Kenshin Himura appears as a gentle, somewhat clumsy wanderer carrying a sakabato (reverse-blade sword), a weapon designed to incapacitate rather than kill.
What made Rurouni Kenshin stand out—and why it remains a legendary series—was its subversion of the typical "tough guy" protagonist. Kenshin’s design is slight and fine-featured, reflecting a "soft masculinity" influenced by shōjo (girls') manga. This tenderness, balanced against his supernatural speed and strength, allowed the series to bridge the gap between male and female audiences, a rarity for the shōnen genre at the time. Watch [Team X-P] Rurouni Kenshin 01
The first episode introduces us to the 11th year of the Meiji era (1878), a time of radical transition as Japan shifts away from the age of the samurai toward modernization. Kenshin Himura appears as a gentle, somewhat clumsy
He meets Kaoru Kamiya, a fiery kendo instructor struggling to defend her dojo’s reputation against a criminal claiming to be the legendary assassin "Hitokiri Battousai". This tenderness, balanced against his supernatural speed and
In the episode's climax, Kenshin easily defeats the impostor, revealing that he is the true Battousai—now a pacifist seeking redemption for his past sins. A Legacy of "Soft Masculinity" and Redemption