Volume 76
‹ Volume 75 | List of Chapters • List of Cases | Volume 77 › |
Volume 76 | |||
Release date: | June 18, 2012 | ||
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Chapters: | 796-806 | ||
ISBN: | ISBN 978-4-09-123738-5 | ||
Publisher: | Shogakukan | ||
English release date: | October 13, 2020 | ||
English Publisher: | Viz Media | ||
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Volume 76 was released on June 18, 2012 in Japan.
Contents
Cast
Online Client
File 796 - The Meeting At Columbo
While Kogoro and the group are watching a news report on a recent bank robbery, Amuro stops by with sandwiches from the Poirot after finishing his part time job for the day. After commenting on the robbery, Amuro reveals that he wants the scoop on Kogoro's newest case request after deducing from Kogoro's appearance and habits that Kogoro had a case. Kogoro gets a text from the client requesting that Kogoro switch the meeting location to the Café Columbo, and Amuro goes with them after changing out of his work clothes.
At the Columbo, Kogoro explains to Amuro the request was to find the locker a key belongs to. The client fails to show, so Amuro, Kogoro, Conan, and Ran go back to the Mouri Detective Agency to make sure the client didn't actually turn up there instead. When Amuro arrives at the agency, he and Conan notice someone had broken in and appeared to have intercepted the client while they were out. Stepping outside, Amuro explains his deductions to the rest of the gang and that the culprit is hiding in the restroom. Before Amuro can open the bathroom door, a gunshot rings out, and Conan rushes in to find a dead man who apparently committed suicide with a gun and a taped-up crying woman.
File 797 - Intertwined Lies and Mysteries
The group escort Kei Kashitsuka back to her condo. Kei goes tidy her room but secretly leaves the condo with Conan following her. As Kogoro, Ran and Amuro waiting for Kei they start searching for listening devices as when Sera called Ran the former's voice wasn't clear. After they locate the final listening device in a suitcase under the bed, Kogoro, Ran and Amuro open it to find a man beaten to death inside it.
File 798 - Detectives' Nocturne
Kashitsuka drugged Conan with a fruit juice. Later they receive an email from Kei Kashitsuka and order them not to attempt to find her or she won't guarantee Conan's safety. Ran contacted Agasa for help while Kogoro and Amuro discovered more information.
File 799 - A Child's Curiosity and a Detective's Spirit of Inquiry
File 800 - When Objects Collide
People
Domestic Violence
File 801 - The Person Who Never Smiled
Masumi Sera is talking to Ran and Sonoko about Conan and Tooru Amuro. She decides to leave when she hears Conan isn't there, but she sees Scar Akai and goes after him. He hides before Sera can confront him. At the Konno's house, where the Detective Boys and Agasa are, Sumika is threatening Takushi with a knife because of supposedly having an affair with other women. Ayumi witnesses this but when everyone comes back to see what happened Takushi had stabbed his wife. Is this self-defense?
File 802 - Don't Make That Kind Of Face...
Sumika is in the hospital and Conan notices that her husband's behaviour is really suspicious. Besides, Haibara suspects Subaru Okiya could be her ex-brother-in-law, Dai Moroboshi.
File 803 - A Misconstrued Conclusion
People
Overnight Deadline
Characters introduced
Wataru Date | |
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File 804 - The Present From Detective Takagi
File 805 - Wataru Brothers
File 806 - The Inherited Shadow of the Dawn
The detective boys remember that the man said something strange, ‘Tomorrow or the next day’ instead of ‘Tomorrow or the day after’. Conan asks if any of the women from the suicide cases was from Hokkaido, and Sato confirms that Natalie Kuruma was. Then Conan suspects that a relation of hers is responsible of the abduction of Takagi. The phrase ‘tomorrow or the next day’ is from Hokkaido. Conan thinks that Natalie was Detective Date’s girlfriend. What Natalie wrote on her calendar wasn’t the English word ‘Date’, but Date’s name in romaji. It was a symbol of Date’s visits. Because Natalie was an English teacher, Sato misread it. Conan further theorizes that Natalie hadn’t learned of Date’s death and killed herself believing she had been dumped. Takagi must have realized the connection between Natalie and Date and decided to tell her family the truth for the sake of his friend’s memory. Sato remembers that Takagi had been seeing crying over a sticker photo in his notebook – which used to belong to Date. If it was a picture of Natalie, Takagi might have looked up her picture in the case file to compare them. As for how this could lead Takagi to end up in a death trap, Conan suspects that Natalie, whose mother was an American, might not have told her parents her boyfriend’s full name, to avoid confusion with the Date name, and just told them he was Wataru-san, a detective from the police headquarters. If Takagi contacted Natalie’s family, asking them for a meeting to discuss Natalie and introduce himself with his full name, like most people would do, the family might have drawn the wrong conclusion and assumed that Takagi Wataru was Wataru-san, the police detective who drew Natalie to suicide by dumping her, and decided to take revenge on him. Sato doesn’t think that it was the family, since Natalie’s parent were killed in the car accident on their way to retrieve Natalie’s body, but somebody did retrieve her body, a colleague from the school, who had lived in the same hometown, Natalie grew up in, and considered her a daughter.
People
Cover in other countries
Trivia
- Sumika Konno is the first pregnant woman ever featured in Detective Conan.
See also
Volumes of the Manga | ||
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Volume 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 • 24 • 25 • 26 • 27 • 28 • 29 • 30 • 31 • 32 • 33 • 34 • 35 • 36 • 37 • 38 • 39 • 40 • 41 • 42 • 43 • 44 • 45 • 46 • 47 • 48 • 49 • 50 • 51 • 52 • 53 • 54 • 55 • 56 • 57 • 58 • 59 • 60 • 61 • 62 • 63 • 64 • 65 • 66 • 67 • 68 • 69 • 70 • 71 • 72 • 73 • 74 • 75 • 76 • 77 • 78 • 79 • 80 • 81 • 82 • 83 • 84 • 85 • 86 • 87 • 88 • 89 • 90 • 91 • 92 • 93 • 94 • 95 • 96 • 97 • 98 • 99 • 100 • 101 • 102 • 103 • 104 • 105 • 106 • 107 |