If you could provide more context or specify which Kabuto you're referring to, I'd be more than happy to try and give you a more accurate and detailed response.

: In certain manga adaptations, he is depicted as dying in a kamikaze-style attack alongside the Great Mazinger.

Later, the plan was drafted in fragments—no neat diagrams, but a map of intentions. They would expose the neglect: a demonstration that could not be ignored. They would show how fragile the promise of care was, how the numbers had eroded on the shore of compassion. Kabuto promised to help with medical logistics—transport, document falsification, patient triage. He would not harm anyone. That was the old code.

anime franchise. While "death" applies differently to each, both involve a powerful transformation and the end of a specific era. 1. The Samurai Kabuto: A Symbolic Death

Kabuto Yakushinji is a significant character in the Arrancar arc of the Bleach series. He serves as the Arrancar #0 and the primary antagonist of the early stages of the Arrancar arc.

Kabuto’s hands shook. He dragged the man out into the rain and carried him like a child to the ambulance. They worked for hours beneath trembling lamps; saline dripped, ventilators whispered. He traced Akio’s palms, counted the beats, watched monitors line up in the small hope that machines could be better at saving than men.

“Is she—?” Akio began.