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Warning: Spoilers Ahead for Boruto: Two Blue Vortex up to Chapter 24.
It makes things all the harder since Boruto very clearly wants to define its own identity, not just follow in the footsteps of its predecessor. For the most part, though, Boruto’s efforts at defining itself have been fairly fruitful, and the series has a ton of surprises that even (or maybe especially) Naruto fans won’t expect. On the other hand, it also falls flat on its face sometimes, proving the bad press right. Here’s what most surprised us our first time through Boruto.
1) Good: The New Mechanics Exceed Expectations

Boruto outsiders get certain impressions about its combat that just don’t pan out in reality. From scientific ninja tools to Karma to senjutsu, all of the new mechanics Boruto introduces are milked for all they’re worth, and it’s fantastic. This is surprising, especially because Naruto fans tend to trash Boruto‘s combat. In actuality, everything is pretty reasonable if you just accept at the outset that Boruto, very intentionally, turns everything up to 11. It establishes a baseline that pretty much takes as its point of departure Naruto‘s peak power levels.
But from there, things are astoundingly steady. Take chakra absorption as an example: in Naruto, chakra absorption was pretty much unheard of outside of Kisame, end-game antagonists, and Rinnegan users. In Boruto, it’s way more common, but it’s not overpowered. There are practical limits at play: attacks that use real-world matter can’t be absorbed, for example. Picture water from an ocean versus water materialized through chakra. That’s a far cry from how Boruto naysayers present it.
2) Bad: Boruto Can Be a Little Too Much Like Naruto

One of the things that holds Boruto back is the sense that it’s constantly trying to reference its predecessor while beating it at its own game. In some cases, this works. Seeing Boruto have Sasuke’s personality while sounding an awful lot like Naruto is always rewarding, for example. Not all of them are great, though, and sometimes they can even feel a little like fan service. The most egregious example of this is the revelation that Kashin Koji is a clone of Jiraiya, who just happens to make a surprise return later on as Boruto’s accomplice. Very cool and all, but also, why?
A more direct reflection of Naruto’s narrative is seeing Naruto and Sasuke working hand-in-hand as a funhouse mirror version of Hashirama and Madara long before them, which is also cool, but has the unfortunate side effect of downplaying the external circumstances that troubled Hashirama and Madara’s relationship so much to begin with. The problem here ultimately is that Boruto is working with themes and dynamics fundamentally different from Naruto, but it seems reluctant to leave Naruto’s shadow, undermining Naruto’s legacy and Boruto’s own seriousness in the process.
3) Good: The Seventh and Eighth Hokage Get a Bad Rap

The Naruto fan base seems to run in two directions when the qualities of Boruto’s two Hokage are mentioned, especially (but not exclusively) Naruto. Some people lean into the fact that Naruto is fairly inactive as Hokage and doesn’t follow through on many of the promises he made in Naruto Shippuden (which is true and fair). Others lean into the hype (like they do with the Fourth Hokage) and say Naruto is an amazing Hokage based on, well, vibes. As an interim Hokage who oversees the development of widespread surveillance, Shikamaru also gets a pretty hard time from fans of both Naruto and Boruto.
But all of those takes miss the crucial context that actually reading (or watching) Boruto provides. Take Shikamaru: does he basically oversee Konoha’s development into a police state? Yeah, for sure. But he doesn’t do it alone: broader social and political pressures basically force him into acting, and he’s actually surprisingly keen to resist those as opportunities present to him. Or Naruto, on the other hand: he’s by no means a perfect Hokage, but he’s also far more active and dedicated to his duties than fans tend to imply. Both of Boruto’s Hokage were major surprises in action.
4) Bad: The Boruto Manga and Anime Are Totally Different Beasts

Going in blind to Boruto’s manga, this was a major surprise. Naruto has a thick and healthy canon outside of Naruto and Boruto, and because Boruto is a monthly manga, there’s a natural limit to what can be done. Boruto’s anime sought to make up for this by animating a lot of the canon material outside of the manga, so that the so-called “anime canon” is parallel to the “manga canon”. Everything from “manga canon” is in the anime, but the same isn’t true in reverse.
This can lead manga-only fans to getting an incomplete view of the world in Boruto. For example, although Konoha is a major center of attention in Boruto, very little time is spent outside of it. The end result is a manga that feels a bit like Naruto’s latter half in terms of sidelining the rest of the shinobi world. That’s not the only problem, though, as we’ll get to later.
5) Good: Konoha Feels Alive

One of the most refreshing things about Boruto is the fact that Konoha feels lived-in, especially compared to Naruto Shippuden. The change is so drastic that it actually feels like a return to the world detail in Naruto’s pre-time-skip story. Boruto takes place after Kakashi’s tenure as Hokage, during which a ton of behind-the-scenes work was done to promote international peace and diplomacy in the aftermath of the Fourth Great Ninja War. Under both Kakashi and Naruto, Konoha saw a massive change in its way of life, effectively becoming a ninja metropolis.
If those were the only changes, though, it would be disappointing and flat. But the reality is that the surplus and relative peace have come back to bite Konoha. Konoha’s municipal budget is declining, and the political apparatus of the Land of Fire always watches over, featuring far more prominently than before and even directly intervening in Konoha’s management. The shinobi world has always had a dark side; Boruto opens up the reality of hidden villages’ role in upholding an international military-industrial complex, showing why peace is a challenge. It’s a deeply intriguing change from Naruto’s status quo.













