At first glance, it sounds like a random word generator. Breakfast? Darts? Work? And how does Boruto Uzumaki, the son of the Seventh Hokage, fit into this?
This foreshadows his entire character arc. Boruto doesn’t need to destroy his enemies like Naruto did. He needs to outmaneuver them, preserve his allies, and return home for breakfast. There is no flashy jutsu in "breakfast dart work." No Rasengan. No Chidori. Just a boy in a tracksuit, breathing hard, legs burning, while his dad signs paperwork in the Hokage office a mile away.
So tomorrow morning, before you scroll Instagram or check your email, ask yourself: Did I do my Boruto Breakfast Dart Work today?
By Episode 65 (the Momoshiki fight), that morning routine vanished. The poster argued that Boruto’s reliance on the Scientific Ninja Tool was a direct result of .
Boruto Uzumaki is one of the most talented ninjas in history. He mastered the Rasengan in three days. He has the Byakugan and the Karma seal. But without the "dart work"—the thankless, sweaty, 6 AM sprints after a bowl of miso soup—that talent rots.
Don’t hustle before you’ve anchored yourself in gratitude. Eat your metaphorical breakfast (family, rest, joy) before you sprint into the chaos. Lesson 2: Darts are for Evasion, Not Aggression Traditional ninja training focuses on hitting targets. Throwing darts (kunai) at boards. But "dart work" in Boruto’s case is about moving like a dart —sudden, sharp, unpredictable. It’s defensive. It teaches him that the best fight is the one you can dodge.