In the latter case it was just a twist of the knife, done for no other reason than to let Naomi know that her fiance's killer and the young man she'd been confiding to were the same person. Light also pulls this with both Raye Penber, and later, his fiancee Naomi Misora before he kills them.Light is stunned and incredulous that the notorious L would so willingly give away his identity to someone he'd just met, but L explains that if he were to soon die, it would prove that Light was Kira. L does this when he introduces himself to Light.Accidental Truth: In the manga, when Kira's killings started, various tabloids put forward the Crackpot Theory that L was Kira, so it was harder for the SPK to seriously put this theory forward when it became true when Light killed L and took over as him.Aborted Arc: There was a small subplot of L trying to figure out Naomi Misora's whereabouts that went nowhere come the time he revealed himself to Light.Abandoned Warehouse: The final confrontation between Light and Near's respective teams takes place in one.When making up a rule to create an alibi, he picks the number thirteen as the number of days a Death Note user can supposedly go without writing in the book before they die. Kira's actions soon attract the attention of the international police community, now with grave concerns about the vigilante killings, and the world's greatest detective, an enigma of a man known only as " L". A cult following soon arises around the mysterious assassin killing off criminals across the country, christening him "Kira" (a Japanese Ranguage approximation of " killer"). While initially horrified at his actions, Light rationalises that he can use the Death Note as a force for good by purging the rotten and corrupt elements of society, thus creating a world free of crime and violence. On a whim, he tries out the instructions held within its pages, and discovers that he can kill whomever he wants, however he wants, by writing their name and (optionally) cause of death into the Death Note. Light Yagami, a brilliant-yet-disillusioned Japanese student, sees the notebook fall into his world and picks it up. In the land of the dead, a bored Shinigami named Ryuk decides to create some entertainment for himself by dropping a Death Note (the notebook of a death god "note" is simply what the Japanese call notebooks) into the human world.
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