Enjoy reading bleach 661. We are the first to released the latest bleach 661 chapter. Select Navigation for bleach 661.We will get bleach chapter 661 the moment it will be release, so be sure to check this page regularly for the update. I think the chapter has made me think really about Hasch's psychology a lot more. I mean, does he have any of the old himself left, or is he just a vessel now for Yhwach's power and his will? Has he been so broken by seeing night after night of things he can't change, even if he wanted to? I'm sure he saw before it happened that Bazz would fight against it, that he would stick up for whatever values they had, and I'm also sure Hasch knew he would kill his friend. It's one reason I want B to be betrayal. What happened to shift Hasch from rebellious to dutiful slave is unclear, but something must.
It might just be the weight of the Almighty at night, though. That would destroy anyone's brain. But then I wonder, if Uryuu reminds hasch of his old self, and Ichigo of the old Bazz, whether trying tom ake uryuu kill Ichigo is a test that echoes the one he himself had to face. Is he testing whether Uryuu has more resolve than he does in standing against Yhwach? Uryuu's said he'll kill himself to destroy Wahrwelt, but how serious is he? If Hasch was to be broken down and beaten, would it be possible to save him? Could Uryuu save him, by not buckling to Yhwach's will? Even if Hasch died, would he be entrusting that rebel spirit from Bazz and himself onto Uryuu and Ichigo, even though defeating Yhwach appears impossible? I dunno yet, but I think the last and this chapter open up a lot of those questions for consideration. Uryuu revealing his plan might just have been because he already knew Hasch knew it, and so he took the bullet and did it to get rid of Ichigo and company, so that he alone had to fight and deal with Hasch. Although he talked about a RW invasion, so really, the RW is not all that safe either. the whole betrayal aspect for Uryu never stuck for me. Not once this entire arc. Never believed it. I don't know why Kubo even did it other than for shock value. I mean, everyone on the boards knew it wasn't true. There was never a real instance where it seemed possible. Kubo wrote it so when Uryu was named successor, some Sternritters outright wanted to kill him. Jugram never believed Uryu to be on their side, calling him out every opportunity he had. Lille was suspicious of him when he interrupted his shot against Ichigo. The only person I feel like actually might have believed Uryu was Gerard, and given how obvious Uryu was not committed to the Sternritter's side, never killed anyone to show his loyalty or engaged in combat with any other Shinigami and actively removed Ichigo from danger, makes me question how much of a miracle it is that The Miracle is able to walk and talk at the same time.
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