Giyu Tomioka VS Sabito
Giyu Tomioka
Giyu Tomioka (冨とみ岡おか 義ぎ勇ゆう Tomioka Giyū?) is a major supporting character of Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba. He is a Demon Slayer of the Demon Slayer Corps and the current Water Hashira (水みず柱ばしら Mizu Bashira?).[2] Giyu had an older sister, Tsutako Tomioka, who died protecting him from a Demon on the day before her marriage. After that incident, he was left in the woods and discovered by the former Water Hashira, Sakonji Urokodaki and was taken under his wing and trained to be a Demon Slayer. Giyu is also the close friend of Sabito, and was defended by him during the Final Selection, and became a Demon Slayer despite failing to kill a single Demon.
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Sabito
Sabito (錆さび兎と Sabito?) was a former apprentice of Sakonji Urokodaki. He appeared to assist Tanjiro Kamado in his preparations for the Final Selection exam. Sabito was a fair-skinned young man with a large scar running from the right corner of his mouth to his right ear, and kind, cat-like eyes of a grayish lavender color, a horizontal bar of much paler purple visible across them near the bottom. He had thick, spiked, peach-colored hair of varying lengths, the longest reaching his shoulders, that he wore messily down with side micro bangs over the left of his forehead. Sabito wore a green yukata, patterned with a geometric hexagon design of yellow and a darker green, tied off at the waist with a piece of black fabric, below which he sported a pair of hakama pants and over which a plain white haori. Around his calves, he wore two pieces of cloth, that bore the same design as his yukata, which his pants were tucked into, as well as black socks and a pair of Japanese sandals on his feet. As with the rest of Sakonji Urokodaki's apprentices, Sabito's white warding mask, hand-carved by his master himself, took the shape of a fox's face, his decorated by a large scar in the same place as the one on his face. The mask's eyes and nose were of a dark green while the ears were more of a gray-red, and it was secured around his face by a thick piece of red rope around his head, the ends of which hung down from behind each of his ears.