“Daredevil Just Broke His One Rule—And He Doesn’t Regret It!”
Matt Murdock, better known as Daredevil, has always lived by a strict moral code—no killing, no matter how bad the villain. But in Daredevil #19, that rule is shattered. And the most surprising part? He doesn’t even feel guilty about it.

Daredevil’s Deadliest Dilemma
For years, Matt Murdock has danced on the razor’s edge between heroism and vengeance. He’s fought crime in Hell’s Kitchen with his fists and the courtroom with his sharp legal mind. But 2025 brings a new kind of nightmare—one born from his own sins.
The latest Daredevil run has introduced a terrifying twist: literal demons feeding off Matt’s past mistakes. These spectral entities attach themselves to significant figures in his life, amplifying their worst traits. Wilson Fisk, aka Kingpin, became the embodiment of Greed. But the most dangerous of them all? Wrath—the personification of Daredevil’s own suppressed rage.
And Wrath wasn’t just another demon. It found the perfect host: a young orphan who blamed Daredevil for his father’s death.
A Life-or-Death Decision
Wrath knew exactly how to break Daredevil. The demon abducted two people: Matt’s lifelong best friend, Foggy Nelson, and his arch-nemesis, Bullseye. Then, it tossed both men off a rooftop, forcing Matt to make the ultimate choice—save one, let the other fall.
For Daredevil, the answer was obvious. He hurled a lifeline toward Bullseye but didn’t move to secure him. Instead, he focused all his strength on saving Foggy. The result? Bullseye plummeted to his death, and with that final act, the Wrath demon dissipated. Its mission was complete—it had pushed Matt Murdock into acting as judge, jury, and executioner.
The Devil in the Details
Now, technically, you could argue that Daredevil didn’t kill Bullseye. He made an effort—just not enough of one. But for Matt, the bigger revelation wasn’t that Bullseye was dead. It was that he didn’t care.
“If I was truly a man of God, I would agonize over my decision,” Matt reflects. “But I’ve never felt more like a devil.”
And that’s the real shocker. Daredevil has struggled with guilt for his entire life, constantly questioning his faith and the weight of his actions. But this time? No guilt, no second-guessing. Just a quiet, unsettling acceptance that maybe—just maybe—some people deserve to fall.
What’s Next for Daredevil?
This moment marks a turning point for Matt Murdock. Has he crossed a line he can’t come back from? Or has he finally embraced the truth—that in a city drowning in corruption, sometimes the devil needs to play God?
One thing is certain: Hell’s Kitchen will never look at Daredevil the same way again.