BOSQUE de la MUERTE: ¿Por qué NO Tiene SENTIDO en Naruto?

The Chūnin Exams in Naruto are iconic, but one crucial detail of the Forest of Death makes no sense: why would a village risk its promising future shinobi in a test that could kill them? Unlike the written exam, which tests strategic intelligence gathering without risk, or one-on-one combat with referees, the Forest of Death is an unsupervised war zone where death is a real possibility and without responsibility for Konoha. This creates a shortage of new generations of ninja, a contradiction for villages that value their military forces. It also facilitates the infiltration of other villages to eliminate rivals, as Orochimaru demonstrated when he used the chaotic environment to test Sasuke and apply the Cursed Seal. The Forest of Death also fails in its purpose of demonstrating the village's power and attracting customers, as no one observes what happens there, unlike the Third Phase Arena. The Chūnin Exams in Boruto, with its capture-the-flag test and referees, are more logical. While we love the drama and epic scenes of the Forest of Death, its logic within the Naruto universe is questionable. Ninjas like Gaara, a cold-blooded killer, participated, putting the lives of other inexperienced Genin at risk. Become a member of this channel to enjoy benefits:    / @animeadicto360   💡 𝗡𝗼 𝘁𝗲 𝗾𝘂𝗲𝗱𝗲𝘀 𝗳𝘂𝗲𝗿𝗮: ✅ Subscribe now, you'll regret it if you don't! ✅ Every Like you don't give is an exclusive you miss out on! 🥰 AnimeAdicto360 loves you...! #Naruto #ChuninExam #ForestOfDeath #NarutoShippuden #Boruto