The 10 Best Fights in Vagabond — Ranked and Analyzed
Vagabond contains some of the greatest fight sequences in manga history. But ranking them is complicated — because Inoue’s fights are not spectacles. They are psychological events. The best ones are not the most violent or the most technically impressive. They are the ones that change something in the characters involved.
This list ranks not just the choreography and art, but the weight of what each fight means within the story. Read all 327 chapters free at Chapter 1 here.
The greatest fight in Vagabond is the one that the manga never completes. Every encounter between Musashi and Kojiro — every near-meeting, every moment where they sense each other across distance — carries more weight than most completed fights in other series. The art achieves something almost impossible: two people in the same panel who exist on different planes of reality. Musashi tormented, Kojiro serene. Neither can fully see the other.
Unlike the fight with Seijuro, which was psychologically lopsided from the start, the duel with Denshichiro is a genuine contest between two people who have fully committed to the sword. What makes it great is its restraint — Inoue shows almost nothing, and everything. One exchange. One outcome. No speeches. The stillness before and after contains more than the action itself.
Seventy men. Darkness. One sword. The Ichijoji night battle is Vagabond at its most visceral — Musashi not as philosopher but as cornered animal, fighting from something below thought. Inoue’s art in these chapters is physically overwhelming: ink that moves, shadows that breathe, motion conveyed through negative space. It may be the most purely drawn sequence in the series.
The Hozoin fight is Vagabond’s first truly philosophical duel. A perfect spear technique against a sword that operates outside the rules the technique was built for. What makes it extraordinary is that neither combatant is decisively defeated — both are changed. The fight ends with questions, not answers. See our complete Inshun guide.
The first major duel in Vagabond is great not for its violence but for its psychological asymmetry. Musashi arrives ready to die. Seijuro arrives performing readiness. The gap between these states is the fight. One panel after Seijuro falls — just his face, recognizing — is among the most affecting images in the entire series.
Fights 6–10: The Honorable Mentions
| Rank | Fight | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| #6 | Musashi vs Shishido | The first fight where Musashi begins to understand — rather than simply win |
| #7 | Kojiro vs Bandits | Demonstrates Kojiro’s nature in under three pages. The most efficient character introduction in the series |
| #8 | Musashi vs Gion Toji | Speed and silence. Inoue shows a fight that lasts less than a second across five pages |
| #9 | Musashi vs the Seven Spears | Early chapters, pure ferocity. The best version of Takezō before he becomes Musashi |
| #10 | Kojiro vs Itou Ittōsai | The meeting of two states of mastery. Neither man is threatened. Both recognize something in the other |
What Makes a Vagabond Fight Great
In most manga, fights are judged by power levels, technique, and spectacle. In Vagabond, the question is different: what does this fight reveal that the story could not reveal any other way? The best fights are the ones where both combatants are changed — not just one winner and one loser, but two people who looked into each other and could not look away.
This is why the greatest fight in the series is the one Inoue never finished. For more on the ending and the hiatus, see our Chapter 327 explained and the hiatus guide.
Ten ranked. Three hundred more waiting. Every one of them changes something. All 327 chapters free.
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