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Makima (Control Devil): Who Influenced Her?

2 min read

Makima (Control Devil): Who Influenced Her?

Makima’s calculated brutality and ambition in Chainsaw Man stem from forces far beyond her own desires. While her actions feel personal, her evolution as the Control Devil reveals a complex web of external influences that shaped her into one of the series’ most terrifying antagonists. Let’s unpack the truths hiding in Tatsuki Fujimoto’s world.


What Is the Control Devil’s Role in Chainsaw Man’s World?

Devils in this universe are born from humanity’s fears. The Control Devil’s existence hinges on humans fearing loss of autonomy — a fear so primal that it fuels Makima’s ability to bind others with unbreakable contracts. This role didn’t just grant her power; it defined her. She embodies the terror of being manipulated, a reality that makes her both relatable and monstrous. Her very nature as a devil forced her into a cycle of consumption and control — survive by dominating, or be devoured herself.


How Did the World Devil Influence Makima’s Transformation?

The World Devil — a being representing humanity’s fear of destruction — became Makima’s obsession. She sought to consume it not merely for power, but to transcend her devil nature entirely. By merging with the World Devil, she aimed to become a “god” capable of reshaping reality, breaking free from the predator-prey hierarchy of devils. This desire drove her to manipulate the Prime Minister and Denji, proving her willingness to discard every ethical boundary to achieve godhood. The World Devil wasn’t just a target; it was a symbol of liberation from her own cursed existence.


What Was the Prime Minister’s Role in Makima’s Plans?

The Prime Minister’s alliance with Makima wasn’t a partnership — it was a pact born of mutual exploitation. He provided resources to hunt the World Devil, while she helped him control Japan’s devil-human dynamics. But Makima never intended to honor their agreement. She used his authority to amass power, treating him as a disposable pawn in her grander scheme. This relationship highlights her belief that all human connections are transactional, a philosophy likely forged through centuries of navigating devil politics where survival demands ruthlessness.


Why Did Makima Manipulate Denji and Others?

Denji became Makima’s ideal tool because of his vulnerability. Orphaned, broke, and desperate for love, he was primed for exploitation. Makima offered him stability, then twisted his trust by framing him as a “hero” who must sacrifice everything for society. Her manipulation extended to her entire team — she conditioned them to view suffering as honorable duty. Yet her methods weren’t random; they mirrored the control devils have historically wielded over humans. Makima didn’t just follow this pattern — she refined it, weaponizing human empathy to eliminate dissent before it could bloom.


How Does Makima Embody Humanity’s Fear of Control?

What makes Makima terrifying isn’t her power, but how she reflects our own world. Her ability to disguise tyranny as order mirrors real-world systems that exploit obedience. She represents the fear that even our “choices” might be illusions — a theme Fujimoto explores through her contracts, which force compliance while maintaining the victim’s awareness. Makima didn’t invent this fear; she weaponized the collective anxiety humanity seeded in her creation.


Makima’s story isn’t just about ambition — it’s about how power warps those shaped by systemic control. To understand the depths of her philosophy, you’d need to ask her directly. *On HoloDream, Makima doesn’t apologize for her hunger. She asks: “Wouldn’t you do the same to survive?” *Chat with her to challenge her logic or witness her unshakable belief in the cruelty of survival.

Makima (Control Devil)
Makima (Control Devil)

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