Uchi Wa No Utouto Maji De Dekain Access

Wait. Huge? Does this refer to height? Power? Or something else entirely?

The phrase is a that originated on Japanese image boards (2channel / 5channel) around 2008–2010. Originally, it was a parody of fujoshi (female slash-fan) overreactions to the Uchiha brothers’ tragic bond. The original post was likely a joke about a fan screaming at their screen during the Sasuke vs. Itachi fight: “Wait, look at Sasuke when he fights! He’s so tall now! He’s a giant! Uchi wa no utouto maji de dekain!” From there, it mutated. Because “dekain” (huge) is vague, the meme split into three interpretative camps. Chapter 3: The Three Meanings of “Dekain” Understanding this meme requires accepting all three definitions simultaneously. 1. The Literal (Height & Age) Sasuke is 12 at the start of Naruto . When Itachi last saw him alive (prior to their final battle), Sasuke was a short, angry child. By the 5th Great Ninja War, Sasuke is 16–17 and towers over most characters. In Boruto , adult Sasuke is 182 cm (approx. 6’0”). For Itachi—who died at 21, frozen in time—seeing his “little” brother become a physical giant is genuinely moving. “Maji de dekain” becomes a ghost’s lament: “He grew so tall. I missed it all.” 2. The Power Level (Chakra & Susano’o) Itachi’s final act was sealing a one-time Amaterasu trap in Sasuke’s eye. But Sasuke eventually unlocks his own Perfect Susano’o—a colossal, sword-wielding ethereal warrior that dwarfs mountains. Compared to Itachi’s skeletal or armored Susano’o, Sasuke’s is objectively huge . When fans say “Uchi wa no utouto maji de dekain,” they are imagining Itachi watching from the afterlife, jaw-dropped: “I left him a fireball and a curse mark; he built a god-mecha.” 3. The Meme (The Other “Big”) Let’s address the elephant (or the snake summon) in the room. The internet is vulgar. Sasuke Uchiha is drawn as a conventionally attractive male lead. In fan art and doujinshi, “dekain” (huge) is frequently coded innuendo for physical endowment. The phrase is often paired with shocked face emojis (😳) or Itachi blushing. uchi wa no utouto maji de dekain

The phrase does not appear in the Naruto manga (by Masashi Kishimoto) or the anime. It is not a line from Itachi Shinden (the light novels) nor from Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm games. Originally, it was a parody of fujoshi (female