uchiha obito là ai

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Obito Uchiha
Naruto character
A black-haired and black-eyed character in Na-ru-to wearing dark xanh rờn and orange clothing, a headband, and goggles

Obito Uchiha, as drawn by Masashi Kishimoto

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First appearanceNaruto manga, chapter 239: "Chronicle 1: The Mission Begins...!!"
Created byMasashi Kishimoto
Voiced byJapanese
Wataru Takagi
Naoya Uchida (Madara)
Sosuke Komori (Kakashi Gaiden and 5 Clip games)
Megumi Han (young) (Shippuden episode 343 and up)
English
Michael Yurchak
Todd Haberkorn (Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Nin-Ja Storm Revolution)
Neil Kaplan (Madara)
Nolan North (Madara in Na-ru-to Shippuden: Ultimate Nin-Ja Storm 2)
Vic Mignogna (young in all truyền thông and Madara in Na-ru-to Shippuden: Ultimate Nin-Ja Impact)
Ninja RankChunin
Dōjutsu or Kekkei GenkaiSharingan (All Levels) and Mangekyō Sharingan (Shared with Kakashi Hatake)
AttacksMasked Man (Obito Uchiha) has already caused an attack, specifically in Konoha, there, he almost killed Na-ru-to Uzumaki and fought with Minato Namikaze, he even extracted the Nine-Tailed Fox from Kushina Uzumaki, but after his departure from Konoha, Minato seals the Nine-Tails in his son, Na-ru-to Uzumaki.

Obito Uchiha (Japanese: うちは オビト, Hepburn: Uchiha Obito), also known by his alias Tobi (トビ), is a character in Masashi Kishimoto's manga Naruto. He is first introduced in a "Kakashi Chronicle" side story as a young ninja who sacrifices himself to tướng save his friends (Kakashi Hatake and Rin Nohara, led by Minato Namikaze) from an adversary group of ninjas. Although he was believed to tướng have died in the 3rd Great Nin-Ja War, Obito is later revealed as the real leader of the terrorist organization known as the Akatsuki, mainly acting behind the scenes for a majority of the group's tenure. He uses the alias of his benefactor, Madara Uchiha, and conceals his true identity with masks as one of the main antagonists of the series' second half. Obito and his varied personas have appeared in Naruto Clip games and animated adaptations.

Kishimoto created Obito early in the series to tướng explore his relationship with Kakashi and explain how his friend possessed the eye technique of Sharingan (写輪眼, lit. "Copy Wheel Eye", English manga: "Mirror Wheel Eye"), unique to tướng the Uchiha clan. Since Obito kept his identity secret, Kishimoto teased fans to tướng anticipate the true identity of Tobi (most notably when the actual Madara Uchiha was revealed, which shocked fans and his voice actor). Critical reception of Obito's character has been positive for his portrayal as a child soldier in Kakashi's backstory and his fight scenes as an adult. However, his role as an antagonist garnered a polarizing response from fans, particularly due to tướng his perceived lack of motivation for his actions, which he is criticized for.[1]

Creation and design[edit]

Obito as a young adult
Unmasked adult Obito

Although Obito does not appear for the first time until the series' special chapters focused on his life as a child soldier, he makes a cameo appearance on the cover of the manga's 16th chapter in a picture with Kakashi Hatake. According to tướng Masashi Kishimoto, one of the biggest mysteries in the series' first half was why Kakashi only possessed one Sharingan eye technique (unlike Sasuke Uchiha and other members of the clan, who possessed the technique in both eyes). Kishimoto wrote Kakashi's backstory to tướng show him as a young ninja whom Obito gave his Sharingan when he was nearly killed in a fight. Kishimoto said that by chapter 16 he had conceived a storyline about Obito being an Uchiha and how it would affect Kakashi.[2]

During the series' first half, Kishimoto introduced the Akatsuki terrorist organization, which seemed far stronger kêu ca the (younger) main characters. This led Kishimoto to tướng change the series, giving the story a timeskip to tướng when Na-ru-to and his comrades would be able to tướng face them. Kishimoto said he based Akatsuki on similar real-life organizations.[2] Obito in his Tobi persona was Kishimoto's favorite Akatsuki character to tướng draw, because of his simple mask.[3] His nickname (Tobi) comes from Obito calling him Guruguru (グルグル), an onomatopoeia for turning round and round or going around in circles. It can also mean "wrapped around", referring to tướng Tobi's function as armor for Obito.[4] With the manga reaching its climax, Kishimoto wanted to tướng be careful with developing Obito's character, finding him as important as Naruto's and Sasuke's growth in the narrative.[5]

According to tướng Kishimoto, Konan's death at the hands of her former superior Obito's statement about the loss of the dream for peace that he, Nagato, Yahiko, and Konan shared, and an indication of Na-ru-to Uzumaki's rise as a bringer of light and hope. [6] When the real Madara Uchiha appeared in the manga, Kishimoto refrained from stating Tobi's true identity but said that both characters were related and he would be revealed in the next few chapters.[7]

In the Japanese version, Obito is voiced by Wataru Takagi; his childhood self was voiced by Sōsuke Komori before Megumi Han took over in chapter 343.[8] In the English version, Obito is voiced by Michael Yurchak and his younger self is voiced by Vic Mignogna.[9] Nolan North does Obito's Madara impersonation in Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Nin-Ja Storm 2, and Todd Haberkorn voices him in Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Nin-Ja Storm Revolution. Neil Kaplan first voiced Obito's Madara impersonation in the Clip game Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Nin-Ja Storm 2, because the CyberConnect2 fighting game's storyline was ahead of the television series. In the game, it is revealed that Obito is not the real Madara. Kaplan had difficulty handling both characters: his Obito persona and the real Madara.[10]

When Obito's true identity was revealed in the anime Naruto Shippuden, the Pierrot staff made an ending scene about his childhood and noted that the series' protagonist (Naruto) was not seen. Pierrot felt that the scene was a success.[11] Character designer Tetsuya Nishio was surprised with the multiple designs Obito had across the series, and noted parallels between him and Na-ru-to Uzumaki in their childhood and innocence.[12]

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Appearances[edit]

In Naruto[edit]

Obito first appears in "Kakashi Chronicle", a Naruto side story. A child living through the Third Great Nin-Ja War, Obito (Kakashi's teammate on Team Minato) wanted to tướng become the Hokage of Konohagakure, and had an unrequited love for his teammate Rin. When he and Kakashi rescue the kidnapped Rin during a mission, Obito's right side is crushed in a landslide. Thinking he was going to tướng die, Obito had Rin transplant his left Sharingan into Kakashi to tướng replace Kakashi's lost left eye.[13][14] Late in Part II of the manga, it is revealed that Obito was saved by an elderly Madara Uchiha and outfitted with prosthetics. He becomes Madara's apprentice, who has Obito witness Rin's death at the hands of a reluctant Kakashi to tướng break his spirit. Concluding that he can use the Tailed Beasts to tướng destroy the current reality and create a utopia, Obito adopts Madara's name and disguises his voice after the ninja's death; he then arranges similar events for Nagato with Yahiko's death to tướng create the current incarnation of the Akatsuki.[15][16] While Kushina Uzumaki (then jinchuriki of Kurama, the Nine-Tails Kyuubi), is giving birth to tướng Na-ru-to Uzumaki, Obito mounts an attack on the Leaf Village, Konoha. He releases the seal over the Kyuubi from Kushina while she is weak during birth, and places the Nine-Tails under his control, releasing it on Konoha to tướng tear the village apart and wreak havoc. During his infiltration, he encounters Minato Namikaze (the fourth Hokage) and they fight. Minato defeats Obito, and releases Kurama from Obito's control. Obito then flees, leaving Konoha to tướng khuyễn mãi giảm giá with the Nine-Tails, resulting in Minato and Kushina's deaths.[17][18] The character has a behind-the-scenes role in the first half of Part II.[19][20]

Adopting the identity of the spiral-patterned Zetsu which served as his bodysuit during his recuperation, Tobi, Obito poses as the carefree flunky and becomes Sasori's replacement and Deidara's partner early in Part II.[21] After Itachi's death, Obito takes a special interest in Sasuke Uchiha and takes him under his wing by revealing the truth about their clan's massacre.[22] He presents himself as Madara after Nagato's death, revealing the "Eye of the Moon" Plan to tướng the Kage and explaining his intention to tướng become the Ten-Tails Jinchuriki to tướng bring all life within an Infinite Tsukuyomi. After the Kage refuses to tướng surrender to tướng him, Obito declares the Fourth Great Nin-Ja War and forms a reluctant alliance with Kabuto Yakushi, who blackmails him with the real Madara's toàn thân.[23] Obito goes to tướng retrieve Nagato Uzumaki's Rinnegan (輪廻眼, lit. "Saṃsāra Eye") from his toàn thân. In the process, he is opposed by Konan. Their argument, in which Konan affirms her faith in Na-ru-to, and Obito (still impersonating Madara) claims his original ownership of the Rinnegan, quickly evolves into a fight. Konan attempts to tướng catch him in various large-scale paper bomb detonations, but he manages to tướng trick her with the Trò chơi Izanagi technique, and stabs her in the back; he obtains the location of Nagato's toàn thân through genjutsu, and proceeds to tướng choke her to tướng death. He retrieves Nagato's toàn thân and Rinnegan successfully.[24][25]

Obito converts the reanimated bodies of the captured Jinchuriki into his own "Six Paths of Pain" (ペイン六道, Pein Rikudō) to tướng use the captured Tailed Beasts' power.[26][27] He fights Na-ru-to Uzumaki and Killer B, who stop the Six Paths of Pain and leave Obito to tướng recover the Tailed Beasts and revive the Ten-Tails.[28] Kabuto then reanimates Madara Uchiha's body; Obito's identity is revealed.[29]

Obito becomes the Ten-Tails host[30] but is defeated by Na-ru-to and Sasuke with the tư vấn of the Allied Shinobi Forces.[31][32] A guilt-ridden Obito tries to tướng revive everyone who died in the war, lượt thích Nagato before him, only to tướng be possessed by Black Zetsu and forced to tướng resurrect Madara. On the brink of death, Obito turns on Madara, restrains Black Zetsu and moves to tướng save Naruto's life.[33][34] His defiance is short-lived, and he is left comatose after Madara forcefully reclaims his Rinnegan.[35] Na-ru-to uses his power to tướng restore Obito's life to tướng help fight Kaguya. Obito dies while shielding Na-ru-to and Kakashi from Kaguya's attack; however, he thanks Na-ru-to for reminding him of his true self.[36][37][38] His spirit remains among the living long enough to tướng help Kakashi by momentarily giving him his chakra and Mangekyo Sharingan (万華鏡写輪眼, Mangekyō Sharingan, lit. "Kaleidoscope Copy Wheel Eye"), passing into the next life after Kaguya is defeated.[38][39][40]

In other media[edit]

In addition to tướng the main series, Obito appears in a number of Clip games. The game Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Nin-Ja Storm Revolution describes the origin of the Akatsuki organization.[41] The sixth Part II film, Road to tướng Ninja: Na-ru-to the Movie (2012), features Obito in his Madara persona. He traps Na-ru-to and Sakura in an alternate world and manipulates Naruto's opposite persona, Menma. When Na-ru-to defeats Menma, Obito releases Na-ru-to and Sakura and considers the mission a failure.[42] He appears in the Naruto light novel Naruto Jinraiden: The Day the Wolf Howled (2012), which explores Sasuke's reflections after Itachi's death.[43] In Akatsuki Hiden (2015), Obito's first meeting with Nagato is shown.[44]

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Reception[edit]

The exploration of Obito's childhood in the Naruto Shippuden anime series was well-received. Sci Fi Online enjoyed the handling of his, Rin and Kakashi's past, which had a major impact on the series' main storyline.[45] IGN ranked Obito and Konan's fight the 11th-best battle in Naruto,[46] and ranked Obito's fight against Minato Namikaze the fourth-best in the series.[47] CyberConnect2 CEO Hiroshi Matsuyama said was Obito became his favorite character in the Naruto series; Matsuyama's previous favorites were Shikamaru Nara and Itachi Uchiha.[48] In a manga popularity poll, Obito was voted the 19th-most-popular Naruto character.[49] Takagi's portrayal of the character in the final war was the subject of praise within viewers of the series due to tướng how dark he is in contrast to tướng his younger persona.[50]

Regarding the character, before his identity reveals, Jason Thompson of Anime News Network was shocked to tướng learn that Tobi was the real leader of Akatsuki (instead of Pain), and when Tobi refers to tướng himself as Madara Uchiha. Thompson enjoyed Kishimoto's depiction of Tobi's teleportation technique and was surprised when Tobi told Sasuke Uchiha the truth about Itachi. He later called Tobi an "insane idealist" (similar to tướng Nagato) after learning of his desire to tướng create a peaceful world with the powerful Ten-Tails.[51] A UK Anime Network reviewer enjoyed Obito's action scenes with Na-ru-to, Killer Bee, Kakashi, and Guy because of his ability to tướng reanimate the six-tailed beasts.[52]

Bryce Coulter of the Fandom Post enjoyed the revelation of Tobi's true identity and liked its impact on Kakashi, praising the story's treatment of his inner turmoil, as he "confronts the demons of his past".[53] UK Anime Network found Tobi's true identity predictable, but highly enjoyed the backstory reveal, calling it "probably the most interesting flashback sequence of the series to tướng date".[54] Jason Thompson was shocked at the revelation that Tobi was Obito, finding the "most compassionate person in the manga" holding a grudge against the world to tướng be out of character.[51] Amy McNulty of Anime News Network praised the animation of Kakashi's fight against Obito and the references to tướng the fighters' childhoods.[55] McNulty found the character's death predictable, and criticized the development of Obito briefly giving Kakashi his eyes' techniques after dying, finding it counter to tướng the prevailing theme of "hard work".[56] Chris Beveridge had mixed feelings about the treatment of Obito's death in the anime version; the narrative begins focusing on flashbacks and his childhood dreams (which had already been shown), neglecting the present fight against Kaguya.[57]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Zimmerman, David (March 31, 2021). "'Naruto: 10 Ways Obito Could Have Been A Better Villain". cbr.com.
  2. ^ a b 漫道コバヤシ第13号「NARUTO完結!岸本斉史SP」 [Kobayashi No. 13 'Completion of Naruto! Masashi Kishimoto SP'] (in Japanese). Fuji Television. December 13, năm trước.
  3. ^ "Interview with Masashi Kishimoto". Shonen Jump. Viz Media. 7 (11 #83): 11. November 2009. ISSN 1545-7818.
  4. ^ "Naruto chapter 666". Weekly Shōnen Jump. No. 14. Shueisha. năm trước.
  5. ^ "L'INTERVIEW DE MASASHI KISHIMOTO – KABOOM". Kana (in French). Retrieved October 11, 2020.
  6. ^ "'Naruto' Creator Reveals The Characters He Won't Bring Back To Life". Comic Book. Archived from the original on July 7, 2019. Retrieved October 15, 2019.
  7. ^ "Tobi's Identity Revealed! An Interview with Masashi Kishimoto". Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  8. ^ 小森 創介/こもり そうすけ (in Japanese). Enkikaku. Archived from the original on March 6, 2013. Retrieved September 23, 2012.
  9. ^ Naruto Shippuden 10 (DVD). Viz Media. April 10, 2012.
  10. ^ "GAMRs Ep 11 Extras - Optimoose Kaplan: Pre-show banter". Gamr. Archived from the original on 2021-12-17. Retrieved August 31, 2019.
  11. ^ "新ED『虹』一度見たら月読の世界に入るよ。これ。" (in Japanese). Pierrot. Archived from the original on January 7, 2019. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  12. ^ "うちは一族フェアってことで。" (in Japanese). Pierrot. Archived from the original on April 1, 2019. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  13. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2007). "Chapter 243". Naruto. Vol. 27. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-1863-3.
  14. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2007). "Chapter 244". Naruto. Vol. 27. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-1863-3.
  15. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2013). "Chapter 602". Naruto. Vol. 63. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-5885-1.
  16. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2013). "Chapter 606". Naruto. Vol. 63. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-5885-1.
  17. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2010). "Chapter 502". Naruto. Vol. 53. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-4567-7.
  18. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2010). "Chapter 503". Naruto. Vol. 53. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-4567-7.
  19. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2009). "Chapter 310". Naruto. Vol. 35. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-2003-2.
  20. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2009). "Chapter 395". Naruto. Vol. 43. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-2929-5.
  21. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2008). "Chapter 280". Naruto. Vol. 31. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-1943-2.
  22. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2009). "Chapter 364". Naruto. Vol. 43. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-2841-0.
  23. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2011). "Chapter 467". Naruto. Vol. 50. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-3497-8.
  24. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2012). "Chapter 510". Naruto. Vol. 54. Viz Media. ISBN 978-1-4215-4102-0.
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  43. ^ Higashiyama, Akira; Kishimoto, Masashi (2012). Naruto -ナルト- 迅雷伝 狼の哭く日 [Naruto Jinraiden: The Day the Wolf Howled]. Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-703279-6.
  44. ^ Towada, Shin; Kishimoto, Masashi (2015). Naruto: 暁秘伝 咲き乱れる悪の華 [Naruto Akatsuki Hiden: Evil Flowers in Full Bloom] (in Japanese). Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-703367-0.
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  49. ^ Kishimoto, Masashi (2011). "Chapter 519". Naruto, Volume 56. Viz Media. ISBN 978-4088702186.
  50. ^ "声優・高木渉さん、『ジョジョの奇妙な冒険』『名探偵コナン』『忍たま乱太郎』『ビーストウォーズ』『NARUTO -ナルト-』など代表作に選ばれたのは? − アニメキャラクター代表作まとめ". Animate Times (in Japanese). Retrieved December 7, 2020.
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  55. ^ McNulty, Amy (September 5, 2014). "Naruto Shippuden Episode 375". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on July 27, 2017. Retrieved June 15, 2017.
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