What happens if a shinigami dies




















Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? Bleach Wiki Explore. Bleach Media. Reverse London Magic. If a Shinigami breaks a law, the Shinigami will face one of nine levels of punishment. The severity is lowest at Level Eight and highest at Level One, and a Shinigami will die if anything above Level Three is applied to them. Another level more severe than the rest, called the "Extreme Level" also exists. Shinigami may not kill a human in any manner outside of using a Death Note, and doing so merits the "Extreme Level" of punishment.

Shinigami are ranked from highest to lowest, with the lowest being the more superior. It appears that higher stats contribute to a Shinigami's rank. The Shinigami King holds an unknown rank; a rank above all the others.

While the system consists of numbers and all Shinigami have a different number, in the pilot series, there appears to be a different ranking system, as one Shinigami says that because Ryuk is always losing his Death Note, he is "still a C-Rank Shinigami," suggesting that there is some alternative ranking system in which multiple Shinigami can be of the same rank.

Despite ranks being mentioned, it appears that ranks have no overall effect on anything in the Shinigami Realm. However, higher-ranking Shinigami tend to be closer to the King of Death.

The Shinigami Realm is a barren, dry, and desolate land that is similar to the Purgatory. The realm includes different landscapes and does not have human-like buildings. There is at least one mountain or cave structure where Ryuk lives alone which is shown in the one-shot special of the anime. The realm also includes deserts with various holes. The holes, which are shaped like concentric orbs, are littered about the surface. The artifacts have openings which let them see anywhere in the human world from a birds-eye view.

These strange objects are what allow Shinigami to take human lives without traveling to Earth. The date that the holes were created is not known. Takeshi Obata , the artist for Death Note, said that he had "a lot of fun" during the creation of the Shinigami. He also felt that the process was "very difficult" since he started "with nothing.

Obata said that at first Shinigami appeared like "beasts" and that with later Shinigami such as Sidoh he designed them to look like crustaceans and insects because "it was easier. When designing the Shinigami Realm, Obata said that he used "no real design motif" and that he never settled on any concrete appearance. He described the Shinigami Realm as changing appearance in each instance in Death Note, with it sometimes appearing to be a dry field and sometimes appearing to be a room full of bones.

Obata says that he likes to think of it as "an abandoned building with chunks of steel sitting around. Excluding the King, all the below mentioned have either made an appearance or been mentioned at some point in the series.

Those included here are listed alphabetically. Armonia is the right-hand man of the Shinigami King and sits on a throne. He informs Sidoh that his Death Note was stolen by Ryuk, and provides Sidoh with several scrolls describing the various rules that Shinigami have for interacting with humans. Calikarcha is considered strange-looking even by Shinigami standards, having eight eyes lined up two rows on each side of his head. He has a penchant for blueberries but dislikes direct sunlight.

Daril Ghiroza is a female Shinigami who passes time by stacking human skeletons. She likes metal accessories but dislikes bright places. Deridovely is a Shinigami who typically spends his time gambling with Guuku and Ryuk. Gelus is a small, doll-like Shinigami whose appearance suggests that he was poorly sewn together from mismatched fabric. Get Known if you don't have an account. The Shinigami King is the only one and true death deity. Heath Ledger: did too good an impression of being evil in The Dark Knight.

Patrick Swayze: Corrupting millions of teenage girls with his Dirty Dancing? A person's natural lifespan is the upper limit to when that person will die barring suicidal shinigami. Shinigami have no idea whether humans have souls or what happens to them after death.

If a god of death intentionally does the above manipulation to effectively lengthen a human's life span, the god of death will die, but even if a human does the same, the human will not die. The reason Ryuk calls the Shinigami world boring and rotten is human science and population. Alternately, Shinigami are humans that owned a notebook, and were killed by other Shinigami.

Ryuk: Don't worry Light, you're already a worthy Shinigami The more bug-like shinigami, as mentioned in How to Read such as the slug-one and Sidoh and possibly Gelus are the original Shinigami, or at least pre-human; the more human ones Ryuk and the unnamed shinigami and possibly Rem and Gelus used to be human. User Info: Look over there. Assuming the soul balance concept isn't broken, what happens when a dead person dies? Continue the cycle of reincarnation; thus, reincarnate back into the living.

User Info: Edgeknight. That's what would make sense but according to the only thing that's ever even attempted to specify it one of the older databooks that's not how it works People just reincarnate after an unspecified amount of time in Soul Society.

It has nothing to do with whether they "die" again or not. User Info: Elaeus. Well according the latest revelation in Germany by Kubo that Ichimaru is dead for good won't they just "poof", stay dead? If not, I wonder if Tosen's unnamed friend will ever be reincarnated again given enough time. Elaeus posted



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