Tsumiki Fushiguro in Jujutsu Kaisen: The Sister Who Was Already Gone

Tsumiki Fushiguro (伏黒津美紀) is Megumi Fushiguro’s older stepsister — a non-sorcerer civilian who gets pulled into the worst conflict in modern jujutsu history without ever choosing to be involved in any of it. She falls into a coma before the story begins, spends most of the manga as an absent motivation, wakes up at exactly the wrong moment, and is dead before Megumi can reach her.
The tragedy of Tsumiki is not just what happens to her. It is that by the time she wakes up, she is already gone.
Character Profile
| Detail | Information |
| Full Name | Tsumiki Fushiguro (伏黒津美紀) |
| Relation | Older stepsister of Megumi Fushiguro |
| Status | Deceased |
| Affiliation | Civilian — Culling Game participant (forced) |
| Possessing Sorcerer | Yorozu (Heian-era incarnate) |
| First Appearance | Chapter 59 (mentioned/flashback) |
| Arcs | Background throughout — active in Culling Game Arc |
Who Is Tsumiki Fushiguro?
Tsumiki Fushiguro is Megumi’s older stepsister — the person he describes as a genuinely good human being in a world that does not protect genuinely good human beings.

Their family is not a stable one. Tsumiki’s mother married Toji Fushiguro, making Megumi her stepbrother. Their parents then abandoned them both and disappeared, leaving money behind. Tsumiki was in primary school. Megumi was younger.
From that point, Tsumiki ran the household. She did the cooking, the cleaning, the domestic management — all of it — while Megumi got into fights and she worried about him. Satoru Gojo eventually stepped in with financial support in exchange for Megumi’s future work as a sorcerer. Tsumiki did not know about that arrangement. She did not know Megumi was destined for the jujutsu world at all. She just knew he kept coming home with bruises and she kept telling him to stop.
Megumi’s entire philosophy — that good people deserve equal protection — comes from watching Tsumiki live her life the way she did and knowing the world was not built to protect someone like her.
What Does Tsumiki Look Like?

| Feature | Detail |
| Hair | Brown, long, styled in a ponytail with long bangs framing her face |
| Eyes | Brown |
| School attire | Tan jacket with black edging, white shirt, red tie, navy skirt, black stockings |
| Casual attire | Light-coloured turtleneck under a pink cardigan |
What Is Tsumiki’s Personality?
Tsumiki is the manga’s clearest portrait of an ordinary person — kind, responsible, completely unequipped for the world she ends up inside.

She scolded Megumi when he fought at school, not out of anger but out of worry. She maintained a home for two people when she was barely a teenager herself. She adapted to whatever circumstances appeared in front of her without complaint.
After waking from her coma, she appears calm and oriented — but something is already different. The Tsumiki that Megumi knew would not have used 100 Culling Game points to change a rule about colony access when those same points were supposed to free her. The real Tsumiki would have left. What woke up was not Tsumiki.
How Does Tsumiki End Up in the Culling Game?
Kenjaku remotely applied Idle Transfiguration to Tsumiki years before the Culling Game began — awakening cursed energy in a civilian brain, placing her in a coma, and designating her as a Culling Game participant without her knowledge or consent.

The curse that put Tsumiki into a coma came first. She investigated Yasohachi Bridge with friends and came back afflicted — bedridden, unconscious, waiting. The full explanation arrives later: Kenjaku had been marking civilians across Japan for the Culling Game, and Tsumiki was one of them. Her brain was modified to host cursed energy it was never meant to carry.
When the Culling Game activated after Shibuya, the seal broke. Tsumiki woke up. She had 10 days to declare participation in the Culling Game or face technique erasure and death.
Megumi joined the Culling Game specifically to save her. That decision — not glory, not duty, just his sister — is what sets the Culling Game arc in motion.
What Happens to Tsumiki in the Culling Game?
The rescue plan works perfectly. Megumi earns the points, the rule is in place, Tsumiki arrives. And then it becomes clear she has never been Tsumiki since she woke up.
Megumi and his allies spend the entire first phase of the Culling Game earning enough points to add a rule allowing a player to exit the game by substituting a non-player in their place. Kiyotaka Ijichi volunteers as the substitute. The plan is clean. It should work.
On November 16, Tsumiki arrives in Tokyo No. 1 Colony. She greets Megumi and Yuji. She receives the 100 points.
Then she uses those 100 points to add Rule 12 — allowing players to freely move between colonies — instead of leaving the game. And then she explains why.
The person in Tsumiki’s body is Yorozu — a Heian-era sorcerer who had been quietly inhabiting and suppressing Tsumiki’s consciousness since before she woke from the coma. Every reunion moment, every greeting, every apparently normal interaction — all of it was Yorozu performing Tsumiki well enough to get close.
Yorozu reveals herself, declares her intention to fight Sukuna, and flies off using insect wings she constructs from nothing.
Read this sequence in Chapter 212 onwards.
Yorozu’s Fight and Tsumiki’s Death
Yorozu has been in love with Sukuna since the Heian era. Her goal in the Culling Game was never survival or victory — it was to fight him. To have Sukuna acknowledge her.
Sukuna, now in control of Megumi’s body, fights Yorozu. Yorozu constructs her greatest creation — True Sphere — and expands her domain. Sukuna uses Mahoraga’s adaptation to crush it. Yorozu dies satisfied that Sukuna thoroughly analysed her technique. She considers this acknowledgement enough.
With Yorozu gone, Tsumiki’s body dies with her. Megumi’s own technique, used by Sukuna through Megumi’s own hands, kills the person Megumi entered the Culling Game to protect.
The weight of that breaks what is left of Megumi’s will. His soul drowns inside Sukuna. The person Megumi became a sorcerer to protect is killed by Megumi’s own power while Megumi watches from inside his own body.
After Sukuna’s defeat, Shoko Ieiri prepares Tsumiki’s body for cremation with Megumi’s approval.
What Does Tsumiki Mean to the Story?
Tsumiki is the emotional engine behind the Culling Game arc and the final instrument of Megumi’s psychological destruction — a civilian who receives no agency at any point in her story and whose death accomplishes exactly what Kenjaku and Sukuna needed it to.
She gives Megumi a reason to enter the Culling Game. She gives Sukuna a tool to break Megumi when the moment arrives. She gives the story a before and after — there is a version of Megumi who protects people because of what Tsumiki represented, and a version of Megumi after her death who has nothing left to hold onto.
Tsumiki herself gets none of this. She is comatose for most of the arc, absent from her own story, already replaced before she speaks a word in the present timeline. The manga does not frame this as oversight — it frames it as the point. This is what the jujutsu world does to ordinary people who have no power and no choice.
For more on how death shapes Jujutsu Kaisen thematically, Tsumiki’s arc is one of the starkest examples. Read the Culling Game chapters at jujutsukaisenmanga.pro and follow the main characters page for how Megumi’s arc connects to the broader story.






