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Fake Death Notes

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As the long duel between Light and Near reaches its climax, both sides turn to forgeries of the killer notebook. These counterfeit death notes become the decisive instruments of the endgame, with each mastermind planting a fake to lure the other into a fatal mistake.

Film: Death Note: The Last Name
Purpose: decoy notebooks used in the Light versus Near endgame
First Appearance Anime: Episode 33: Scorn
First Appearance Manga: Chapter 92: Night
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Overview

The replicas look and feel like ordinary notebooks but carry no lethal power, serving instead as bait. They surface late in the story, when the contest between Kira and his pursuers comes down to deception rather than killing, and a single misplaced trust in the wrong book decides who falls. Both Light and Near build their final strategies around persuading the enemy that a counterfeit is genuine.

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Function

Light has Teru Mikami parade a counterfeit in public while under watch by the Special Provision for Kira, arranging for Kiyomi Takada to perform the real killings using pages torn from the authentic book. Near sees through the ruse, recognizing that Mikami's displayed notebook is false, and orders Stephen Gevanni to manufacture a duplicate of his own. Mikami unwittingly writes in the substitute that Gevanni and Anthony Rester prepared, mistaking it for the real thing, and the slip damns both himself and Light as Kira.

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Notable Users

The films and television drama recast the trick in different shapes. The film Death Note: The Last Name sees L plant a forgery that fools Light into killing his own father, exposing him. The TV drama has L and Watari supply fakes to both Light and Mikami, each of whom incriminates himself while reaching to kill an enemy. Author Tsugumi Ohba once weighed an alternative plan involving laminated pages before abandoning it, and he has hinted that Light's later claim of a planted fake notebook may not have been wholly untrue.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a fake Death Note?

Yes, as the long duel between Light and Near reaches its climax, both sides turn to forgeries of the killer notebook. These counterfeit death notes become the decisive instruments of the endgame, with each mastermind planting a fake to lure the other into a fatal mistake.

What do the fake Death Notes do in the story?

The replicas look and feel like ordinary notebooks but carry no lethal power, serving instead as bait. They surface late in the story, when the contest between Kira and his pursuers comes down to deception rather than killing.

How does Near use a fake Death Note to defeat Light?

Near sees through Light's ruse, recognizing that Mikami's displayed notebook is false, and orders Stephen Gevanni to manufacture a duplicate. Mikami unwittingly writes in the substitute that Gevanni and Anthony Rester prepared, mistaking it for the real thing, and the slip damns both himself and Light as Kira.

How does Light try to use a fake Death Note?

Light has Teru Mikami parade a counterfeit notebook in public while under watch by the Special Provision for Kira, arranging for Kiyomi Takada to perform the real killings using pages torn from the authentic book.

Do the Death Note films use the fake notebook trick?

Yes, the films and television drama recast the trick in different shapes. The film Death Note: The Last Name sees L plant a forgery that fools Light into killing his own father, while the TV drama has L and Watari supply fakes to both Light and Mikami.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Fake Death Notes? The Death Note Wiki on Fandom has a dedicated page with community notes.

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This content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the Death Note anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.

Character and scene imagery on this site is original artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters, not screenshots or licensed imagery. Official cover art is used on three types of pages for editorial commentary:

  • Movie pages: theatrical posters and key visuals, credited to Nippon Television and Warner Bros. Japan.
  • Game pages: official box art, credited to Konami and other publishers.
  • Manga chapter pages: Jump Comics volume covers, credited to Shueisha, Tsugumi Ohba, and Takeshi Obata.

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