This is the most radical part of the "death episode":
He doesn't die tragically. He doesn't get a heroic sacrifice. He simply... stops lying to himself. In the world of Naruto , where death is usually the ultimate consequence, Kabuto’s fate is far more terrifying and far more merciful. He has to live with what he did—but now he has to live as himself . Naruto has always been about the cycle of hatred and the search for identity. Naruto himself struggled with the demon inside him. Gaara wrestled with the meaning of love. Pain sought to end suffering through destruction.
Kabuto represents the third option:
The Kabuto we meet in Naruto is not a person; he is a mask. Orphaned by war, he was recruited by Nonō Yakushi (the head of an orphanage/spy network) and Danzō Shimura. The tragedy of Kabuto is the tragedy of a child forced to kill his own mother figure (Nonō) to protect his cover. After that moment, Kabuto made a conscious decision: If I cannot know who I am, I will become everyone.
Let’s break down why Kabuto’s journey into the Infinite Tsukuyomi (The Izanami loop) is the most philosophically dense "death" in the entire series. To understand Kabuto’s defeat, we must first understand that Kabuto Yakushi died before the episode even began. kabuto death episode
And that is precisely the point.
When fans discuss the most emotional deaths in Naruto , the conversation usually revolves around Jiraiya’s tragic sinking into the deep sea, Itachi’s tearful forehead poke, or Minato and Kushina’s final words to baby Naruto. But rarely—if ever—does anyone mention Kabuto Yakushi. This is the most radical part of the
Kabuto’s "death episode" (spanning episodes 332-338 of Naruto Shippuden , climaxing with “The Great Reversal”) is not a story about a villain being struck down. It is a story about an identity being erased. It is a psychological horror wrapped in a medical drama, and ultimately, a Buddhist parable about the prison of the self.