I was scrolling through X when the notification hit: Shonen Jump News labeled the next chapter a “super climax.” You could feel the chat rooms shift from speculation to a quiet, charged waiting. If you’re a Jujutsu Kaisen fan, that kind of silence has its own weight.
I follow the official feeds so you don’t have to guess the facts. Jujutsu Kaisen Modulo launched on Manga Plus and VIZ Media on September 8, 2025, and it has run for twenty-four chapters. Now, the most reliable source—Shonen Jump News (@WSJ_manga on X)—has flagged Chapter 25 as the story’s finish line, using the term super climax to signal an ending rather than another cliffhanger.

At a café, a friend told me they’d already read leaked pages — then closed the tab when the official date dropped.
Yes. The announcement from Shonen Jump’s official account is our clearest cue: Modulo wraps with Chapter 25. This was always a short-form spin-off, a narrative experiment that played in Gege Akutami’s universe without stretching into an ongoing serial. The super climax phrasing is not marketing-speak here; it reads like a signal flare from the editorial team at Shueisha that the arc reaches its endpoint.
Will Chapter 25 end Jujutsu Kaisen Modulo?
Short answer: yes. The editorial note from @WSJ_manga and the pacing across recent chapters make a final chapter the logical conclusion. I’d trust the Shonen Jump channel over forum rumors—this is where official publication decisions are posted and amplified through VIZ Media and Manga Plus.
When does Chapter 25 come out?
Chapter 25 is scheduled to go live officially on March 8, 2026. That’s the date you’ll see the English release on Manga Plus and VIZ Media, and it’s the version that supports the creators. Leaks have circulated, but the official drop remains the timeline to follow.
Where can I read Chapter 25?
Read it on Manga Plus or VIZ Media to access legal, translated chapters and to follow any final editorial notes. Shonen Jump News—via X (@WSJ_manga)—will also carry official headlines and promotional art if you want context around the finale.
On a subway platform, strangers argue about spoilers while a teen scrolls silently with the official app open.
The spin-off gave us sharp, compact storytelling. It introduced new faces—Maru, Cross, Dabura—and threaded the next generation into the saga with Yuta and Maki’s grandchildren. Yuji returns in a way that repositions him as one of the strongest sorcerers on paper, and the series balanced big-idea set pieces with quieter emotional beats.
The ending choices push beyond spectacle. Maru’s decision to target cursed energy’s source reframes the conflict into a philosophical move, and the final act reads less like endless combat and more like arguments finally being settled. The story’s escalation has been stable, almost surgical, moving like a fuse burning toward a single spark.
A bookstore window displayed the collected volumes; a parent buying one for their child asked me if short series feel less satisfying.
They can be. But Modulo used its brevity. Each chapter stacked revelation on revelation until the editorial team and author had room to close the loop. Readers who came for fights got them; those here for character work found an emotional coda. When you read the last pages officially, it’s likely to feel deliberate—more of a closing statement than an abrupt cut.
I’ve watched fandoms polarize before; a finale will always split rooms. Some will praise the thematic risk. Others will grumble about loose threads. You can expect hot takes on X, comment sections on Manga Plus, and retrospectives in places like VIZ Media’s news feed. Think of the finale as a lighthouse guiding a frail ship—it doesn’t erase every scar, but it gives a direction to the discussion.
If you want the cleanest reading experience, wait for March 8, 2026, on Manga Plus or VIZ Media. If you care about supporting creators and keeping translations accurate, those platforms are the place to be. And if you plan to join the conversation, keep an eye on Shonen Jump’s account for any follow-up notes or author comments from Gege Akutami and the editorial team.
Will you read the official finale on release day and defend it, or will you sit back and let the fandom argue without you?