What is the plot?

The episode opens with Yoshino and Kirishima in the aftermath of her illness, with Kirishima having already helped care for her and kept her safe in his home. The mood is calmer than in earlier episodes, and the immediate focus is on ordinary school life and looming exams rather than open violence.

After the final exams, Yoshino and Kirishima travel to Yokohama to meet Yoshino's cousin, Tsubaki Akashigata, who has moved there from Kyoto. The reunion is affectionate and nostalgic at first: Yoshino and Tsubaki spend time together with Kirishima accompanying them, and the three of them tour Yokohama while talking easily and sharing memories. During this daytime outing, the atmosphere stays light, with the cousins reconnecting while Kirishima tags along and watches their interaction.

At some point during the outing, Yoshino receives a call that requires her to return to school, so she leaves Yokohama and goes back alone. This leaves Kirishima and Tsubaki together without Yoshino present. Kirishima then invites Tsubaki on what he calls a "short date," and the two of them continue the day into the night. Their time together culminates on a nighttime Ferris wheel, where they speak more directly and the conversation turns more revealing than the earlier sightseeing had been.

During this private conversation, Kirishima shows that he has been paying close attention to Tsubaki and to the family situation around Yoshino. Tsubaki, in turn, makes clear that she is highly perceptive and willing to threaten Kirishima if he proves untrustworthy toward Yoshino. Kirishima also indicates that he has learned something about Tsubaki's background, including that her father is the director of a Kyoto hospital tied to the larger Dōseikai group, which is rumored to be involved in illegal organ trading and transplants.

The episode also reveals more about Tsubaki's fixation on Yoshino's grandfather, the Somei patriarch, whom she regards as an almost ideal human being. Tsubaki further discusses the financial transaction tied to Yoshino's kidney, explaining that she only took a liter and a half of her blood in exchange for the four million yen Yoshino had requested. This confirms that the earlier kidney-related scheme was not a full medical exchange in the way it may have first seemed, but a deliberately limited blood-taking arrangement tied to Yoshino's payment demand.

Kirishima then admits, in effect, that he had been intensely interested in Yoshino even before they ever met. Tsubaki responds by warning him that if he turns out to be a genuine scumbag, she will prevent him from ever finding Yoshino again, "even if it takes plastic surgery." The exchange makes clear that Tsubaki is not a passive observer in Yoshino's life, but someone fully prepared to interfere if necessary.

Near the end of the episode, Yoshino is called away again for a school-related problem and leaves Kirishima behind to handle the situation with Tsubaki. After Yoshino is gone, Kirishima and Tsubaki continue talking about Yoshino and about how much Yoshino trusts her cousin. Kirishima then exchanges contact information with Tsubaki, which finalizes their connection and leaves the two of them in contact after Yoshino has departed.

What is the ending?

Yoshino and Kirishima end the episode in a quieter but more serious place than they began, with their relationship still unstable but now joined to a new layer of family tension and hidden secrets. The episode closes with Yoshino trusting Tsubaki, while Kirishima learns enough to keep digging into the truth about Yoshino's past injury and the people connected to it.

Yoshino and Kirishima begin the episode after exams, and the story settles into a more domestic rhythm before shifting toward a family meeting in Yokohama. Yoshino goes to meet her cousin, Tsubaki Akashigata, who has moved from Kyoto, and Kirishima comes along with her. Tsubaki speaks openly and intensely, showing strong attachment to Yoshino and sharp curiosity about Kirishima.

As the conversation continues, the truth behind Yoshino's supposed kidney surgery comes out. Kirishima has been looking into the scar he noticed while caring for Yoshino, and he concludes that the mark is too shallow to be a real surgery scar. Tsubaki then explains that Yoshino did not actually lose a kidney; instead, she took only blood in exchange for the four million yen Yoshino wanted for the kidney. This reveals why Yoshino had earlier believed she had gone through a kidney-related operation and had experienced side effects.

Near the end, Yoshino receives a school-related phone call and leaves the two of them alone. Before she goes, the atmosphere has already turned serious, because Kirishima has started connecting Tsubaki's family to the larger hospital and organ-trading rumors he has been investigating. Tsubaki, for her part, warns Kirishima that if he turns out to be a real scumbag, she will make sure he never finds Yoshino again, even if she has to use plastic surgery. Kirishima also says he has been crazy about Yoshino before they ever met, and Tsubaki responds to him with suspicion rather than trust.

When Yoshino and Kirishima are finally alone again, they talk about Tsubaki and Yoshino's trust in her. Kirishima reveals that he exchanged contact information with Tsubaki, which leaves the episode on a note of unresolved tension rather than a finished conflict.

Yoshino's state at the end is that she is still moving forward through school and family obligations, while remaining tied to Kirishima and now newly linked to Tsubaki's revelations. Kirishima ends the episode more informed and more suspicious, having confirmed that Yoshino's past procedure was not what it had seemed. Tsubaki remains present as a protective and forceful relative, positioned between Yoshino and Kirishima with her own demands and warnings.

Is there a post-credit scene?

There is no reliable evidence in the available sources that Episode 5 of Yakuza Fiancé: Raise wa Tanin ga Ii has a separate post-credit scene. The episode reviews describe the story ending with Kirishima and Yoshino talking about Tsubaki and Kirishima revealing that he exchanged contact information with her, which reads as the episode's closing scene rather than a post-credit tag.

The episode's ending content centers on: - Yoshino's trust in Tsubaki, despite Tsubaki's intense, threatening protectiveness. - Kirishima's admission that he got Tsubaki's contact info. - The implication that Tsubaki may become a continued point of tension going forward.

Because none of the provided sources explicitly mention a post-credit scene, I can't confirm that one exists from the available evidence.

Who is Tsubaki Akashigata, and why does she matter in Episode 5, "The Camellia Princess"?

Tsubaki Akashigata is introduced in Episode 5 as Yoshino Somei's cousin, and her arrival immediately changes the episode's power balance because she is tied to Yoshino's private life, her medical history, and her future leverage points. The episode makes her important not just as a new character, but as someone who already knows intimate, unsettling details about Yoshino and is willing to use them for her own goals.

What exactly is the relationship between Tsubaki and Kirishima in Episode 5?

Episode 5 turns Tsubaki and Kirishima into a cautious alliance, with the two acting like "frenemies" who can each get something from the other. They exchange contact information and even images, and both appear willing to cooperate when it benefits them, while still keeping their true motives hidden.

What is the significance of Yoshino’s blood in Episode 5?

One of the episode's most shocking plot details is that Tsubaki reveals she has Yoshino's blood and has kept it for unknown reasons. This becomes a major point of concern because it shows that Tsubaki has already taken something personal from Yoshino without permission and may be using it as a form of private control or leverage.

Why does Episode 5 focus so much on Yoshino’s kidney and body?

The episode connects the blood reveal to a bigger bodily threat by making it clear that Yoshino still has her kidney, which deepens the sense that her body has been treated as something other people can possess, monitor, or trade over. That detail makes the situation more alarming because the episode frames Yoshino's body itself as part of the conflict around her, not just her emotions or relationships.

What does Episode 5 reveal about Kirishima’s feelings toward Yoshino?

Episode 5 reinforces that Kirishima is obsessed with Yoshino and will go to extreme lengths to get closer to her. The episode also hints that he was intensely fixated on her before they even met, which makes his exchange with Tsubaki feel less like ordinary cooperation and more like another way he inserts himself into Yoshino's life.

Is this family friendly?

No, this is not especially family-friendly for children, even in an episode that is more conversation-heavy than violent.

Potentially upsetting or objectionable aspects can include: - Yakuza/crime context throughout the series, which makes the overall tone unsuitable for very young viewers. - Threatening or aggressive behavior associated with the central characters and their world. - Mild violence/crime-related tension is part of the series overall, even if this episode is described as having less action than usual. - Romantic/sexual undertones and mature interpersonal dynamics, based on the series' content warnings and premise. - Psychological intensity or manipulation implied by the series' darker crime-drama elements.

For Episode 5 specifically, available descriptions say it is more domestic and dialogue-focused, with no major violence highlighted in that episode review.