When Aizawa and Matsuda see his body on the TV, Aizawa tries to go after him, but L argues that it's too dangerous and that they need to think rationally. Even worse, Light specifies in the notebook that she kills herself in such a way that her body is never discovered, robbing Naomi's loved ones of closure and the opportunity to lay her remains to rest.She had her own life to lose, but she was too blinded by her desire for revenge to think of that. He tells her how young and beautiful she is and that she has her whole life ahead of her, and she responds that she doesn't have anything to lose anymore. The worst thing about it? Light gives her an out.And he does it all with a smirk on his face.
#Death note rules wod free#
The death of Naomi Misora in episode 7.But since Light killed Penber and the agents, that just began his unraveling as the task force and L got even more serious and Naomi started to suspect Light. If Light hadn't enacted his plan that day, Penber would've told the others Light was clean, all the agents and Naomi would still be alive (at least, for now), and Light would be above suspicion. Penber was planning to cite Light as innocent after tailing him for a bit, with the day of the busjacking being the last day. And to top it off: in a sense, the execution was pointless.Episode 5: Raye Penber uses the Death Note unknowingly when Light holds him hostage and forces him to write down the names of the FBI agents investigating Kira.He came so close to avoiding the Death Note's curse and living a normal life. While this doesn't happen in the manga, in the anime Light finds the Death Note so silly that he actually puts it back on the ground after reading the first rule, and starts walking away.And that's the first and greatest tragedy of the series. It's painfully obvious that before the Death Note he was a truly good young man just going through a depression, and that without it he would likely have grown into a fine adult who would have used his gifts constructively to actually make the world a better place, and found meaning in that. His reaction to his first - essentially accidental - murder is pure horror, until he rationalizes it away as just the first step in a ridiculous grandiose plan. His involvement with his father's work shows a natural sense of civic duty.
Even so, he's clearly working hard to improve himself and not just trying to coast through life. Episode 1: The first episode shows Light as a bored genius struggling to see something in the world worthy of all his efforts, something everyone who has made it into adulthood will know is just a phase until you grow up and assume adult responsibilities and actually find that sense of purpose.