Kuze’s violence is . He strikes to maintain a system. He punches downward to keep the rats in the sewer. His fists are about debt, about territory, about the grim arithmetic of organized crime. He has forgotten what it feels like to hit someone for a reason that isn't transactional.
It is not a punch. Not really. Not in the way a fist meets a jaw in a bar fight, or in the way a delinquent swings for the first time. When Kiryu Kazuma’s fist collides with the face of Daisaku Kuze, it is a philosophical explosion rendered in flesh and bone. Kiryu punches Kuze
Not a grin of masochism, but a grin of recognition. Kuze has spent a decade surrounded by sycophants and ghosts. He has been shouting into the void, trying to teach a new generation that pain is the only truth. And then, from the concrete dust, comes this quiet dragon who refuses to stay down. When Kiryu’s fist lands, Kuze finally feels real again. For the first time in years, someone has answered his nihilism with absolute conviction. Kuze’s violence is