What is the plot?

The episode opens immediately after the previous incident, with Hikaru deeply shaken by what he has done to Yoshiki, while Yoshiki outwardly acts calm and decides not to confront him in the moment.

Yoshiki tells Hikaru to skip school with him, and the two leave town together for the day instead of going to class. Their time together begins in a deliberately ordinary way, with Yoshiki trying to create a "last normal day" for Hikaru by spending time with him as if nothing has changed.

They go to a movie theater and watch a film from a favorite series on the big screen, treating the outing like a shared childhood hangout rather than a crisis. After the movie, Yoshiki takes Hikaru to eat desserts at a convenience store, continuing the same quiet attempt to make the day feel familiar and soft rather than frightening.

Yoshiki then wins Hikaru a gacha prize featuring one of their favorite characters, and Hikaru responds with visible emotional warmth, taking in each small pleasure as if he is trying to understand what Yoshiki is doing for him. Yoshiki keeps treating the day like a farewell, and he even promises Hikaru that they will have "another tomorrow," despite already having decided that things cannot continue as they are.

As the day goes on, Yoshiki's private resolve hardens. After what happened with Asako, he has decided Hikaru is too dangerous to be allowed to continue unchanged, and he finally acts on that fear by stabbing Hikaru in the stomach with a kitchen knife in order to stop him from harming anyone else.

The stabbing does not kill Hikaru. Yoshiki learns immediately that Hikaru cannot seemingly be killed in the normal human way, and the expected collapse or finality does not come. Instead, Hikaru is hurt and sad that Yoshiki tried to kill him, especially because Yoshiki had spent the day trying to give him a good last memory first.

Yoshiki then tells Hikaru that, if Hikaru cannot be killed, Hikaru should kill Yoshiki instead. That request reveals the depth of Yoshiki's desperation and his belief that the situation has become unbearable if it cannot be ended cleanly. Hikaru recognizes that Yoshiki is thinking in a way that feels far removed from his own understanding, and the episode dwells on the emotional distance between human intentions and Hikaru's inhuman perception of death.

Hikaru considers Yoshiki's request and realizes that if he kills Yoshiki, they will never be able to eat ice cream together again. That small, ordinary image matters to him more than the abstract idea of death, and it becomes the key reason he stops moving toward violence.

Instead of attacking Yoshiki, Hikaru physically turns inward and compresses part of his own body, making himself smaller and less capable of hurting people. He offers this altered form of himself to Yoshiki as proof that he understands what Yoshiki is afraid of, and as a way of keeping their connection alive without pretending he can remain exactly the same.

Yoshiki accepts Hikaru in this changed state, and the episode ends with the relationship shifting into a new, unresolved form rather than a clean ending.

What is the ending?

Yoshiki takes Hikaru out for a day of skipping school, but the outing ends with Yoshiki bringing Hikaru back home and stabbing him in the chest with a kitchen knife. Hikaru is left hurt and shaken, while Yoshiki stands his ground and tells him, in effect, that he wants to understand what he really is.

Earlier in the episode, Hikaru is shown feeling uneasy after the incident with Asako, and he worries that Yoshiki may now hate him. Yoshiki, instead of confronting him openly at school, chooses to pull him away for the day, and the two ride a train into town and spend time together as if trying to hold on to something normal for a few more hours.

Chronologically, the ending unfolds in this order:

Yoshiki skips school with Hikaru and takes him out into town. The day is presented as unusually quiet and tense, with the two boys moving through ordinary places while the episode keeps the sense that something important is being postponed rather than resolved.

They spend the day together, and the episode uses this time to show how much the relationship between them has shifted after the attack on Asako. Hikaru is uneasy because he senses Yoshiki's distance, and Yoshiki is no longer treating the situation as something he can ignore.

When they return to Yoshiki's room, the atmosphere becomes more direct and more dangerous. Yoshiki brings out a kitchen knife and stabs Hikaru in the chest, making clear that he is no longer willing to simply accept Hikaru's presence without forcing an answer out of him.

After the stabbing, Yoshiki does not retreat into denial. He confronts Hikaru with the fact that he wants to know what Hikaru really is, and the episode ends on that unresolved confrontation rather than on comfort or reconciliation.

The fate of the main characters at the end of the episode is as follows:

Yoshiki remains alive and physically unharmed, but he has crossed into open confrontation with Hikaru.

Hikaru is wounded by the knife attack and left in a fragile, shaken state at the end of the episode.

Asako does not take part in the final scene, and her earlier encounter remains the event that drives Yoshiki's change in behavior.

The classmates and choir performance continue in the background while Yoshiki and Hikaru are absent, underscoring that life at school goes on even as the central conflict between the two boys reaches a breaking point.

Is there a post-credit scene?

Yes. Episode 7 does not have a separate post-credit scene in the usual sense, but it does have a post-credits sequence: the end credits continue over Yoshiki and Hikaru singing together, rather than cutting to a new story beat.

The clearest description from the available sources is that the episode's school choir song keeps playing through the later part of the episode and then becomes the credits song, sung by the two leads over the ending. One source also notes that viewers are told to stay through the end credits because "Yoshiki & Hikaru are singing."

So, if you are asking whether there is an extra teaser after the credits, the available evidence points to no separate post-credit stinger--just the credits sequence itself, centered on their duet.

What happens when Yoshiki takes Hikaru out for the day in Episode 7, and why does he do it?

Yoshiki deliberately stages a quiet, almost normal outing for Hikaru by skipping school and taking him into town, using the day to give this version of Hikaru a good last memory before he tries to stop him from harming anyone else. The episode frames this as Yoshiki trying to hold on to something tender and familiar even as he prepares for a painful break from it.

Why does Yoshiki stab Hikaru in Episode 7, and what does he think it will accomplish?

Yoshiki stabs Hikaru in the stomach because he wants to prevent Hikaru from hurting another person and believes he may be able to end the danger there. He is also acting out of a conflicted wish to preserve a final, humane memory of Hikaru rather than simply letting the situation continue unchecked.

How does Hikaru react after Yoshiki tries to kill him in Episode 7?

Hikaru is deeply hurt that Yoshiki tried to kill him, especially because he understands that Yoshiki did it while trying to give him a good last memory. That emotional injury matters to him more than the wound itself, and the episode emphasizes his sadness and disappointment.

What does Episode 7 reveal about Hikaru’s inability to die?

The episode shows that Hikaru cannot be killed in the ordinary human sense, since Yoshiki's stabbing does not end him. This turns the scene into a grim discovery for Yoshiki: violence cannot simply restore the old order or remove Hikaru as easily as he hoped.

Why does Hikaru offer to make himself smaller in Episode 7, and what is Yoshiki’s role in that decision?

After realizing that killing Yoshiki would also cost him the chance to keep sharing small ordinary pleasures like eating ice cream together, Hikaru changes course and physically alters himself to become smaller and less dangerous. Yoshiki's stabbing helps force that change by breaking Hikaru's expectation that everything can stay comfortably the same, and the episode presents this as the start of a new, uncertain path for both of them.

Is this family friendly?

No, this is not family friendly for young children, and it may also be upsetting for sensitive viewers. Netflix labels the series TV-14, and it is described as an ominous, psychological horror anime with teen and TV horror themes.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements in episode 7 include: - Horror and suspense throughout, with a tense, unsettling tone - Violence involving a stabbing attempt - Threatening or disturbing behavior tied to the characters' fear, guilt, and uncertainty - Psychological distress and emotionally heavy scenes, including themes of desperation and mourning - Death-related and supernatural unease, which may be frightening for sensitive viewers

If you want, I can also give a spoiler-free age suitability recommendation for kids, teens, or highly sensitive viewers.