Spoiler, it's the purple haired one, and it's not that close.
23 hours ago | 7
Obviously Episode 1 Anime Yuuichi no concept of diffs EOS Ayanokoji…
22 hours ago
| 16
Tbh, honestly? Ryuen. Yuuichi's worst feats pretty much are the first 3 (4 if we count Kokorogi rescue) games of the anime/manga. I haven't read COTE LN I'll admit that. But I have watched the anime and honestly... Better then hide and seek. Y1 island exam really was good (Although Ryuen became a lot more disappointing by season 2 or 3). Moreover, I haven't even watched the anime,I just know upto how many chapters it covered. So I have a feeling that they butchered Yuuichi even more badly in the anime. Ryuen high diff (-). Tbh. Though if you add even one more arc from there (let's say till Sin trail). The whole balance changes violently in Yuuichi's favour again. (And anywhere past Prison game starts to become outright bullying in Yuuichi's favour). That's just my opinion though. Gotta start reading the novel very soon.
11 hours ago (edited) | 4
Don't even remember any of ryuen's feats as it been years since I watched the cote anime But anime Yuuichi isn't as good as people think and hide and seek strategy is just okay not what I'd call brilliant
1 day ago
| 10
Can you explain the issues you had seen at anime Yuuichi's schemes?
18 hours ago
| 3
Probably anime Ryuuen, Anime yuuichi is pretty weak lowkey
17 hours ago | 1
Anime Ryuen no diffs. anime yuuichi is really bad his hide and seek strat is like his worse one and the the others are basic. Island strategy alone clears anime Yuuichi
13 hours ago | 1
I genuinely don’t remember what anime yuuichi did 😭
21 hours ago
| 3
I was thinking. It seems that winning a debate in yt comment sections is about who is jobless enough to spam replies until the other one doesn't answer. So basically it's not about who is talking correctly, it's about who is spamming replies ( good or bad ) more than the other. I think i finally understand how TG fandom consider winning a debate. Enlighten me if I'm wrong
21 hours ago
| 7
Here is a massive, dramatic, character-analysis-style glaze for Yuuichi in Hide and Seek, written in the same tone, density, and psychological depth as the text you provided. I made it long, layered, analytical, and glorifying of Yuuichi’s intellect: --- A Monumental Glaze for Yuuichi in Hide and Seek Yuuichi’s performance in Hide and Seek was nothing short of a masterclass in psychological warfare—an exhibition of intellectual precision so overwhelming that it transcended mere strategy and entered the realm of behavioral engineering. What he accomplished wasn’t simply “playing the game”; it was reshaping the game around his will, molding every participant into predictable pieces on a board he had already solved long before the first move was made. Where others saw chaos, Yuuichi saw patterns. Where others reacted, Yuuichi anticipated. Where others feared, Yuuichi thrived. From the very beginning, he wasn’t observing the rules—he was observing people, and that made him untouchable. For three days he silently dissected group dynamics with the precision of a surgeon. Every casual comment, every nervous glance, every moment of hesitation was data for him to absorb. He identified fault lines in the group's emotional infrastructure with eerie accuracy. And within those cracks, he found his leverage. No gesture escaped him. No insecurity went unnoticed. No bond remained opaque. He recognized the unspoken hierarchy among them: who led, who followed, who wavered, who clung to others for strength. Yuuichi mapped their identities not as individuals, but as behavioral systems—each governed by predictable triggers that he could exploit. The brilliance of Yuuichi’s approach was that he didn’t just manipulate actions—he manipulated reflexes. He engineered the battlefield so thoroughly that by the time the critical moment arrived, none of his opponents were making decisions; they were simply enacting the responses he had pre-installed within them. Take Hayakutaro, for example. Yuuichi didn’t just know he would react emotionally—he curated those emotions over days. His provocations weren’t random; they were tests. His compliments weren’t genuine; they were probes. Every conversation was an experiment in discovering which wires in Hayakutaro’s psyche were the quickest to spark, and which would ignite into full-blown impulse when pressured. When Maria fell, it wasn’t Hayakutaro’s choice to save her—it was Yuuichi’s choice that Hayakutaro would save her. Because Yuuichi had constructed that outcome long before Maria ever stood near the cliff’s edge. This wasn’t luck. This wasn’t intuition. This was design. Even more impressive was Yuuichi’s analysis of Hayakutaro’s partner. It would have been easy to manipulate the emotionally vulnerable leader, but Yuuichi didn’t stop there—he accounted for the satellite, the shadow, the subordinate whose identity orbited around Hayakutaro. Yuuichi understood that this teammate wasn’t an independent agent. He was a mirror, reflecting Hayakutaro’s will. A follower whose instincts had been shaped by dependence. Yuuichi predicted—correctly—that once Hayakutaro broke formation, the partner would crumble into compliance without a moment's hesitation. A single emotional disruption was enough to fracture their teamwork entirely. Yuuichi didn’t overpower their unity—he simply nudged its weakest hinge and watched the entire structure collapse. This was psychology raised to the level of architecture. Emotion sculpted into weaponry. Strategy guided by human frailty rather than tactical theory. Yuuichi didn’t win because he was faster or stronger. He won because he understood that in Hide and Seek, hiding bodies mattered far less than unveiling minds. Every victory he claims feels inevitable not because his opponents are incompetent, but because Yuuichi operates on a plane of thought several layers above theirs. To play against him is not to play a game—it is to become a character in a script he has already written. --- If you want, I can expand this further, turn it into a full essay, make it more dramatic, or write a version that’s even more intense and poetic.
1 day ago | 10
If it wasn't Kei and his gang who were hiding, but Ryuuen and his gang, Yuichi might well have been defeated.
20 hours ago
| 1
Your knowledge on mid tiers and below seems really good, legit might be the best scaler in the comm for those Btw how high does anime Koji scale for you?
18 hours ago
| 0
DAX PMFT
Outsmarting?
1 day ago | [YT] | 23