This key visual for 35th episode owns my heart, JUST LOOK AT THIS MASTERPIECE 😭
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This key visual for 35th episode owns my heart, JUST LOOK AT THIS MASTERPIECE 😭
TefudaGaOomeNoVictoria has Spyxfamily vibes, I feel it 👀
Yor and Yuri's Parallel Journeys - Spy x Family Analysis
I originally posted this on Reddit, but I figured I might as well share it here as well. I also rarely make analysis posts like these cause I'm usually on the wiki, but I thought this topic was interesting enough to make a post for.
also also. this post has lots of manga spoilers up to the latest chapter, so if you haven't caught up, you have been warned.
Yor and Yuri's relationship is probably one of my favorites in Spy × Family, and one I think is often understated. While rereading the series for the nth time, I began to notice something about the Briar siblings: although their character arcs are not identical, they unfold in surprisingly parallel ways. After losing their parents, both Yor and Yuri built their identities around protecting the other. As the story progresses, each is forced to confront the same underlying question: how do you redefine yourself after spending your childhood living for someone else? Yor reaches that turning point first, gradually expanding beyond an identity centered solely on Yuri, while Yuri's recent development suggests he is only beginning to confront the same question from the opposite direction, learning to support Yor's happiness without making himself the center of it.
This is a lengthy post, but I hope you'll bear with me and read it all the way through. Now, let's get into it.
1. Shared Foundations
Both Yor and Yuri lost their parents during the Second East-West War. While the exact circumstances remain unknown, Yor stepped up as Yuri's primary caretaker from a young age and eventually became a Garden assassin to continue supporting him. Years later, during the Cruise Adventure Arc, Yor realizes that her resolve to fight had grown beyond simply protecting Yuri, reaffirming her desire to create a world free from needless tragedies, a motivation that seemingly stems from the losses she experienced as a child. In turn, Yuri grew up inspired by Yor's kindness, resolving to "make this world a kinder place for her sake."
Although these revelations occur in different parts of the story, the chapters that reveal them were released relatively close together. Viewed together, they present the Briar siblings as sharing the same emotional foundation: both chose their paths in response to the same childhood tragedy, each hoping to protect the other in their own way.
2. Catalyst
By the start of the series, Yuri has already moved out and is working for the SSS, leaving Yor living alone for the first time since raising him. After impulsively telling Yuri that she has a boyfriend, Yor meets Loid and eventually agrees to a marriage of convenience. While the arrangement is primarily practical, allowing her to maintain her cover as an assassin and avoid suspicion for being unmarried, Yor also explicitly notes that it will put Yuri's mind at ease, knowing how much he worries about her. Although the marriage begins as a matter of convenience, it quietly becomes the catalyst that forces both siblings to confront lives that no longer revolve solely around one another, setting their parallel journeys into motion.
3. Secret Police Arc
This arc marks the first major divergence between Yor and Yuri. While both still place each other at the center of their decisions, they begin responding to Yor's marriage in fundamentally different ways.
Yor repeatedly frames her relationship with Loid in terms of how it affects Yuri. She worries about causing him unnecessary stress and later thanks Loid not simply for tolerating Yuri, but for accepting him as part of their family. Even at this early stage, Yor's instinct is not to replace Yuri with Loid, but to expand the family she already has. Yuri, meanwhile, responds in the opposite direction. Rather than seeing Loid as an addition to Yor's life, he immediately views him as a rival competing for the place he has occupied since childhood. His hostility toward Loid stems less from jealousy than from a fear of losing the role that has defined his identity for years.
Looking back, these chapters foreshadow the direction both characters eventually take. Yor's first instinct is inclusion: she tries to reconcile her old family with her new one. Yuri's first instinct, by contrast, is exclusivity, viewing Loid's presence as a threat to his place beside Yor. This distinction quietly becomes the foundation for both siblings' later development. Yor gradually succeeds in expanding the world she built around Yuri, while Yuri's journey ultimately becomes learning how to accept that expansion rather than resist it.
4. The Lives They Chose
While Chapters 26 and 29 primarily focus on Anya, they reveal for the first time that both siblings chose their secret professions out of devotion to one another. Yuri pursued the SSS believing he could help Yor, while Yor reflects that what began as a means of supporting Yuri eventually became a source of pride and a way to protect others. Although these revelations seem isolated at first, they ultimately become the core foundation for both characters' later development.
5. Yuri's Character and Yor's Resolution
Chapter 41 is the first time we see Yuri existing (mostly) independent of Yor. We see his exceptional capabilities as an investigator whose concern for families extends beyond his own, suggesting that the ideals Yor inspired in him have become genuine convictions. But the chapter also reminds us that Yuri's emotional center remains unchanged: after completing the case, the first thing he does is visit Yor simply because he wants to see her, immediately reverting to the affectionate younger brother.
Not long after, Yor reaches her first major turning point during the Cruise Adventure Arc. After Yuri tells her that he is no longer a child and that she should rely on him instead, Yor quietly acknowledges that the role she has fulfilled since their parents' deaths has finally come to an end. Wondering whether there is still any point in remaining an assassin, she even considers making her current assignment her final mission as the Thorn Princess.
However, while protecting Olka and Gram, Yor gradually realizes that her desire to safeguard peaceful families is the very reason she became an assassin in the first place. Olka's wish to simply live quietly with her child reminds Yor of the losses that shaped her own childhood, leading her to reaffirm her resolve to prevent others from experiencing the same needless tragedies. Rather than finding a new purpose, Yor realizes that the ideals which first led her to become an assassin had always extended beyond Yuri alone. By the arc's conclusion, as she quietly wishes that the peace she has found with the Forger family could last forever, Yor understands that protecting peaceful lives like theirs is the very reason she continues fighting as the Thorn Princess.
In the middle of all this, we get another look into Yor and Yuri's past in Short Mission 6. While we already covered this in the first part, it is essential to the arc as it forms a complete circle: Yor chose her path to protect Yuri, while Yuri dedicated his life to becoming someone worthy of protecting Yor in return. However, the siblings' parallel development is not merely chronological. Because Yor was forced to grow up first and become Yuri's caretaker, she is also the first to confront what it means to move beyond that role. Yuri, by contrast, has spent much of his life looking up to the sister who raised him. His own journey only begins once Yor's growth compels him to reconsider the role, and ultimately the identity, he has long built around protecting her.
6. Yuri's Identity
While Yor largely resolves this part of her journey during the Cruise Adventure Arc, Yuri is still trying to fulfill the promise he made as a child. Chapter 68 shows this in a surprisingly mundane way. Rather than confronting Loid as an SSS officer, Yuri competes with him over everyday household chores, desperately trying to prove that he can still be more useful to Yor than her husband. Underneath the silliness is an uncomfortable question: if Loid can now provide the support Yuri once wanted to give his sister, what role is left for him?
The Wheeler/Mole Hunt Arc quietly builds on this idea. Before Yuri unknowingly clashes with Twilight, Yor tells him not to interfere in what she calls a marital spat between herself and Loid. Later, after Yuri and Loid nearly kill each other during the operation, Yuri visits the Forger home only to be sent away so Loid can rest. Although Yor later apologizes, these moments show how much her perspective has changed. She still loves Yuri just as deeply as ever, but she no longer instinctively places him at the center of every decision.
Chapter 89 finally turns the spotlight back onto Yuri. Still shaken by his defeat against Twilight and being turned away from the Forger home, Yuri privately admits that his recent encounter with Yor has left him wondering whether he can truly protect his country. The changing role Yor now plays in Yuri's life begins to shake the very motivation that led him to join the SSS. In an effort to become strong enough to defeat Twilight and prove himself worthy of protecting Yor, he throws himself into work, recklessly taking on an entire gang by himself. Chloe saves him from getting himself killed and bluntly points out what he's doing: his entire life revolves around Yor. Rather than telling him to stop caring about his sister, she challenges him to become someone who no longer gives Yor a reason to worry about him. Before trying to protect Yor, he first has to show that he can stand on his own.
By the end of the chapter, Yor visits to apologize for sending him away and admits that she missed him, reaffirming that nothing has changed about how much they care for each other. But Yuri leaves with a new question. Instead of immediately plotting how to get rid of Loid, he asks Yor how she actually feels about him. For the first time, Yuri pauses to consider that arresting or eliminating Loid might not be what Yor wants after all. He doesn't resolve these doubts yet, but for the first time he begins looking inward instead of measuring himself solely through Yor.
7. Chapter 114
Before getting to Chapter 114, it's worth briefly touching on Chapter 91. While it doesn't significantly change either sibling's trajectory, it provides the missing context behind both of their motivations. By confirming that Yor and Yuri's parents died during the war, it retroactively strengthens the Cruise Adventure Arc's revelation that Yor fights to prevent other families from suffering similar losses, while also reinforcing why Yuri devoted himself to becoming someone capable of protecting the sister who became his entire world.
With that context in mind, Chapter 114 offers something the series has rarely given us: Yor and Yuri simply spending time together after both of their arcs have significantly progressed. More importantly, they do so from very different places than where they began. Yuri initially falls back into familiar habits, dwelling on the sacrifices Yor made to raise him while accusing the Forgers of taking her away from him and changing who she is. Yor, however, responds from a very different place. Rather than dwelling on the hardships of the past, she gently explains that those feelings belong to another time and speaks openly about the happiness she has found in her current life.
This contrast becomes most apparent when Yuri suggests returning to their hometown of Nielsberg. While the proposal shows his lingering attachment to the life they once shared, Yor quietly declines. She treasures those memories, but no longer wishes to return to them, choosing instead to continue moving forward toward the future she wants to protect.
Despite this, the chapter reaffirms that their relationship remains as close as ever. Before they part, Yuri remembers that Yor wanted to buy a gift for Anya and gives it to her himself, showing consideration for what is important to her. Left alone afterward, Yuri reflects on the childhood promise that shaped his life and initially wonders whether the Forgers are the reason his sister now feels so distant. However, he quickly realizes that they are not the only reason: he has also built a life whose burdens and responsibilities he can no longer share with Yor. However, we also get a hint that Yuri may be capable of embracing the life he he has built beyond his relationship with his sister, as the chapter closes with him accepting an invitation to join his fellow SSS officers for drinks.
8. The Five-Year Love Plan Arc and onward
The Five-Year Love Plan Arc immediately demonstrates how much Yor and Yuri's dynamic has changed. For the first time, Yor openly admits to Yuri that she loves Loid. Earlier in the series, Yuri viewed Loid primarily as someone who had stolen his sister away. Although he remains visibly uncomfortable with the confession, he decides to follow them to the broadcast to judge for himself whether Loid is truly worthy of the place he holds beside Yor. Even more strikingly, when the hijacking occurs, Yuri and Loid spend much of the arc working toward the same goal: protecting Yor. Although they continue to clash, neither allows their wariness of each other to interfere when Yor is in danger.
When the hijackers later demand that Yor kiss someone as part of their staged reshoot, Yuri immediately objects to forcing his sister into such a situation. However, when it becomes clear that the hijackers will not back down, he argues that Loid should be the one instead, implicitly accepting that, if anyone should fill that role, it should be Yor's husband. Later, both siblings witness Loid risk his own life by confronting the hijackers at gunpoint to protect Yor. When Yor tearfully tells Loid that he could have died, her words echo the advice Chloe previously gave Yuri: that protecting someone also means making sure you return to them safely.
The most recent chapters continue this progression. We see Yuri asking his coworkers to help him evaluate whether Loid is truly worthy of Yor. The question itself marks a complete reversal of his earlier mindset. Instead of assuming Loid has no place beside his sister, Yuri is now willing to consider the possibility that he does. By the end of the SSS party, he even admits to Chloe that he doesn't actually hate Loid. While he is far from considering Loid family, Yuri recognizes that Loid has remained true to his promise to protect Yor alongside him. Rather than judging Loid as the man who took his sister away, Yuri begins evaluating him as someone who shares the same desire to keep her safe.
At the same time, Yuri's attention gradually turns inward. Acknowledging that Yor now has a life of her own, he realizes that he cannot continue depending on her forever and resolves to start acting more like an adult. While his journey is far from complete, this is the clearest indication yet that Yuri is beginning to redefine his own identity instead of measuring himself solely through his relationship with his sister.
Now, one thing I didn’t really touch on is Yuri's "siscon" behavior. I don’t think this analysis ignores it so much as looks beneath it. Most of Yuri’s attachment to Yor is presented comedically, but his major character moments consistently frame that attachment as an identity issue rooted in their childhood rather than just a running gag. That’s why I focused on the underlying question of who Yuri becomes as Yor gradually builds a life that no longer revolves entirely around him.
Viewed as a whole, the Briar siblings' stories resemble two halves of the same journey unfolding at different points in time. Yor's arc shows her learning that loving Yuri does not mean living solely for him, while Yuri's recent development suggests he is only beginning to confront that same realization from the opposite direction. The childhood promises they made to protect one another have never been broken; instead, they have gradually taken on a new meaning. Rather than defining themselves through the sacrifices they once made for each other, they are gradually learning to support one another as siblings who have each built lives, relationships, and responsibilities beyond the bond that first shaped them.
wedding photos! 🫶
SpyxFamily: When the lines blur
Actor, spy, Loid Forger.
The characterization in SpyxFamily always involves multiple layers due to the secrets the characters are keeping. From a writing perspective, I find it fascinating and commendable how Endo keeps these characters behaving and interacting with each other in hilarious and deep (layered) ways. With each action they take, we as the audience wonder which parts of themselves they’re revealing, and which parts are still hiding.
Loid Forger loves his wife.
Of course he does; it’s not even a doubt in anyone’s mind. Loid Forger is a doting father and an adoring husband. Loid Forger works tirelessly to access the best education that most parents couldn’t even dream of offering their children. Loid Forger is wrapped firmly around his daughter’s finger, willing to rent out a castle just to make her smile. Loid Forger lavishes his wife with expensive dates. Because of course, he would. Loid Forger is nothing if not the perfect husband: sensitive, caring, hardworking—and above all, fake.
But what about Twilight?
Twilight isn’t supposed to exist. Twilight, the orphaned son of Westalis, who threw away his humanity and his future because he was told it was the only way he could save the world. Twilight, who crafted a cover family out of strangers that society had deemed as outcasts: a faceless spy, a child orphaned several times over, an isolated woman with a single family tie to bind her to the rest of the world.
Twilight shouldn’t love his cover. Twilight, the fake father who pushes his fake daughter to make connections, to excel in school, not for the sake of her future and happiness, but for his mission. Twilight, the fake husband who planted a bug on his fake wife out of misplaced suspicion. Twilight, the spy who manipulated the hearts of the only people in the world who completely trust him to be a part of their family. Twilight should see them as a means to an end. Twilight shouldn’t feel guilty for what he’s done to them.
But what about [REDACTED]?
[REDACTED] is a corpse buried under years of war and calamity. He hasn’t been allowed to exist for so long that he’s forgotten his own mother’s face. But he appears, sometimes—after all, Loid Forger can’t be real. Loid Forger entered this world six months ago. Twilight isn’t supposed to know the minute details of his fake family beyond what is necessary to further his goals. They can’t be the person who encourages his wife to make friends because he knows she deserves to have people who love and support her outside of her own family. They can’t be the person who plays pretend with his daughter at the expense of his pride because it makes her happy. They can’t be the person who steps in front of a loaded gun without a thought spared for his own wellbeing, because his wife was in danger. They can’t be the person who listens to his wife’s fears and doubts and tells her the most honest thought he’s shared in years: “you remind me of my mother. You’re strong.”
Loid Forger is the mask. And when Loid Forger says he loves his wife, it’s with Twilight’s voice. It’s a calculated performance to protect his fake life, his fake marriage, all for the sake of his mission. He’s in a pit of vipers doing anything he can to not get noticed as prey. But it’s [REDACTED]’s lingering ghost that makes his confession not just a lie born out of a desperate need for survival. It’s [REDACTED]’s thoughts that makes it something less of a lie and something closer to an uncomfortable reality.
And for a man that isn’t supposed to exist, the lines between his lies and his reality have become concerningly blurred.
⚠️CH 134 SPOILERS⚠️
he’s getting so good at this guys!
Post-Reveal domestic fluff?
My neck hurts 😠 so I curse him the same 😇
Hey can we please talk about the juxtaposition between these two panels?
And also between these two pages?
Because I love the contrast between Yor’s expression when she’s really starting to work out her true feelings for Loid and when Twilight is beginning to understand that he might actually have feelings for Yor.
AND THEN HOW THEY BOTH COME ABOUT ADMITTING SAID FEELINGS.
Yor is entranced, Twilight is distressed.
For Yor, there’s bright twinkly lights. For Twilight, there’s nothing but darkness. Chiaroscuro in the subtext, if you will.
Not to mention how Anya is a catalyst for Yor’s confession, while also being the reason that Loid doesn’t continue this line of thought.
Just food for thought.
Because I’m thinking about it.
I’m thinking about it a lot.
after the unfortunate event during their date,,,,
one of my favorite things about this panel is how we've never seen yor look like this. before she meets anya and loid, and when shes working as thorn princess, she tends to have a serious, almost empty expression (except when shes talking to yuri on the phone). THIS expression, though, is completely different. her eyes are completely black. i wouldnt even say this is thorn princess talking. this is maybe even more vulnerable than earlier in the chapter when shes crying. i think this comes from a much deeper place: yor was a girl who lost her parents, turned to contract killing to survive and realised at a very young age that people die. they die, just like that.
LoidxYor - SPY X FAMILY Fanart
Source: https://x.com/HydeLeBon/status/2044914863223259144
VGEN: https://t.co/Z1zPzjbdtL
Looking back on Chapter 131, I think it is safe to say that Yor was not shaking because of the kiss, but because of something else.
I remember when I first read it, I was shocked at how terrified Yor looked because of the kiss. Still, I thought it was pretty justifiable considering she's never kissed anyone before, let alone a complete stranger.
But her face was completely different from any expression we've ever seen her show. Normally, whenever she is faced with any type of romance, her face goes red, and she becomes very flustered.
We even see her do it in the same chapter.
Yor is always very vocal and over-the-top when anyone mentions kissing or flirting, or anything of the sort.
But this time is different. Yor looks terrified. And now we know why.
Instead of another dramatic outburst about romance, Yor is shaking in fear. Not because of the kiss. Not because of the hostage situation. But because of Loid.
Someone was pointing a gun at her, and he stepped in. He stepped in front of her (why the hell did he step in front?) and nearly got hurt because of her. Loid could've gotten killed, and she would never forgive herself for it.
In her eyes, he's just a regular civilian, a regular civilian with a nice house, a stable job, and a beautiful daughter. The thought of someone like him dying shakes her to her very core. So she sucks it up. All she has to do is kiss someone. There is no reason to involve someone like him in this, especially if it would gravely injure him.
So she goes up and tells him she can handle it, but her body still shakes with the idea of his lifeless body falling limp to the floor. Because people die. People die every day. It has happened, and it will always happen.
This panel isn't one where Yor is afraid of kissing a stranger, but where she cares so deeply for her family that there is absolutely no way she would let them get hurt, in no universe would she let anyone even pluck a hair from their heads, and she would even sacrifice herself if she had to.
made a part two of this! Keep thinking twiguy!
Hmm indeed
Between the scenes - Mission 75-76 / Episode 46
"How much danger have you been exposed to, Anya?"
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This is what I think happened right after the bus hijacking and before the morning when Twiguy drove Anya to school in his tiny car.
(FINAL)
Part 4 of my Twilight vs Thorn Princess fancomic!
For anyone interested, the full comic (76 pages) is available to patrons for download. Obviously it's free to read on my socials but any support would be greatly appreciated as it'll help me make more comics yay! ✨ Also this entire thing took me more than 750 hours to make 💀
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