Mitsuki attacks with lethal intent. Boruto, despite being vastly stronger, refuses to strike back. He simply evades, using the same defensive techniques Naruto used against Sasuke at the Valley of the End. He says only one sentence that breaks the tension: “You don’t have to believe me. But I’m glad you’re okay, Mitsuki.”
The Calm Before the Storm: Deconstructing Boruto: Two Blue Vortex Chapter 81 – Homecoming and the Weight of Conviction boruto two blue vortex chapter 81
His entrance against the Claw Grime in the forest is a statement. He doesn't use Rasengan. He doesn't yell. He simply moves. Using the —Minato’s technique—he teleports instantaneously, slicing through the Grime with a chakra blade. This is genius: Boruto has inherited his grandfather’s speed, his father’s raw power, and his master’s swordsmanship. He is a hybrid of the three greatest shinobi of the last era. The Mitsuki Confrontation: The Heartbreak of the Chapter If the action is the hook, the Mitsuki scene is the soul. Mitsuki attacks with lethal intent
What’s brilliant here is the mundanity of the horror. We see Sarada, now a Jonin (confirmed!), sitting in the Hokage’s office. She looks exhausted—not from battle, but from the Sisyphean task of being the only person (alongside Sumire) who remembers the truth. She is gaslit daily. Shikamaru, now the acting Eighth Hokage (a role he never wanted), treats her theories about Boruto’s innocence as teenage delusion. This isn't a shonen where the hero’s friends simply wait; they are actively suffering psychological warfare. The chapter’s title, “Boruto,” is deceptive. It’s not about reintroducing him—it’s about confronting the myth he has become. He says only one sentence that breaks the