Both are psychological and make you think outside the box while in a life or death situation.
Both have a male lead that can solve the crime (L and number 5).
Both have life as a tool and not as something given. Kira plays with people's lives while the 12 teens that are in "12 suicidal children" want to give their lives away.
Both have a male lead that can solve the crime (L and number 5).
Both have life as a tool and not as something given. Kira plays with people's lives while the 12 teens that are in "12 suicidal children" want to give their lives away.
"Momo no Uta" was popular among elementary and junior high school students in Kanagawa Prefecture in the early Heisei era. It was said that singing this song would help you find something you were missing, and in recent years it has become popular again among young people. However, those who sing this song have been dying mysteriously one after another. While investigating the series of mysterious deaths, Masumura Kenichi, a writer for the occult magazine "Nessie," discovers the sad truth hidden in the song.



