Fan-created anime character fights are always a fun gambit because there’s never a true victor. Whether we’re talking about Goku versus Superman, Vegeta versus Hiei, Gojo versus Frieren, or Sung Jinwoo versus Vash the Stampede, we could debate the outcome all day, and much of it would come down to personal bias. The real fun of these exercises isn’t necessarily the power scaling or the fight itself, but the deeply detailed research that goes into each character.
This sentiment is especially true in the latest Death Battle YouTube video, which pits Jujutsu Kaisen’s Yuji Itadori against Chainsaw Man’s Denji. It’s a fair fight that throws two of modern Shonen Jump’s biggest stars into an all-out brawl, but what makes the episode interesting isn’t the fight itself; it’s the care with which the creators dissect both tragic souls.
[Ed. note: Spoilers for Jujutsu Kaisen and Chainsaw Man ahead.]
Yuji Itadori is a fierce yet kindhearted 15-year-old boy with a knack for using Cursed Energy. Ignoring the fact that he has a demon over 1,000 years old nested inside his consciousness — Sukuna, known as “The King of Curses” — Yuji has consistently proven himself resilient and determined, often at the expense of his own well-being. The 18-year-old Denji, meanwhile, is a little stranger. While his mind is frequently occupied by inappropriate thoughts involving Power or Makima, he’s similarly capable of pushing far beyond the limits that should stop an ordinary person.
The creators of Death Battle Wiz and Boomstick, do a fantastic job of capturing that duality. Wiz offers a more analytical breakdown, while Boomstick supplies the chaotic energy and comedic relief every anime death match needs. About 8 minutes into the video, Boomstick notes Denji’s “raging teenage hormones” are enough to make him “battle all of devil-kind.” Boomstick then jokingly adds that Denji “was a natural at killing…not getting laid.”
The most fascinating part about Yuji and Denji is that literal death looms over them at all times. In their respective stories, both are viewed as too dangerous to be left alive because of the immense power they carry: Ryomen Sukuna’s possession of Yuji Itadori and the Chainsaw Devil’s fusion with Denji. Both have also lived deeply tragic lives — Denji perhaps more obviously so, though Yuji’s suffering, as it unfolds over the course of the story, is no less profound.
Wiz even points out that Yuji’s life was orchestrated by the body-hopping sorcerer Kenjaku as part of a plan to resurrect Sukuna and usher in the curse apocalypse, a massive plot twist revealed toward the end of Jujutsu Kaisen. While Denji grew up in abject poverty and exploitation, Yuji’s entire existence was engineered to help bring about the end of the world. It’s a tragedy that completely recontextualizes his journey and demonstrates how deeply the Death Battle team understands the character’s emotional weight. Rather than focusing solely on power levels, Wiz and Boomstick weave in critical pieces of lore that reinforce the thematic foundations of both stories.
That understanding extends beyond the surface-level details many debates of this kind tend to rely on. In discussing Denji, the episode recognizes that Chainsaw Man has never really been about becoming stronger. Series creator Tatsuki Fujimoto has previously spoken about Denji’s desire to become a “normal person,” connecting it to the creator’s own feelings of existing on the outside of society. Denji’s story is not one of conquest but belonging. Likewise, Yuji’s journey in Jujutsu Kaisen is defined less by his strength than by the burden of responsibility forced upon him. Death Battle repeatedly returns to these ideas, treating both characters as people first and weapons second.
In the end, victory goes to Denji, the Chainsaw Man, which is probably a fair conclusion for those familiar with both series. But the winner isn’t what makes this episode memorable. The internet has spent decades arguing over who would beat whom in fictional fights, and those debates rarely reach a consensus. There will always be another calculation, another feat, another interpretation that shifts the outcome. What lasts is the understanding of the characters themselves.
That’s where Yuji versus Denji succeeds. Rather than reducing two of Shonen Jump’s most beloved protagonists to stat sheets and attack multipliers, Death Battle recognizes the tragedy at the center of both stories. These are not heroes defined by overwhelming strength, but by their determination to keep moving forward despite lives shaped by suffering, manipulation, and impossible expectations.
Whether Denji could really defeat Yuji is ultimately beside the point. The real victory belongs to the writers, who understood why fans fell in love with these characters in the first place.


