Boruto Two Blue Vortex Chapter 29 Pest Control – Read Manga Online In High Quality

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Boruto Manga Chapter 29 Review

Boruto’s Full Karma Power, Mamushi’s Invasion, and Shikamaru’s Falling House of Cards

Boruto Two Blue Vortex chapter 29 is one of the most consequential chapters of the arc so far. It’s not just a power-up chapter — it’s a turning point packed with irreversible deals, political fallout, and some of the most impressive combat we’ve seen from Boruto Uzumaki since the time skip. Here’s everything that happened and why it matters.


Boruto’s Deal With Momoshiki — The Full Picture

The Boruto Manga chapter opens with a flashback expanding on the agreement Boruto struck with Momoshiki in recent chapters — details he deliberately kept from Kashin Koji.

Boruto offers Momoshiki full control of his body once Jura is defeated. The catch? He’s fully prepared to die in the process. His plan is simple: let Momoshiki take over, then have Kawaki eliminate him, just like nearly happened before in part one. Nobody, no Momoshiki.

But Momoshiki, after spending so long sharing a mind with the son of Naruto Uzumaki, sees right through it. Since their thoughts are linked in both directions, there are no secrets between them. Momoshiki tells Boruto plainly — he knows the endgame is Kawaki killing Boruto on sight the moment Momoshiki surfaces.

Despite being completely exposed, Boruto holds his ground and demands to know if they have a deal or not.

Momoshiki answers by activating Boruto’s Karma seal — and granting him access to everything. Not just the chakra reserves or the combat experience that comes with Karma, but the full suite of Momoshiki’s abilities. Whatever Boruto needs to destroy Jura and deal with the current crisis, it’s all available to him now.


Boruto Unleashes True Karma — Byakugan Included

In the present timeline, Boruto faces down a wave of Mamushi clones inside Konoha. The moment one clone attempts to absorb him, it’s instantly destroyed. Boruto, operating at full power with true essence of Karma active, annihilates the clone’s arm and part of its body in seconds using a Karma-amplified Rinnegan.

What follows is some of the most fluid, high-skill combat in the series:

  • He takes down seven more clones using Flying Raijin combined with thrown shuriken, teleporting behind the clones and decapitating them — targeting the eyes specifically to prevent regeneration.
  • For the first time in the manga, Boruto activates the Byakugan while in true Karma mode. Previously, that eye remained sealed during Karma activation. Now, he’s using it to see through solid structures and track hidden clones with masterful precision.
  • He executes Sasuke’s bouncing shuriken technique — something Sasuke tried to teach him during part one — landing it perfectly in combat for the first time.
  • He finishes off three more clones with a Super Giant Rinnegan, the same level of technique Jiraiya needed Sage Mode to perform, and the same variant Naruto used against Edotensei Mō.

The scale of power Boruto is putting out here is massive. What makes it even more impressive is his chakra control — he’s managing a Super Giant Rinnegan inside a populated village without leveling buildings or cratering the ground. That level of precision is a direct reflection of how much he’s grown since part one.

The reason Boruto can push this hard without risk now is the deal itself. Previously, burning too much chakra risked handing Momoshiki control. That limiter is gone.


Kawaki’s Upgrades on Full Display

Meanwhile, Kawaki is handling his own wave of Mamushi clones in the forest — seven at once after cutting on his own Karma seal.

He’s working with the body upgrades Amado completed in the previous BTBV chapter, and the difference is noticeable. He shrinks himself to near-invisible size using Isshiki’s dimension-shifting ability, repositions, then summons chakra rods directly from the Daikoku dimension — driving them through the eyes, skull, and mouth of a clone before resizing.

He follows up by using a summoned chakra rod as a staff and physically shattering the heads and bodies of the remaining clones through sheer force.

The key takeaway: both Boruto and Kawaki had to activate Karma to handle these clones. That’s a meaningful data point on how dangerous Mamushi’s clones actually are — each one stronger than Code, which is not a low bar.


Mamushi’s 50-Clone Invasion Strategy

Mamushi deployed 50 full-power clones across Konoha — 20 more than Kashin Koji had factored into his calculations. With that many clones active simultaneously, his overall intelligence drops significantly, making each individual clone easier to manipulate and predict.

When he realizes Boruto and Kawaki are tracking and eliminating clones faster than they should be able to, he shifts strategy. Instead of trying to outsmart them, he floods the field with even more clones spread out across a wider area. The logic: overwhelm response time, make tracking impossible, and if Ada gets exposed in the chaos, all the better.

It’s a brute-force approach, but it has internal logic — more destroyed clones means his intelligence slowly returns, and he can recalibrate from there.


Himawari, Team 10, and the Fight Inside the Village

Himawari enters the fight in Nine-Tails mode — this time activating it on her own without the rage trigger that forced it previously. She drop-kicks a clone across the sky before luring two more into position for Team 10.

Shikadai reveals a new jutsu developed during the time skip: he can now fire four simultaneous Shadow Possession jutsu like heat-seeking projectiles, ensnaring multiple targets at once and yanking them off rooftops. Chocho follows up with Expansion Jutsu to finish them off.

Even with things going relatively smoothly, Kashin Koji is visibly uneasy watching the situation unfold — suggesting the threat isn’t as contained as it looks.


Shikamaru’s Political Crisis — Kobu Closes In

The political subplot is accelerating fast. Inside the interrogation room, Kobu is methodically dismantling the cover story around Boruto’s escape. He identifies that the seal on Boruto’s cuffs could only be deactivated by someone with the access code — a very short list of people.

Konohamaru steps in and claims he forgot to set the activation code, meaning the cuffs were never armed. Kobu doesn’t buy it for a second and gives him a look that makes that obvious.

Shikamaru, reading the situation from the Hokage Tower, uses the Mamushi attack as cover to order Mitsuki’s release — framing it as a wartime necessity. Sai delivers the warning that Kobu won’t be pleased; Shikamaru pulls rank and tells him to do it anyway under Hokage’s orders.

It’s a calculated gamble. Shikamaru always knew this confrontation was coming. By acting now, under the guise of defending the village, he buys himself a window. But Kobu ends the chapter by telling Konohamaru to go fetch the Eighth Hokage for questioning.

The water in the pot is boiling. Shikamaru is running out of time.


What Chapter 29 Sets Up

Boruto Two Blue Vortex Chapter 29 isn’t just a showcase of how powerful Boruto has become — it’s a chapter about the cost of that power. The deal with Momoshiki has an expiration date: once Jura falls, Boruto’s body belongs to Momoshiki permanently. Kawaki becomes the next target on Momoshiki’s list. And Boruto has apparently already accepted that he won’t survive this.

Combined with the political pressure mounting on Shikamaru and the sheer scale of Mamushi’s invasion, the village is fighting on two fronts simultaneously — one external, one entirely internal.

If Boruto’s ominous prophecy from chapter 1 about the worst possible outcome is going to come true, chapter 29 is laying every brick in that road. Boruto Chapter 30 reveals Kashin Koji’s dark plan and Konoha’s moral crisis. Discover shocking twists, clone chaos, and political tension—read now.

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