the events of her late father happening a few years ago when she was born , so she seems to also have grown at a steady rate. So judging by these, it can be argued that hanyous age at a normal rate as humans, alongside their parents.

Haruo Koga is assumed dead. Episode 9 is a good penultimate chapter and leaves everything in the balance for the finale. It was revealed that he settled down with Ayame and most likely had children with her. Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Press ESC to cancel. Skip to content Home Helpful tips Will there be a live action Inuyasha?

Helpful tips. Ben Davis April 3, Technically, the sword was instrumental in his transformation, but that doesn't explain what happens to it when he transforms from a human into his full-demonic form.

Does the sword get absorbed into his new body or simply disappear only to reappear when he returns to human form? It seems like this is one of those things the viewers accept because there is no explanation given, but it doesn't make much sense when you think about it for more than a minute or two.

Magical swords have to go somewhere when the person holding them transforms into a giant dog monster, but that doesn't mean the series had to show what happened to them. This is one of those things that doesn't make any sense when you think about it for more than a second because we all know bikes aren't something you can simply pick up and move easily.

Granted, they don't weigh a lot, but that doesn't mean she was able to easily move it into and out of the well in the way it is depicted in the series. This just seems like lazy writing when you get right down to it, but there is no way she could have carried that bike easily through the well each and every time she needed it.

Time travel is one of those storytelling tropes that often raises more questions than it answers. Paradoxes form all the time based on events carried out in the past. Inuyasha is no different seeing as the majority of the series takes place in Feudal Japan.

Kagome's actions in the past should have a huge impact on her present, but every time she returns to her time, nothing has changed. This doesn't add up when you consider all the events she has taken part in. How has she not affected her timeline and made everything different?

These questions are the danger of time travel in storytelling, but they are also part of the fun. Her actions in the past could have resulted in her present as she knows it, but there was never an explanation given, so who knows?

Like most anime, Inuyasha closed out with a pretty good explanation of what happened to the main characters in the series. Unfortunately, one character was left out without much said as to what happened to him. Koga was notably absent when the series picked up three years after in the events of the final chapter.

Where was Koga and what happened to him that we didn't get to see? It seems plausible that he returned to his pack, but for a character who spent so long chasing after Naraku, it seemed like there was something missing when it came to his story's conclusion.

There was a passing comment by Kagome that he might have married Ayame, but that's all that was said about what happened to him. When the series began, the Shikon Jewel was shattered into pieces while it was high in the sky thanks to a crow demon. When it shattered, its pieces flew far and wide across all of Japan, which established the setting for the series. The only problem that didn't make any sense was why the shards fell so far from each other.

Granted, it's all about magic here, but reasonably, the shards should have dropped into a small area beneath where the jewel shattered.

It's one of those aspects of the series that only works if you don't think about it much Of course, the series would have been over and done with if all the characters had to do was scour a small area to locate the shards. While we get that this is an anime and there are aspects of the series that shouldn't make sense, there were a few things about Sango that just don't work when scrutinized. The biggest flaw that drew our attention was Sango's Supergirl-level of costume changing that made it seem as if her wardrobe was magically activated.

Sango demonstrated an ability to change into her Demon Slayer outfit in a manner that makes it seem impossible. She also, for some reason, whipped her hair into a ponytail to complete the ensemble, which was certainly impressive, but probably not necessary.

How did she change so quickly throughout the series and why was it presented in such a way? There was no explanation for it. I don't really like parts of the ending. It is extremely rushed. Even though they never really mentioned it, we're supposed to assume that the Bone Eating Well stopped working after Kagome was able to reactivate it to return to the Feudal Era. And that InuYasha easily outlived Kagome and his new human friends, almost resulting in him alone yet again.

This ending is quite hollow. I think the ending worked overall, but I wish it weren't so rushed. She's this mighty demon slayer and then she all of a sudden she's having back to back babies with Miroku, that disappointed me even though I saw it coming. I also wish they would've elaborated if Kagome still visited home after she chose to marry Inuyasha. I would hope so. I wasn't too bothered by Inuyasha still being a half demon and outliving her.

I liked Rin living with Kaede too, and Sesshomaru still visiting her. That was sweet.



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