Kamen Rider Zeztz Episode 27 helmet closeup discussing Sieg and dream world powers

Kamen Rider Zeztz 27

Kamen Rider Zeztz Episode 27 Proves Sieg Changes Everything Rider Tears

Watch Analysis

Kamen Rider Zeztz Episode 27: Sieg Makes a Great Show Even Better

Kamen Rider Zeztz Episode 27 proves something interesting.

A show that is already great can still get even better.

The arrival of Kamen Rider Dawn, the growing presence of the Nightmare Rider, and especially the introduction of Sieg are pushing the series into a new phase. The show already had a strong foundation, but this episode expands the world in ways that make everything more dynamic and unpredictable.

What really stands out is how Sieg changes the rules of the story.

Here are three ways Episode 27 shows that.

Sieg’s Nightmare World

One of the most fascinating scenes in the episode takes place in Sieg’s strange domain.

It looks like some kind of warehouse filled with imprisoned nightmares. Shadows are locked in cages and forced to fight each other for Sieg’s amusement.

At one point he releases two of them and lets them battle. One of the nightmares survives and the other is altered and tortured in some way. We do not fully understand what Sieg is doing yet, but the scene establishes something important.

Sieg is operating from a place we have never seen before.

This raises a lot of questions. Is this space part of the dream world? Is it something separate from the dream realm entirely? And why does Sieg have control over so many nightmares?

Just introducing this location expands the lore of the series.

Sieg Can Enter Other People’s Dreams

The second major reveal is Sieg’s ability to enter the dream world directly.

When Nox experiences a nightmare and Baku enters it, Sieg appears there as well. That alone is interesting, but what really matters is that Sieg is powerful enough to interfere with the battle taking place inside the dream.

At one point he redirects an attack and stops a finishing move that was about to destroy a nightmare.

That moment tells us something very important about Sieg.

He is not just observing the dream world. He can manipulate it.

And that means he is operating on a completely different level from most of the characters we have seen so far.

Sieg Can Rewrite the Dream

The most surprising development comes at the end of the episode.

Earlier we saw the Wolf Nightmare lose a fight in Sieg’s strange prison arena. Sieg modified that nightmare in some way and placed something over its face. At the time we did not know what that meant.

Later the same nightmare appears again inside a new dream scenario.

But the dream itself has changed.

Instead of the usual subconscious nightmare setting, the environment becomes something closer to a gang conflict. The Wolf Nightmare now appears as a kind of gang leader with a cybernetic mask.

This suggests something new.

Sieg may not only be entering dreams. He may be able to rewrite them completely.

If that is true, then Sieg represents a huge expansion of the show’s power system.

Expanding the Lore Without Slowing the Story

What makes Episode 27 impressive is that all of these ideas are introduced in an entertaining way.

The episode does not stop to explain everything in detail. Instead it delivers new lore through action, strange imagery, and mysterious character behavior.

The result is that the world of Zeztz feels larger without the story losing momentum.

Yuya Takahashi has always been good at layering mysteries into his Rider series, and this episode shows that skill again.

Final Thoughts

Episode 27 adds a powerful new piece to the puzzle.

Sieg is not just another villain or rival Rider. He introduces new rules to the dream world and creates new threats for every faction in the story.

CODE must deal with him.
The Lady must deal with him.
Baku must deal with him.

And we still do not fully understand what Sieg actually is.

If the show continues exploring these ideas, the second half of Kamen Rider Zeztz could become even more interesting than the first.

Inspector’s Notes

What Does the CODE Cat Mean?

CODE’s logo has a cat on it.

Minami’s necklace, which was focused on in her first appearance, has a cat on it.

There is now a black cat jumpoing around Agent Three and Agent Zero in the intro.

What’s the deal? What does it mean? What does it represent? Will we actually see a plot-significant cat in the show at some point? Maybe as the final villain?

Ghost Stories/Gakkō no Kaidan I’m looking at you…

Code Somnia Already Happened

Did YOU Already Know Sieg?

Is Sieg a Trigun Reference?

How Did Sieg See Baku’s Premonition?

Where Is Sieg Actually Living?

Do Nightmares Ever Really Die in Zeztz?

Did Zeztz 27 Make Baku a Baller?

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