Chainsaw Man is an anime/manga series that is known to have intense battles, deep psychological themes, and highly controversial plot twists. Published late in September 2025, Chapter 216 of Chainsaw Man is an extension of that theme, with Fujimoto being equally focused on balancing melodramatic emotionalism with physical action. Chapter 216 stands out as a hotspot among fans who are demanding to know what will happen to major characters (and particularly the fate of Asa Mitaka) as the saga gears up to a second major climax.
To respond to the key question: Asa is not killed in chapter 216 of Chainsaw Man. Though the chapter is a serious, violent, traumatic memory row, and new agreements between devils and people, the story of Asa is subject to an essential change, but she manages to survive. Asa confronts her inner trauma instead of death, particularly that of her mother, which is a plot in Chainsaw Man chapter 216.

Chapter 216 of Chainsaw Man begins with Denji (the protagonist of Chainsaw Man) in an inner world with Asa Mitaka. We see glimpses of Asa’s constant sense of guilt as they both run in a dreamy alley, where Asa imagines her nightmare of unintentionally killing Bucky, the chicken devil, with Denji watching on in confusion. Their desperate pursuit drives them to what Asa longs to face with her mother, whose death years ago shaped much of the trajectory of Asa in chapter 216 of the Chainsaw Man, and earlier chapters.
In the real world, however, there is a violent confrontation between Chainsaw Man and Yoru, the War Devil with whom Asa shares her body. The way Yoru heals after her crippling attacks is shown to be fueled by a terrifying pact with the governor of California: every single cut she suffers is matched by the killing of a civilian somewhere in California- now 32 million lives are connected to her survival in Chainsaw Man chapter 216.

In chapter 216 of Chainsaw Man, Yoru is repeatedly stabbed by Chainsaw Man, yet she heals instantly. The horrifying twist is that ordinary citizens thousands of miles away, like an old man by the water, drop dead in her place. This grotesque mechanism makes Yoru virtually invulnerable, raising the stakes dramatically: Chainsaw Man can’t kill her without unleashing mass slaughter.
Yoru draws on the power of the Accident Devil, and turns it into a whip that can sever the head of Chainsaw Man-and, indeed, severs her own head in the course of the battle. The carnage is also reflected by the fact that Denji and Asa are seeking traumatic memories in the dream alley: when Asa arrives at the mysterious man she is chasing, she discovers that it is her mother, dressed in the exact outfit she wore when she was killed by the Typhoon Devil, as she had previously revealed in chapter 102.

In the emotional climax of the Chainsaw Man chapter 216, Asa has to face the guilt of childhood, when she feels that she could have saved her mother, but instead she saved a cat. The trauma takes the shape of the body of Bucky and the loss of her mother, which the story relates to unresolved losses of Denji himself. Chainsaw Man chapter 216, therefore, forms intricate connections between the material violence of the real world and the pain that is left unresolved in the mental realm.
Asa’s Fate in Chainsaw Man Chapter 216
Unlike recent chapters that emphasize physical danger, Chainsaw Man chapter 216 shifts its focus to Asa’s psychological survival and her battle with overwhelming guilt. Though deeply emotional and unsettling, both the dream sequence and the confrontation in reality stop short of claiming Asa Mitaka’s life. Instead, she endures and is ultimately confronted with the image of her mother, a moment that hints at the possibility of closure and foreshadows the emotional reckoning awaiting her in the chapters to come.
In the entire Chainsaw Man chapter 216, the manga contrasts external and internal fighting. The fact that Denji is in the mind of Asa highlights that both characters have a common trauma: he is not a hero in a fight but a man who can show empathy and assist Asa in dealing with the sins of her heart.

The most chilling truth of the chapter is the monstrous contract that Yoru has. The Accident Devil and spectralization of California deaths to keep Yoru alive solidify her as one of the greatest threats in the world, whose abilities are now comparable to the techniques used by Makima in Part 1. At the same time, the plot of Asa is narrowly focused, being buried in her dream fight with her mother.
Chainsaw Man Chapter 216 does not provide a clear closure of Asa but rather a transition to what will follow. Readers are left with Asa speechless and shaken, staring at a ghostly apparition of her mother instead of being physically harmed or killed.
To conclude, Chainsaw Man chapter 216 centers on psychological growth rather than character death. Asa does not perish; instead, she endures both external and internal threats and manages to survive them all. What truly deepens in this chapter is her trauma, along with the looming consequences of Yoru’s growing power. By intertwining violence, guilt, and the complexities of devil contracts, the chapter weaves a layered narrative that cements itself as a pivotal moment in the manga’s ongoing progression.