Not anymore.
In Two Blue Vortex , Boruto doesn't win by shouting louder. He wins by being colder, faster, and more ruthless than his enemies. When he fights Code (the new main villain), he doesn't deliver a speech about friendship. He simply removes Code’s eye and tells him to run. It is shocking, visceral, and incredibly refreshing. Part 1 gave us the "Cyborgs" (Eida and Daemon), who broke the power scale with ridiculous abilities (passive omnipotence and auto-reflect). In Part 2 , the threat evolves into cosmic horror. boruto two blue vortex
The art by Mikio Ikemoto has finally hit its stride. The panel layouts are cinematic. The double-page spreads of Boruto’s new Rasengan Uzuhiko (a planetary rotation attack) are breathtaking. It feels like a mix of Akira and Devilman —dark, gritty, and desperate. If you gave up on Boruto after the "Funato War Arc" or the slog of the anime, come back. Not anymore
Without spoiling too much, the "Ten-Tails" has splintered into sentient, humanoid beings called the (Divine Trees). These creatures look like twisted reflections of beloved characters (including a terrifying clone of Sasuke and even a version of Naruto). They aren't just strong; they have a terrifying objective: to consume the original person they were cloned from to become perfect. When he fights Code (the new main villain),