Warning! This article contains spoilers for Last Samurai Standing season 1.
Last Samurai Standing season 1’s ending is filled with duels, betrayals, and twists, leaving a lot hanging in the balance. Last Samurai Standing‘s reviews know exactly what the show is: a battle royale that emphasizes badass samurai action. This action comes to a head in Last Samurai Standing episode 6, from individual duels to teases about future battles.
As a Squid Game meets Shogun battle royale, Last Samurai Standing has its share of twists amid the action. The narrative reveals and action moments truly solidify it as Netflix’s next manga adaptation, allowing Last Samurai Standing to carve out its own niche in the genre.
By the time of episode 6’s ending, the death game at the show’s center ramps up, characters have climactic showdowns, and teases about changing loyalties are provided. All of this is offset by Last Samurai Standing‘s main villains orchestrating things from behind the scenes, hinting at a lot more to come in season 2, should it happen.
Why Kawaji & The Organizers Want To Kill All Samurai
The main villain of Last Samurai Standing is Kawaji, the Superintendent-General of Japan’s police service. Kawaji betrays the Home Minister and his other “friends” in the government to host Kodoku, the central competition of Last Samurai Standing. This pits 292 samurai against each other in a race to Tokyo, with the true motivations of Kawaji and his villainous allies revealed along the way.
Last Samurai Standing opens with the show’s protagonist, Shujiro, in a battle. After seemingly winning, Shujiro and his men are destroyed by canon fire and gunshots, later revealed to have been orchestrated by Kawaji. To put it simply, Kawaji is a man who believes in the industrial and political progression of Japan.
Therefore, Kawaji deems the samurai outdated in the modern age. He also believes that their codes of honor, loss of societal privilege, and high skill set could be dangerous to any changes in Japanese society. As a result, Kawaji gathers the country’s remaining samurai in the Kodoku competition.
Kawaji’s goal is to have the samurai remove each other while providing entertainment for his rich elite benefactors. This will leave Kawaji to enact his plan to take control of Japan as a police state, as proven in Last Samurai Standing‘s ending, in which he kills the country’s Home Minister.
Bukotsu vs. Shujiro Explained: Why They Have A Rivalry & Who Wins
With all this happening outside of the Kodoku competition, several rivalries take place within it. The main one is Shujiro’s feud with Bukotsu, a brutal former samurai. In Last Samurai Standing‘s ending, it is revealed that Bukotsu was at the initial battle shown in the show’s opening minutes. He and Shujiro dueled, with the latter leaving the former for dead.
Bukotsu was then left to rot in prison, going insane with revenge and bloodlust. Bukotsu was set free by Kawaji’s main enforcer, Hanjiro, also a former samurai. This explains why Bukotsu is so set on defeating Shujiro, and why his brutality leads him to kill innocents.
In Last Samurai Standing‘s climactic duel, Shujiro and Bukotsu face one another amid an exploding firework stand. Eventually, Shujiro defeats Bukotsu, killing him this time, thus ending the latter’s chances at winning Kodoku and his brutal killing streak.
Last Samurai Standing’s Ending Teases Kyojin Is Not An Ally Of Shujiro, Futaba, & Iroha
Throughout Last Samurai Standing, a man named Kyojin is a strategist and mastermind who allies with Shujiro, Futaba, and Shujiro’s adopted sister, Iroha. Kyojin teams up with the group to uncover the secrets of Kodoku, while seemingly knowing information about the other contestants that he should not.
In Last Samurai Standing‘s ending, Kyojin reveals that he sent another contestant, a deadly old man named Gentosai, to kill Shujiro and his other adopted siblings. Kyojin asks Gentosai, “Really? You couldn’t kill them? I even gave you their location.” This comes after Kyojin told two of Shujiro and Iroha’s siblings that the latter two were being hunted by Gentosai.
The only hint given as to why Kyojin orchestrated this battle between the siblings and Gentosai is that he wants to enjoy Kodouku while he is part of it. Clearly, there is more at play with Kyojin. Exactly what remains to be seen, but Last Samurai Standing season 1’s ending teases he may not be the ally Shujiro thought he was.
Who Is Last Samurai Standing’s Gentosai & Why Does He Want To Kill Shujiro’s Siblings
Concerning who Gentosai is, the old samurai was a mysterious ally of Shujiro’s old master. The school to which Shujiro and his adopted siblings belonged once held a Kodoku of its own, which was supposed to leave one student remaining. The students were not allowed to flee, lest Gentosai hunt them down and kill them to protect the teachings of the school.
Shujiro ran from the school, allowing his other siblings to escape. Since then, Gentosai has been hunting the siblings down to continue his old master’s bidding. More about Gentosai remains shrouded in mystery, though Last Samurai Standing‘s ending teases more reveals in season 2, be it why Gentosai is such a brutal enforcer or why he is allied with Kyojin.
How Last Samurai Standing’s Ending Sets Up Season 2
Last Samurai Standing‘s final episode sets up more to come from the manga adaptation. Of course, Kyojin’s conflicting loyalties are the main tease for season 2, as are his true motivations and ties to Gentosai. Beyond that, Shujiro is aware of a coup within the Japanese government, if not entirely certain of each moving part.
Last Samurai Standing season 1’s final moments show Shujiro seeing Kawaji in a carriage, shortly after the death of the Home Minister, and the reveal that Shujiro’s government contact is heading for Tokyo in a state of emergency. Shujiro tells Futaba that they will reach Tokyo, both as a way to win the Kudoku and uncover the conspiracy led by Kawaji.
Shujiro’s other siblings, who are either grouped up or going solo in Kodoku, vow to kill Gentosai, as they will never be truly free while he lives. Encircling all that is Kodoku itself, as Kawaji and his allies promise that the game will only grow bigger and more “entertaining” as the contestants near Tokyo.
Evidently, Last Samurai Standing promises a bigger, more consequential second season. Whether Netflix renews the show for that story remains to be seen, but a lot of plot threads are left hanging in the balance should a continuation happen.
- Release Date
-
November 13, 2025
- Network
-
Netflix
- Directors
-
Michihito Fujii
- Writers
-
Shogo Imamura
-
Junichi Okada
Shujiro Saga
-
Yumia Fujisaki
Futaba Katsuki