Travel — Chainsaw Man Hot Spring
While the manga’s iconic "Hot Spring Arc" (Chapter 52, "Bath After Revenge") is infamous for its brutal emotional whiplash—swinging from goofy camaraderie to Aki’s tragic future—it also cemented the Japanese onsen as a sacred space for Devil Hunters.
Have you visited a real-life Chainsaw Man location? Share your photos (of the bath, not the gore) in the comments below. Don’t let Makima see your search history.
In Chapter 52, after defeating the eternity of the Leech Devil, the gang heads to a rustic inn. For a few precious panels, they aren't Devil Hunters. They are kids. Denji stares at breasts (classic), Aki pours sake, and Power tries to drown. The hot spring is not just a bath; it is a ceasefire. In the Chainsaw Man universe, where death is cheap and Makima is watching, the onsen is the only neutral zone. Chainsaw Man Hot Spring Travel
If you have ever watched Tatsuki Fujimoto’s masterpiece Chainsaw Man , you know two things for certain: Denji’s life is a constant cycle of visceral violence and devastating heartbreak, and the man desperately needs a hot bath.
Denji didn't get to enjoy his bath for long. Aki never got a peaceful retirement. But you can. By traveling to these remote, sulfur-scented wooden bathhouses, you are honoring the dream of Division 4: a world where Devil Hunters just get to be tourists. While the manga’s iconic "Hot Spring Arc" (Chapter
So, book the room. Pack the Pochita plushie. Let the 42°C water dissolve the memory of the last manga chapter you read.
By: Public Safety Travel Bureau
Remember the mantra: "If you win, you live. If you lose, you die. If you don’t fight, you can’t win... but if you soak, you just might heal."

