

"Now, you better stop talking to me now, because if the Kiss Cam comes over here, I won't kiss any of you!" Nobara pointed while ignoring them now, focusing on bullying the foreign team, the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks, while yelling in motion with a lot of people. And he needed some distraction after all the things that had happened recently, so he couldn't complain too much. It was nice to see them happy for a change, and he won't be the one to pop their bubble, at least not this day. Yūji and Nobara snapped, laughing out loud to their hearts' content, while Megumi looked at them with an exasperated look. "Look! Look at the screen!" Nobara yelled to the boys while pointing to the screen, and they saw how an old man in the stands was being compared to Muten Rōshi from Dragon Ball. I used to come when I was younger." Megumi looked bored and unamused. "You seem to know very well how this works."

I mean, people come to watch the game, but nobody pays attention because of that." Megumi pointed at the giant screen, and Yūji followed with his gaze. "I don't understand a thing." Yūji looked concerned while watching the pitcher move from his plate to the coaching box without a warning or comment, just making moves without sense. But Yūji could barely focus on what the players were doing on the field. Nobara felt super comfortable with the mood, laughing out loud whenever the game announcer followed through a joke on the giant screen in the Dome. So they stood in their seats, watching the game with overpriced food in their hands, vibing with the flow of cheering and chanting for the teams. He wasn't a fan, but Itadori was excited since this was the first time he would watch a game in person, and the face he made trying to convince him made it. It took zero effort to convince Nobara, who had never been to a game before, but Fushiguro was reluctant. Still, it struck them as odd when he came to Megumi and Nobara, showed them the three baseball tickets he just won in the lottery the Konbini near the Tokyo Tech School was sorting out, and invited them to watch the game with him.įree tickets. The point was that Itadori was pretty lucky. But pretty bad luck if they counted the many things he had lived through since eating the first Sukuna’s finger. If you asked their actual first-grade classmates, Itadori had luck, yes.

Or that time he won an all-inclusive trip for two to Okinawa when he was 7.

If you asked his late grandpa, he would totally recall that time Yūji won a year's worth of fish in the fish market when he was 13. Itadori Yūji was a kid with a ton of luck.
