Ryomen Sukuna Cosplay Guide 2026: Kimono, Markings & the King of Curses

Ryomen Sukuna Cosplay Guide 2026: Kimono, Markings & the King of Curses

Ryomen Sukuna, the King of Curses, is one of the most requested Jujutsu Kaisen cosplays heading into the 2026 convention season, and it is a completely different build from the Tokyo Jujutsu High students. Instead of a school uniform, Sukuna's look is built around a flowing dark kimono, his distinctive tattoo-like facial markings, and the menacing presence of the strongest curse in the series. This guide covers the outfit piece by piece, how to get the markings right, how to nail the sizing, and how our 30-day returns let you commit to a bold character build with confidence. Browse the rest of the cast in our Jujutsu Kaisen collection and find the right hair in our cosplay wigs collection.

The Sukuna Kimono: What He Actually Wears

Sukuna's signature outfit is a dark, loose-fitting kimono worn open at the chest, cinched with a sash, and paired with wide sleeves that give the character his imposing silhouette. It is deliberately different from the structured, high-collared jujutsu uniform the students wear, which is exactly why it stands out in a group photo. Our Jujutsu Kaisen Ryomen Sukuna Kimono cosplay costume is cut for that draped, open-front look rather than a tight modern fit, so plan to wear it with the collar relaxed the way Sukuna does. If you want to add height and menace for photos, a pair of tall geta or simple dark sandals completes the profile without any extra tailoring.

Getting the Markings Right

The detail that turns a dark kimono into an unmistakable Sukuna is the markings. In his incarnated form, Sukuna wears a set of black tattoo-style lines across his face, including the paired lines on each cheek and the second set of eyes, plus matching lines running down his forearms and torso. You do not need a costume to reproduce these, they are a makeup and body-paint job: use a smudge-proof black liner or face paint and work from reference art so the cheek lines and forehead marks sit symmetrically. If you are cosplaying his four-armed, four-eyed true form, the extra eyes are usually done with makeup or appliqués rather than a costume piece. Practicing the markings once before the con is the single biggest thing that sells the character.

Hair and Finishing Touches

Sukuna's spiky, two-toned pink hair is as recognizable as his markings, so the wig matters as much as the kimono. Look for a short, heavily spiked style you can shape upward, and match the pink tone to your reference. Because the character is defined by the combination of the open kimono, the black facial lines, and the pink spikes, getting all three to read at once is what makes the cosplay land instantly. Browse styles and colors in our cosplay wigs collection so the hair matches out of the box instead of needing a full restyle.

Prefer a Figure? Sukuna on the Shelf

Not everyone wants to cosplay the King of Curses, and Sukuna is also one of the best figures to anchor a Jujutsu Kaisen collection. We carry the Banpresto x Bandai Jujutsu Kaisen Sukuna figure for a solo statement piece, and the Jukon no Kata Megumi Fushiguro and Sukuna figure if you want the character captured in one of his most memorable confrontations. Both are officially licensed Banpresto pieces, so they pair naturally with the rest of a JJK display.

Get the Sizing Right Before You Order

Sizing is where most cosplay orders go wrong, and a kimono-style costume is no exception. Cosplay pieces are cut differently from everyday clothing, and sizing varies between makers, so do not order by your usual clothing label. Before you buy, take three measurements with a soft tape, chest, waist, and hips, plus your height, and match those numbers to the size chart on the product page. Every costume we stock comes with a size chart spanning XS to 3XL. Because the Sukuna kimono is meant to hang open and loose, if you fall between two sizes you can size up for a more dramatic drape, or stay true-to-size for a cleaner line. Measuring first is the best way to avoid a fit problem.

30-Day Returns Take the Risk Out of It

Trying a bold new character is more fun when the order is reversible. Magic Stories accepts returns within 30 days, so if the Sukuna kimono does not fit or drape the way you expected, you can arrange an exchange or a return within that window. That safety net is what lets you commit to a standout costume you have never worn, even for your first Jujutsu Kaisen build.

Quick Answers

  • Is Sukuna hard to cosplay? Sukuna is a moderate build: the kimono itself is simple to wear, but the facial markings and spiked pink hair take some prep. Practice the black cheek and forehead lines once before the convention and match a spiky pink wig, and the character reads instantly.
  • What does Sukuna wear? Sukuna wears a dark, loose kimono worn open at the chest with wide sleeves and a sash, rather than the structured Tokyo Jujutsu High school uniform the students wear. The open, draped fit is a key part of his silhouette.
  • What are Sukuna's markings? They are black tattoo-style lines across his face, including paired lines on each cheek and a second set of eyes, plus matching lines on his forearms and torso. They are done with makeup and body paint, not a costume piece.
  • How do I get the right size for a Sukuna kimono? Measure your chest, waist, and hips with a soft tape plus your height, then match those numbers to the size chart on the product page, which spans XS to 3XL. Because the kimono hangs open and loose, you can size up for a more dramatic drape.
  • Can I return a Sukuna costume if it does not fit? Yes. Magic Stories accepts returns within 30 days, so you can arrange an exchange or return if the fit or drape is not what you expected.
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