I never read Danganronpa Kirigiri but this has been eating me up for a while...what did Yui do to Kyoko that ended with her hands being burned and what happened to Yui afterwards?
First, a bit of backstory.
1) Early on in the DRK books, Yui Samidare asks Kyoko to call her "big sister." We learn that Yui lost her actual little sister when she was abducted for ransom and ultimately killed. The case went cold and the perpetrator was never found - leading to Samidare becoming a detective. By the second and third books, it's clear from Samidare's internal thoughts that she'd take nearly any opportunity to find her sister's killer.
2) Most of the series involves our lead duo getting dragged into various "Duel Noirs" that are set up by the so-called "Victims' Catharsis Committee." These are scenarios in which so-called "Victims" are challenged to kill their "Targets" (someone who did something to them or someone they love). Each Duel also has a "Detective" and an "Innocent" who are sent a letter informing them of a location where they must go. And the Victim can opt to invite more than one “Innocent,” too! What happens at the location where the Detective and Innocent(s) are led is really up to the "Victim" - but it often involves the Victim, with the Committee’s help and support, setting up some elaborate game or puzzle designed to perhaps kill the Target, perhaps ensnare/delay the Detective, perhaps frame an Innocent as the mastermind, or perhaps some mixture of the above. Note: The Victim is not allowed to kill the Detective. Victory for the Victim means they are given the chance to set up with a new identity in a new country and given a monetary reward. Failure for the Victim means the Committee cuts all ties and leaves them to face justice.
Based on the above points, you probably already know where this is going. I’ll warn you that we don’t actually have a full translation of the final book or anything like that. So what we know about how it turns out is partly courtesy of Reddit, partly courtesy of the Wiki, and partly courtesy of both @siknakaliux‘s summary of the conclusion and @yuissamidare ‘s own distinct summary plus an ask that @drmedicsgamesurgery answered for me just recently. So credit to all of them, but also: Because I’m gluing all these pieces together, it’s possible we’ll one day learn more context that will provide some changes to this summation.
Let’s get into it.
(Spoilers for Danganronpa Kirigiri Vol. 7 under the cut. There will be many details as well as some complaining.)
Naturally, the final book deals with Samidare's own Duel Noir scenario in which she is set up to face the killer of her sister.
To her credit, evidently Samidare was waffling on whether she would really want to participate in such a thing. She soon decided she’d never agree to be the Victim in a Duel Noir. And then she was essentially forced into it after the Victims’ Catharsis Committee threatened to end Kyoko's life if Samidare refused.
So, the Duel Noir that the Committee sets up is pretty wild. Everyone in this crazy scenario is cuffed in some modified chains that can only be removed with a key card. Attempting to remove the chains in any other way injects you with a paralytic. Oh, and everyone in chains has to be inside their assigned room in the building before time runs out or the bombs go off and the building explodes.
Kyoko established way back in DRK2 that she’d never understand these Duel Noir “Victim” people risking everything for a chance to commit murder. It angered her. But that same book told us that, from Samidare’s POV, she kinda understood it, y’know? Because of her sister’s murder.
So now, naturally, Kyoko believes Samidare chose to be the Victim for this ultimate game. She feels betrayed by a fellow detective she had bonded with and looked up to.
Long story short: A fire breaks out in the building which renders the whole “go to your rooms” option pretty much non-viable. Kirigiri ultimately finds the key card for their chains held in the death grip of a body that is on fire. She ends up reaching into the fire and prying the body’s hands open to free herself, badly burning her hands in the process. She gets the card to Samidare, who also frees herself. They escape the building into the outside snowscape (yeah, it’s cold) and get into a discussion that’s interrupted when the Culprit/killer of Yui’s sister ultimately attacks. He shoots Yui with a crossbow a couple times. Kyoko tries to negotiate but gets a knife thrown at her for her trouble, which she catches right through her palm (even more hand injuries!). Samidare demands to know why he killed her sister, and the Culprit’s response is that he was just really “interested in” her. This pisses Yui off enough that she cuffs his leg and begins to forcibly drag him back towards the building. There’s a cliff beyond the building, so it’s unclear if she plans to have them both be by the building when it explodes or just drag him off the cliff, but either way, she’s bound and determined to die by killing her sister’s murderer.
She achieves that goal when the building finally explodes. Samidare’s body catches all the building chunks and shrapnel that would’ve flown into Kiri, and then her body lands atop Kiri as well. Kyoko loses consciousness. But even then, the fading warmth of Samidare’s corpse ends up helping to prevent Kiri from getting hypothermia before she’s rescued.
Kyoko wakes up in the hospital and is told that Yui didn’t survive, which she initially responds to with merely an “oh.” She maintains that detached exterior during her hospital stay. However, once she recovers, she goes to visit Samidare’s grave. And that’s where she unleashes all her grief with a flurry of screaming and crying. She thinks about how her “Big Sis” was protecting her all the way to the very end. But unfortunately, Samidare never disabused Kyoko of the notion that Yui WANTED this Duel Noir. She believes that Yui entered this final game of her own volition in order to avenge her sister. Even a final posthumous letter from Yui (which she wrote to be given to Kyoko just in case she died) offers no hard denials.
After losing it completely at the grave, Kyoko composes herself and shuts her emotions down harder than ever before.
But hey, that’s basically what the Victims’ Catharsis Committee wanted! See, their entire “Duel Noir” deal wasn’t just designed to give power back to victims who needed justice. It was actually ALL a huge manipulation to mold the “Ultimate Detective” who they believe will be needed in order to combat a forthcoming apocalyptic event. (Which they know about because their leader is a former detective who claims he can “sense impending death”... hmmm, shades of the whole “hearing death’s footsteps” thing) For a while, they had a number of candidates. But by volume 7, they knew it had to be Kirigiri. And Samidare’s death and subsequent trauma to Kyoko? Why, that was exactly the final push she needed to become even colder and more analytical. They manipulated her in exactly the way they always wanted... and Kirigiri will never even know it.
The story ends with a flashforward to Kiri starting her time at Hope’s Peak. We learn that she helped take down the remaining parts of the Victims’ Catharsis Committee; there will be no more “Duel Noirs.” Since losing Samidare, Kyoko’s evidently decided that she made a mistake letting someone else get that close to her in the first place, and that she won’t do something that foolish again.
Naturally, in the last scene, she is approached by none other than Makoto Naegi.
It definitely feels like author Takekuni Kitayama had all the pieces lined up for this to align perfectly. But it also feels like he chickened out. In particular, having Samidare not sure she really would participate in a Duel Noir willingly, refusing to take on the “Victim” role, and then only doing it because Kyoko’s life is threatened? After Samidare already thought to herself in previous volumes about how she could understand participating in one if it’d let her get her sister’s killer? Either Kitayama stretched this series out to a level where he no longer thought Samidare would realistically participate in such a thing willingly after all she’d experienced, or he just couldn’t bear to let his fav OC be guilty of such a thing.
Also, I really don’t like the whole “Kirigiri was chosen to become the Ultimate Detective!” bullshit. Both because it takes away from the skill and luck that combined to lead them to victory in DR1, but also because it’s indicative of Kitayama’s larger habit of making Kyoko just an unwitting victim of manipulation for her whole damn life.
What happens to Kyoko Kirigiri’s hands in Danganronpa Kirigiri 7 ANSWERED.
Just read through it. Answer under cut (spoilers obviously)
Kirigiri’s hands get burnt, during the final Duel Noir, set at the sirius observatory (the same place as the first book). The burns are caused after the building explodes, trying to protect yui samidare. Ultimatly yui still dies though, riperoni.
God, I had to download and re-add this image because goddamn was it being a pain in the butt.
Okay, so!
Normally the obi doesn’t actually have anything really worth talking about, and mostly that holds true here...except for one part.
Let’s see if you guys can spot it.
Real Deal Dangan Ronpa!!
Don’t over look this shocking final volume!
Kirigiri Kyouko’s ultimate enemy is herself?!
From the “Master of Physics Tricks” Kitayama comes a true mystery that shows off his skills!
Okay so.
Let’s talk about my interpretation of Kirigiri’s character, and her arc throughout the DR series.
My understanding of Kirigiri is that she’s so focused on finding the truth and solving the mystery in front of her, that she sometimes will do questionable or downright immoral things to get to it. This includes her own hyperactive sense of self-preservation, which she rationalizes as her needing to be around to solve the mystery, since no one else will be able to.
We see evidence of this in the original game, with her perfectly happy to throw Naegi under the bus in Chapter 5 to try and trap Junko, and it’s why she should have really stayed dead in DR3, since that would have been a poetic end to her arc, with her sacrificing herself for the greater good instead of pushing it on someone else if for no other reason than she can’t trust them to find the truth without her.
This was much more prevalent in the first volume, but there was time in DRK put into drawing some parallels between Samidare and Naegi, and I believe it’s implied that the reason Kirigiri bothers to help Naegi in the original game is because he pings something in her memory that reminds her of Samidare.
Because I think she carries a lot of guilt about how Samidare died.
(This seems to be indicated in Kirigiri Sou as well, in a few key scenes I have screenshots of somewhere.)
Because I think Samidare’s death is her fault.
I think this final volume of DRK will show off that Samidare’s fate and Kirigiri’s burns are the direct result of her sacrificing Samidare to take Shinsen down. I think that just like Naegi in Chapter 5, Samidare will go willingly, and Kirigiri will feel awful about it.
So as predicted, this cover makes a set with Vol. 6 to create a two-book spread that DR side novels are so fond of. Understandably, it’s DR1-era Kirgir facing her younger self, to tie into the fact that it’s a prequel (thank you for pointing that out, Kodaka, it’s only been on the back of every DRK book that’s been released).
I’m a bit disappointed that there’s no visual hints to Samidare’s fate besides her crying, but I guess they wouldn’t want to slap a spoiler on the cover, huh.
On the topic of crying, I think this indicates that either Samidare dies, or ends up in despair, but I could be wrong. We do know she ends up with one of the ribbons though, hence why the Kirigiri we all know only has one.
Is that smoke in the background? Hint toward hand burns? We do definitively find out what happens with the hand burning in this one, so sayth Kodaka on DanganTV episode 1, so I guess that canonizes Samidare into her DR1 FTEs.
My final note is looking at the paint job on her knees, and thinking about Ogata saying that it must have been a long time since Komatsuzaki drew Kirigiri.
...I hope this final volume has a bunch of illustrations like the first one did...
I keep seeing tweets from people who say that the ending of DRK7 made them cry hard, come pick me up I'm getting scared
Ah, to be a NEET and have a random Wednesday off to read a book in a day...
I will be emotional at the end regardless since I’ll be sad that DRK is over, but I will very much enjoy Samidare’s heavily telegraphed self-sacrifice.
Oh yeah, you’re right! The back blurb is available now too.
Let’s see...
Ten years since the beginning of the series comes the final volume of Dangan Ronpa Kirigiri!
The final case orchestrated by their arch enemy and strongest assassin of the Committee for the Salvation of the Victims of Crime, Shinsen Mikado.
It will test her bond with Samidare Yui, Onee-sama?!
The girls are beset by the detective’s fate, at the intersection of the Kirigiri family’s bloodline (destiny) and Samidare’s regrets (trauma)!
This is the past of SHSL Detective, Kirigiri Kyouko, as depicted by Kitayama Takekuni--known as Physics Master Kitayama and flag-bearer of true mystery--based on direct notes from Dangan Ronpa scenario writer Kodaka Kazutaka.
And with this, we have the grand finale of real Dangan Ronpa!
That hand burning fakeout in DRK1 is going to be paralleled so hard in DRK7 mark my words. Im so excited for it. i now it is a lot to ask but i would love to see another summary soon (i need to do mine as well for drt3 ive been slacking off) Thanks as always! -seiko
I’m gonna try to get the next summary for DRK5 out this weekend, actually.