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The so-called “hundred-man killing contest” refers to an alleged competition between two Japanese junior officers, Toshiaki Mukai and Tsuyoshi Noda, during the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937. The event was reported in Japanese newspapers at the time as a race to see who could kill 100 people with a sword while advancing toward Nanjing. The story appeared in serialized, propagandistic articles meant to portray battlefield heroics to the Japanese public.
Historians generally agree that the published stories were sensationalized, deeply unreliable, and possibly fabricated or exaggerated for wartime morale. The articles blended fiction, bravado, and unclear battlefield reporting. No independent, verifiable documentation confirms the contest as described by the newspapers.