I remember the theater going silent the second Reggie slid a crumpled receipt across the screen. My palms tightened—because a scrap of paper shouldn’t change the fight that fast. You felt the rules wobble; that was the moment everything shifted.
At the supermarket, every purchase prints a tiny strip of paper. How Reggie Star’s Contractual Re-creation actually works
I’ve watched fights where one rule change ends careers; you’ll see the same here. Reggie’s cursed technique lets him materialize objects tied to recorded transactions. If a receipt lists knives, he can spawn knives. If it lists a van or a billboard, he can manifest those too. The effect reads simple on paper, but the gameplay is anything but.

Mechanically, the receipts act as triggers: the written record links concept to reality. Reggie can command the summoned objects to attack, reposition, or vanish. That command-and-control seam is where the technique gains teeth—because it doesn’t only create matter, it controls intent tied to that matter.
How powerful is Reggie Star’s contract technique?
Short answer: more dangerous than it first appears. Reggie isn’t just producing tools; he’s altering the battlefield and the opponent’s decision space. A sorcerer who can turn a mundane ledger into offensive and defensive resources forces every rival to play a different game. If you’ve tracked theorycraft on Reddit, X, and YouTube breakdowns, you’ve seen the same conclusion repeated: this skill warps engagement dynamics.
In real life, a signed contract forces outcomes you didn’t plan for. What Binding Vows mean for Reggie’s ceiling
I’ve signed papers that shifted budgets overnight; you know the sensation. Binding Vows in Jujutsu Kaisen tie power to promise, and if Reggie layers vows onto receipts, the stakes explode. Add a vow that increases output in exchange for risk, and a single receipt could summon objects of escalating scale or permanence.
Reggie’s ledger is a Pandora’s box. With carefully crafted vows, a receipt for a warehouse could become a sustained battlefield asset rather than a momentary projectile. That means potential force multipliers beyond brute force—area denial, traps, or long-term infrastructure on the fly.
Can Reggie summon buildings and vehicles?
Yes—if a transaction records them. The series has already shown scale is possible: Reggie can manifest large, complex items if they exist in his receipts’ records. The limiting factors are available records, how specific the transaction is, and any vow-based constraints he accepts. Think of supply-chain data turned into immediate hardware; the imagination is the limit.
On forums and Crunchyroll comment sections, fans are framing scenarios as if building tools in a sandbox could change meta. How Reggie stacks against Gojo, Sukuna, and others
I’ve read dozens of takes on Shueisha forums and followed Crunchyroll streams; you’ve probably scrolled the same threads. Compared to signature powerhouses—Gojo’s Limitless or Sukuna’s Shrine—Reggie is subtler but more modular. Gojo reshapes space; Reggie reshapes context. Against a raw power user he may lose in a straight clash, but in any encounter where environment and logistics matter, he becomes a decisive factor.
Those receipts are weapons in disguise. Against teams or in the Culling Game’s chaotic map, that disguise becomes a strategic advantage: sudden cover, mobile barriers, or improvised siege tools.
How would Binding Vows affect Reggie’s ability at full potential?
Binding Vows can convert conditional boosts into permanent multipliers for him. A vow that ties a boost to a cost—life, freedom, or long-term expenditure of cursed energy—could let Reggie summon larger constructs or keep them active longer. At full potency, he could pattern-match receipts to produce layered effects: a single transaction catalyzing traps, reinforcements, and escape routes all at once.
I trust you can see why theorycrafting around Reggie has exploded across platforms like Reddit, X, and YouTube, and why MAPPA’s portrayal feels purposely restrained in the reveal. If you follow Gege Akutami’s writing and Viz Media’s translations, the seeds are being planted for far bigger consequences—do you think the series will let him remain a tactical oddity, or will he become a game-defining weapon?