
Few manga power systems are as deceptively simple as the one in Chainsaw Man. Every devil is born from a fear, and the strength of that devil is determined by how deeply that fear is embedded in the human psyche. A fear shared by only a handful of people creates a relatively minor threat. A fear that has haunted humanity for centuries can give rise to an entity capable of reshaping reality itself.
What makes Chainsaw Man so interesting is that power is not measured solely through combat ability. Influence, symbolism, and the emotional weight of a concept all play a role. As the manga progressed toward its later arcs, readers learned that some devils represent fears so fundamental to human existence that they transcend conventional life and death. Others wield extraordinary abilities despite being tied to more specialized anxieties. With the series’ finale expanding the lore surrounding the Horsemen, Primal Fears, and Pochita’s true significance, the hierarchy of power for the major devils in Chainsaw Man has become clearer than ever.
15
Blood Devil (Power)
Known better as Power, the blood fiend, the Blood Devil is one of the show’s more conceptually narrow devils. Power’s core association is with blood itself and the dread of bleeding. In practice, this translates to powers that center on blood manipulation and localized threats, such as creating gore or exploiting hemorrhage in opponents.
Compared to the higher-tier devils on this list, her power scope is rather limited in that her abilities. While possessing the general abilities of a devil, which include fear empowerment, contract creation, and reincarnation among the likes, her danger level can incapacitate or terrorize individuals and small groups at best.
She effectively lacks the narrative heft or implied global dread needed to be powerful enough to threaten cities or nations. That weakness is structural. Her original concept, tied only to bodily injury, is profound but common enough that larger collective anxieties can eclipse it.
The Blood Devil is one of the most conceptually limited devils in the series after Chainsaw Man’s finale. Even with blood manipulation abilities, its fear base is relatively narrow and personal. The final chapter reinforces that devils tied to bodily injury alone rarely scale beyond localized destruction.
14
Ghost Devil
Previously contracted to Himeno, the Ghost Devil embodies the fear of ghosts, vanished presences, and unresolved deaths. Comprising a body of flowers and about 20 legs that are actually arms, not much is known about the full extent of the Ghost Devil’s abilities other than its contract with Himeno.
Its ghost physiology ability ranks among the most broken in the series because it allows interaction with the physical world, but not the other way around. This means that it can make itself and its contractor selectively tangible or otherwise, as it did against the Eternity Devil.
However, it lacks the raw, destructive output of devils born of broader societal dread like the War Devil, for instance. The Ghost Devil’s strengths are subtlety and persistence: it can linger, manipulate perception, and exploit grief. Its weakness, however, is the scope of its origin concept, which earns it a near-bottom placement.
13
Doll Devil
The Doll Devil represents the uncanny fear of lifelike objects and inanimate bodies animated against their will. Its real appearance remains unknown in the series. Typical of a devil, the Doll Devil grows stronger through fear and can also make contracts with humans for a price.
The only known contract it has in the series is with Santa Claus, which enables her to create dolls from humans through physical contact, a power that is effective and highly contagious. In battle, this translates to creating instant armies of human dolls, in a puppeteering act of carnage.
The dolls can turn their arms into blades, but Santa must stay close to them to maintain control. Essentially, the Doll Devil can cause disproportionate psychological harm and localized carnage, but it cannot scale to a national-level catastrophe without external boosts in power.
12
Bomb Devil (Reze)
The Bomb Devil manifests most memorably through Reze, whose human form masks devastating explosive power, and like Denji, she’s also a Devil-Human Hybrid. In direct conflict, Reze demonstrates lethal single-target power: timed detonations, compact nuclear-like blasts, and a capacity to level structures.
As a Soviet spy, her combat lethality is among the highest in the series, making the Bomb Girl arc a crisis for Denji and the rest of the Public Safety officers. In her hybrid form, she can create explosions from parts of her body powerful enough to destroy buildings while taking no damage.
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Nevertheless, her explosive force, even at its greatest, is episodic. Reze’s threat level is immediate and violent, but not necessarily sustainable in battles of attrition due to a weakness to water. The devil’s power is spectacular and strategic in hit-and-run scenarios. Still, she loses ground against devils whose concepts command long-term fear and enable control or reconstitution across hosts.
11
Angel Devil (Angel)
Described by Makima as the second-strongest member of Tokyo Special Division 4, the Angel Devil is a paradoxical being. Born of humanity’s fear of angels, or more precisely, the unsettling mix of reverence and dread toward divine judgment, Angel embodies quiet danger.
Outwardly calm and soft-spoken, Angel’s devil appearance hides a lethal ability: with a single touch, it drains the lifespan of anyone nearby, converting those lost years into powerful weapons. This mechanic makes Angel one of the most efficient killers in the Public Safety ranks and, by extension, the Chainsaw Man universe, despite its pacifist temperament.
However, the Angel Devil’s unwillingness to fight unless ordered limits its overall threat level. Combining an emotionally detached yet oddly empathetic figure, it represents how divinity and death coexist uneasily in the human mind. Its power may not rival cosmic devils like Darkness or Death, but the sheer intimacy of its ability — death by touch — makes it terrifying.
10
Hell Devil
The Hell Devil is tied to the infernal imagery and the fear of never-ending torment in Hell. Taking the form of a centaur with a featureless head and constantly burning flesh, its appeal in canon lies in visceral dread rather than demonstrated feats.
As a devil, the Hell Devil possesses all of the standard devil abilities and is much more powerful than the average devil hunter. However, the extent of its powers is unknown because of a lack of canonical feats other than existing on Earth and Hell simultaneously.
The fiend’s most notable feat is sending individuals to Hell for eternal punishment, as seen in its contract with Santa Claus and its dealings with the anti-Makima Squad. It ranks above narrowly physical devils because its concept is broader, but below devils that have altered geopolitics or caused mass casualties across countries.
9
Famine Devil (Fami)
A member of the Four Horsemen in Chainsaw Man, Fami the Famine Devil is the embodiment of hunger, famine, starvation, and scarcity. Initially thought to be the Death Devil, Fami’s potential for large-scale harm is substantial because food insecurity is a persistent social fear. Unlike her sisters, Fami’s personality is meek and outwardly emotional, which makes her appear somewhat weak.
However, her personality is simply a reflection of her twisted sense of what humanity’s salvation should be: Release from suffering through death. Like the Angel Devil, she’s also able to absorb life force through bodily contact, with no exceptions, be it a devil, human, or animal.
This makes her strategically dangerous than many specialist devils in the story. In the devil hierarchy, Famine sits comfortably above single-incident killers because its concept taps systemic vulnerability and can scale with social conditions, and simply because she’s one of the Horsemen.
8
Gun Devil
The Gun Devil holds a special place in the Chainsaw Man universe because of its immense historical impact. The embodiment of guns and firearms, the Gun Devil is canonically responsible for a death toll of 1.2 million upon its first-ever appearance on Earth in just five minutes.
That documented lethality provides a clear basis for its high placement. Possessing the standard abilities of a devil, the Gun Devil is contracted to different world governments. Its domain includes rapidly precise distributed violence delivered through firearms, and being able to accurately target and fire headshots, killing every male adult within a kilometer radius, means it’s impossible to defend against.
The Gun Devil’s weakness is conceptual, as societies can, in theory, reduce fear through disarmament, cultural change, or contingency planning. Nevertheless, the Gun Devil proved in-story that when fear aligns with technological proliferation, destruction becomes catastrophic and near-uncontrollable.
7
War Devil (Yoru)
Another of the Four Horsemen, the War Devil, is built on the global fear of war. As Yoru, the War Devil, can inspire combat, command host bodies strategically, and escalate violence by stoking the instruments of war.
Although her true appearance is unknown, she currently inhabits Asa Mitaka’s body. Ability-wise, Yoru possesses all standard devil abilities, but she’s also potentially one of the most powerful devils to exist, despite her weak introduction. Due to the long absence of war in the human world, Yoru’s current capabilities are only a fraction of her original self.
She’s capable of turning anything she owns into weapons of destruction with strength proportional to the guilt that she/ Asa feels in making the weapon. Additionally, Yoru’s capacity to convert the fear of war and all its related concepts into logistical power makes her incredibly fearsome for any opponent.
6
Control Devil (Makima / Nayuta)
A member of the Four Horsemen, embodied by Makima, the Control Devil represents domination and conquest. Makima’s control-based abilities allow her to override the will of other beings, bind devils through contracts, and bend systems to her purpose on the condition that she deems herself to be superior.
On that capacity alone, the Control Devil is a direct threat to all of humanity’s agencies and institutions. Makima, as the Control Devil, is one of the series’ most terrifying characters. Feared by humans, devils, and fiends alike, the Control Devil is capable of forcing humans into contracts, as Makima did with the Prime Minister of Japan.
Additionally, she’s also capable of force manipulation, an ability similarly used by the Darkness Devil. In all, the Control Devil ranks high because it can neutralize other devils indirectly and shape outcomes without open warfare. Makima’s legacy remains intact even after her death, and the finale reinforces the long-term persistence of control as a concept.
In Chainsaw Man’s rewritten timeline created by Pochita’s self-erasure, Nayuta assumes Makima’s narrative function in Denji’s life. This reinforces a key thematic idea: control is not tied to a single individual, it is cyclical, reborn, and structurally embedded in human society.







