Talk:Uryū Ishida vs. Mayuri Kurotsuchi

Moving the article
I thinkthis should be moved to: "Uryū Ishida vs. Mayuri Kurotsuchi & Nemu Kurotsuchi" as she participiates in the fight too.--Suzumushi 17:27, November 6, 2009 (UTC)

Uryu victorious?
Well it depends on what you call victorious. Mayuri poisoned him, was seriously wounded and left to recover. Uryu was fatally wounded, poisoned, and dying. It was more of a tie.Redbird41 (talk) 06:42, April 28, 2012 (UTC)

Mayuri did not fatally wound him. He said throughout the fight that he was trying to take Uryu in alive, and while he did injure Uryu heavily, he did not injure him fatally. The only fatal aspect that can come close to qualifying to that is Konjiki Ashisogi Jizo's poison, which we would say he was poisoned instead of injured, since the poison was induced through gas rather than injury. Additionally, at the battle's conclusion, Nemu gave Uryu the antidote for Konjiki Ashisogi Jizo's poison, so he walked out of that fight without succumbing to the poison's effects. Arrancar109 (Talk)  07:24, April 28, 2012 (UTC)

The word "Fatal" means "capable of causing death." The poison Mayuri used on Uryu was capable of causing death, so it was fatal. The word "wound" means "injury". The word "injury" means "physical damage or hurt." Uryu was hurt. Therefore he was fatally wounded. Fair enough, but it didn't say that he was poisoned in the box at all. Nemu gave Uryu the antidote, so he didn't succumb to the fight. Mayuri went back to his lab to recover. The manga says that when he turns himself to liquid he can recover from the battle. So both of them were heavily injured and both of them recovered.Redbird41 (talk) 18:42, April 28, 2012 (UTC)


 * To win a fight does not mean to kill your opponent, it means to simply defeat the opponent. In this case, Uryu won, he defeated Mayuri who was forced to retreat. End of discussion.--