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Kyokou Suiri Raw The New Chapter 82 And Xu Gou Tui Li Xu Gou Tui Li In Spectre Invented Inference Kyoko Suiri Kyokou Suiri Invented Inference Better
They are the same. So the question is:
Is the invented inference (虚构推理) in Kyokou Suiri good?
Detailed answer:
Yes, it’s uniquely good because:
If you like philosophical / rhetorical battles over physical fights, Kyokou Suiri is superior to most battle-shonen or even conventional mystery manga.
In Chapter 82, the core concept of Xu Gou Tui Li (Invented Inference) remains the driving force. The chapter showcases Kotoko fabricating a narrative or logic trap to subdue the antagonist, proving that in the realm of Spectres, a well-constructed lie is the strongest weapon. This approach makes the series distinct and, for many readers, "better" than traditional detective fiction. They are the same
It sounds like you’re referencing Kyokō Suiri (In/Spectre) — particularly the raw for chapter 82 — and playing with the phrase “xu gou tui li” (虚构推理, literally “fictitious reasoning” or “invented inference”), which is the original Chinese title for the series. You’re asking for a piece that shows how invented inference (the protagonist’s signature method) could be executed better or more cleverly in a new scenario.
Here’s a short, original piece demonstrating invented inference in the style of Kyokō Suiri, imagining a situation more intricate than what raw chapter 82 might show — a tighter, more elegant lie to pacify a supernatural threat.
Title: The Locked Shrine
Situation:
A water god’s shrine has been found desecrated. The god threatens to flood the valley unless the culprit is named. Two humans were near the shrine: a fisherman and a child. Neither did it, but the god demands a “true” culprit. If you like philosophical / rhetorical battles over
Iwao Kotoko’s invented inference:
“The culprit is neither human,” Kotoko says, standing on her crutch in the rain. “It was a tanuki — not an ordinary one, but a tanuki who once borrowed the fisherman’s face.”
She weaves her lie:
The tanuki, jealous of the shrine’s beauty, shape-shifted into the fisherman. But the shrine’s mirror saw through the disguise. The mirror shattered — that’s the desecration. The tanuki, startled, fled into the river and drowned. The water god, seeing the fisherman’s face in the mirror shard, mistook him for the true offender.
“Thus,” Kotoko concludes, “you have your culprit — the tanuki — and the fisherman is innocent. The child saw only the reflection afterward.” In Chapter 82, the core concept of Xu
Why it’s better than brute-force “inference”:
That’s the essence of invented inference: not the truth, but the most functional, self-sealing fiction that monsters will accept.
As of the latest raw scans for Chapter 82, the manga (adapting Chiyo’s light novels) continues the "Sleeping Murder" arc. Without posting spoilers, here is the structural genius of the chapter:
In Chapter 82, Iwanaga faces a locked-room mystery perpetrated by a spectre that cannot be named. The police have a suspect. The spectre knows the truth. But the truth—that a shapeshifting Gashadokuro was involved—would cause a panic in the supernatural world. So, Iwanaga must construct an invented inference.
The raw shows Iwanaga weaving a narrative that uses real clues (footprints, broken locks, timestamps) but threads them into a false conclusion (a human stalker). For the reader seeing the raw panels, it is a masterclass in gaslighting—but beautiful, consensual gaslighting. The kyokou suiri raw scans highlight how her facial expressions shift: cold calculation for the monsters, fake tears for the human police.