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Backstory

    God 
The big man upstairs himself. He doesn't make a physical appearance in the series, but he is mentioned by various characters and, if Blue Fangs is to be believed, actually does exist in the setting.

    Leon Belmont 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/belmont.png

A French nobleman that moved to Wallachia and founded the Belmont clan.


  • Adaptational Nationality: In the games, Leon was a European knight with a French name, but his origin isn't otherwise explicitly stated. He's explicitly French here.
  • Epic Flail: He wielded the Morning Star, which was presumably used against Dracula if the latter's reaction to seeing it is any indication.
  • Famous Ancestor: For the Belmonts. He's the one who started the family's monster hunting and first wielded a lot of the artifacts they used.
  • Greater-Scope Paragon: He serves as this for the series since he started the feud with Dracula and left some precious treasures to be used against him like the Morning Star.
  • Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: Leon had blond hair, appropriate for his heroic knight look.
  • Hero of Another Story: Trevor only alludes to the great adventures Leon must have had.
  • Odd Friendship: We don't learn what lead to Leon, a French nobleman, teaming up with Trefor, a Celt wanderer. Whatever the reason, their bond was strong enough that centuries later, his descendant Trevor was named after him.
  • Our Founder: His portrait hangs prominently in the stairwell that leads into the Belmont Hold, as he is responsible for setting down the family business in Wallachia.
  • Posthumous Character: Naturally, as he died centuries ago and all we ever see of him is his painting in the Belmont Hold.

Season 1

    Mrs. Djuvara 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/djuvara___01.png
"I don't care what they say. I won't take joy in that woman being killed by the Church. I'm here remembering her instead."
Voiced by: Moira Quirk
An elderly resident of the village of Lupu who was once a patient of Lisa Tepes.
  • Nice Girl: She's very grateful of Lisa being the only one to treat her illness. She refuses to watch her doctor being burned alive by the church and instead takes the time to mourn her loss.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: She only appears in two episodes but she is how Dracula learned of his wife, Lisa, being taken away and burned alive by the church, eventually setting the plot into motion.
  • You Will Be Spared: When she informs Dracula of Lisa's execution, he warns her to take her family and leave the country. He spares her in Lisa's name, perhaps because she was kind to Lisa and is bringing flowers to their destroyed home, perhaps because Lisa cared for her, but he clearly has no affection or sympathy for Mrs. Djuvara beyond this.

    Bosha and Kob 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tumblr_inline_osyv5g9oja1shl8uw_1280.png
Bosha voiced by: Jonathan Lipow (English), Mauricio Pérez (Latin American Spanish)
Kob voiced by: Matt Lowe (English), Julio Bernal (Latin American Spanish)

Two Wallachian peasants who gang up on Trevor.
  • Bar Brawl: They start one with Trevor.
  • Berserk Button: The upper class, specifically the Belmonts.
  • Big Guy, Little Guy: Kob is the big guy and Bosha's the little guy.
  • Bullying a Dragon: Averted. As the protagonist and a Belmont, one would expect Trevor to easily best the bar patrons when they pick a fight with him. Surprisingly, the peasants give the thoroughly drunk and tired Trevor almost as good as they get, but it still ends with him walking out of the bar upright whilst they don't meaning Trevor won against them.
  • Chairman of the Brawl: Kob breaks a wooden chair over Trevor.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Bosha has a moment of this.
    Bosha: Pitir! We were wondering if you spot any attractive sheep on your way.
  • Eat the Rich: They both despise the upper class, which is part of the reason why they gang up on Trevor.
  • Groin Attack: They use this to great effect against Trevor.
  • Half-Sibling Angst: Heavily downplayed. Bosha doesn't regard Kob as his half-brother, but that doesn't seem to stop them from getting along.
  • Insistent Terminology: Kob says that the two of them are brothers while Bosha insists that they're cousins.
    Bosha: We might have the same father, but you came out of my aunt!
  • Mr. Exposition: While antagonizing Trevor, Bosha provides insight on the lore regarding the Belmont clan for the audience.
  • Mugging the Monster: These two thought they could take on a Belmont, a trained Hunter of Monsters. Needless to say, they get their butts kicked.
  • Noodle Incident: The entirety of Bosha's encounter with a man that had sex with one of his goats is this.
  • No-Sell: Trevor is a trained and experienced fighter, but his unarmed blows have no effect on the large and muscular Kob.

Season 3

    Sumi and Taka — Warning: Walking Spoiler 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/7knh53vo3xk41.png
Sumi voiced by: Rila Fukushima (English), Kanako Miyamoto (Japanese), Jocelyn Robles (Latin American Spanish)
Taka voiced by: Toru Uchikado (English), Shuntaro Karato (Japanese), Miguel Ángel Ruiz (Latin American Spanish)

Two Japanese vampire hunters who come to Alucard, seeking knowledge to better understand how to help save their people from the (now deceased) vampiress Cho.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Taka has sex with Alucard alongside Sumi. It is left vague whether he had any real sexual attraction towards Alucard or if it was all an act.
  • Book Dumb: Taka at least, is this. In a dialogue with Sumi, he complained that all the reading he did that day had made him exhausted. Sumi tells him that he's just lazy though she does agree it was a lot.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Appearing as a very friendly duo at first, they quickly reveal themselves to be paranoid and treacherous ingrates who turn on Alucard because they perceive him to be manipulating them as he isn't helping them fast enough. This proves to be their undoing.
  • Bodyguarding a Badass: Cho had them serve her as part of a human honor guard she kept just because it amused her. She'd often order them to allow a hunter through and make them watch as she fought, in order to break their will.
  • Cynicism Catalyst: Their betrayal devastates Alucard, leading to him impaling their dead bodies at the gates of his castle as a deterrent just like his father, having developed a renewed sense of misanthropy from the experience.
  • Dead Guy on Display: Their bodies are posthumously impaled vertically by Alucard to be left as a warning to anyone who might venture close to his castle.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: The worst thing that Alucard does to them is withholding some information (that he is under no obligation to give) so they will keep him company for longer. That doesn't justify tying him up and trying to murder him in the slightest bit.
  • False Friend: They are this to Alucard, ironically due to their paranoid belief that he is this for them.
  • Fan Disservice: They're both attractive individuals who are shown fully nude and trying to have a threesome with Alucard, but this turns out to be a Honey Trap where they can murder Alucard in the act for perceived betrayal. Not to mention it's intercut with scenes of Gorn.
  • Fatal Flaw: Distrust and impatience. Alucard was more than happy to reveal everything he knew with only minor things but because he wasn't doing so fast enough, they were willing to try and kill him under the justification he had betrayed them. Naturally this leads to their deaths when Alucard calls his sword via magic and slices through their necks.
  • Freudian Excuse: Being kept imprisoned and enslaved by a sadistic vampire, and then apparently being lied to and cheated by everyone on their journey, left them jaded and paranoid. So they put on a friendly act to earn Alucard's trust, then see his not fully helping them in the exact way they wanted as him manipulating them, and thus an excuse to murder him.
  • Guys Smash, Girls Shoot: Inverted. Taka is the one with the bow and arrow while Sumi handles the sword.
  • He Who Fights Monsters: Sumi's and Taka's hatred of vampires has corrupted them entirely. Not only do they try to murder Alucard because he might be leading them on (no doubt influenced by his half-vampire status), but they planned to build an empire of mass murderers not unlike the vampires wanted, only with the opposite side as slaughter.
  • Hidden Buxom: After she gets nude to shag Alucard (actually, to kill him), we see her big jubblies for a few moments.
  • Hypocrite: When Sumi and Taka drop the act, they accuse Alucard of lying to them and manipulating them with an ulterior motive, something they themselves are more than guilty of in their relationship with Alucard.
  • Improperly Paranoid: Their paranoia over Alucard keeping secrets is unwarranted. While Alucard told them the truth about the castle's moving mechanism being broken and about the Belmont hold, Sumi and Taka think he must be keeping secrets or lying to them. This gets the both of them killed by Alucard when they spring a Honey Trap on him. He even says "I never lied to you" after he commits the act, showing that their paranoia was completely unnecessary.
  • Meaningful Name: Taka is Japanese for "hawk". A bird famous for keen eyesight is the perfect homage for a master archer.
  • Never Be Hurt Again: They have been lied to and cheated by everyone they've encountered in their travels and they betray Alucard because they believe he will do so again.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Their interactions with Alucard throughout the season is very amicable as they enjoy learning from him, even playfully dogpile him during a training session, and understanding that he is lonely due to having to kill his father. They then seduce and have sex with him while acting very intense as a way to “reward” him, which is followed by a failed attempt to kill him that ends with their deaths.
  • Slashed Throat: Courtesy of Alucard's sword which is summoned in the last minute to rescue him while he is restrained by the duo and it slashes their necks on a single swing.
  • Take Over the World: When the duo turn on Alucard, they explain that they plan to work out how to move the Castle and find out all of Alucard's secrets to use to make their own empire.
  • Teamwork Seduction: They both show up to solicit sex with Alucard at the same time, cooperating to seduce him with the goal of killing him during the act.
  • Theme Initials: Taka and Sumi are Alucard's potential Replacement Goldfishes for Trevor and Sypha.
  • Vampire Hunter: Both of them, though not as proficient as Trevor.
  • Youthful Freckles: Taka has freckles across his face.

    The Judge — Warning: Walking Spoiler 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thejudgejpg.jpg
"It has its little pleasures."
Voiced by: Jason Isaacs (English), Hiroki Matsukawa (Japanese), Jorge Badillo (Latin American Spanish)

The judge of the village of Lindenfeld, who serves as the local authority. He enlists the help of Trevor and Sypha to investigate the local priory, which seems to have been taken over by an evil cult.
  • Anti-Hero: The Judge is a serious, gruff Control Freak but means well when caring for his home. Becomes a subversion when it's revealed he was a serial killer, with many of his victims being children.
  • Asshole Victim: He gets stabbed to death by Sala, but when it's revealed he was a serial killer of children, you no longer feel sorry for him.
  • Badass Army: He leads a militia that not only not fear demons, but can properly dispose of them without the need of a hunter like Trevor.
  • Bald of Evil: Initially presented as an aversion, being completely clean shaven on the top and leads the defense of his people in the front. Unfortunately, it's revealed at the end tha the is in fact played straight.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: He comes off as a reasonable, if gruff man, but turns out to be a serial killer.
  • Child Hater: Most of his victims are children, whom he at least partially targets because he views them as a disruption of his town's order.
  • The Comically Serious: The Judge is a stern strict man and that's often used for comedic effect when he plays off of Saint Germain or the heroes.
  • Control Freak: Adamant about ensuring people do as he tells them and that his town is run as smoothly as possible. This is ostensibly one reason why he murders people — to thin out disobedience.
  • Evil Old Folks: Double Subverted. He's a bit stern but is otherwise an affable and even-handed man. Then the finale of Season 3 reveals him to be a Serial Killer of children.
  • Dark Is Evil: Initially subverted. While he physically resembles a Hanging Judge with his dark robes, bald head and stern disposition, he presents himself as a benevolent leader. Double subverted when it's revealed he is actually a serial killer.
  • Dark Secret: The Judge is actually a Serial Killer that arranges the deaths of his victims by sending them to a trap outside the town's limits and later recovers their shoes as souvenirs to be collected in his house. He arranges Sala to be killed this way and reveals it to Sypha after being mortally wounded.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: Kills a small boy because he runs around town too much. His other victims' "crimes" were likely similarly petty given his controlling nature.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: He takes his responsibility of safeguarding Lindenfeld very seriously, and is contemptuous of the local evil cult and horrified when they sacrifice the entire town for their ritual. All this, despite being revealed to be a serial killer afterwards.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": When asked about his name, he insists on being called merely by his title.
  • Evil All Along: He appears to be a Reasonable Authority Figure. Until it turns out he murders anyone who violates his rules.
  • Frontline General: When Dracula's Night Creatures attacked his town, he lead his men in the front and impressively, completely unarmed.
  • Hanging Judge: Double Subverted. He looks like one, but is actually a relatively friendly fellow that governs the town with a fair hand and avoids clashing with Prior Sala despite not fully trusting him. Turns out he isn't quite as noble as we thought, secretly punishing even the most petty crime with death.
  • Hypocrite: He chews out Sala for endangering Lindenfeld, but the Judge has been murdering the townspeople he believed were troublemakers.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Jerk: After shouting at a boy for running in the street, he softens and gives him directions to a secret tree in the forest and tells him to have some apples. Turns out there's a Pit Trap in front of the tree and he sends people there to get rid of them.
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: For most of the series, he aids Trevor and Sypha in their endeavors to stop Sala and his men. His conversations with them also paint him as a stern man who cares about his town. It's terrifyingly subverted by the season finale with the revelation that he was a serial child murderer who collected their shoes as trophies.
  • Serial Killer: Season 3 finale revealed that The Judge was a murderer of the children in the village that went missing, using the evil creatures of the night as cover. Both Trevor and Sypha are completely disgusted when they learn this.
  • Taking You with Me: When he realizes that Prior Sala has fatally stabbed him, he tricks the cult leader into following his direction, which leads to a pitfall death trap. He dies knowing he's going to Hell and he's eagerly waits for Sala to join him so he can kill him again.
  • Villainous Breakdown: His brief breakdown upon the realization that he has condemned his people to death by waiting for them to get indoors.
  • Villainous Valor: He's a depraved child-murdering monster, and leads his army as a Frontline General and refuses to back down. Even when stabbed, he tricks Sala into disposing of himself in a last-ditch maneuver.
  • Walking Spoiler: Most of his entries here spoil one of the final reveals of the third season.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Several of his victims were innocent children.

    The Collector 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_merchant_collector.png
"If you have a God, then you probably have a Devil. And if God created everything, then he also made Hell."
Voiced By: Navid Negahban (English), Blas García (Latin American Spanish)

"I have a feeling you haven't received many gifts in your life, and it pleases me to improve that balance."

A merchant encountered by Isaac in Tunis. He treats Isaac with kindness and even offers him a distance mirror.
  • Buy Them Off: Gives Isaac a gift to get himself a "get out of Hell free" card, but mostly as a joke to amuse Isaac.
  • Blind and the Beast: Played with. He's blind, but he knows well enough what Isaac is, and he himself is perhaps as beastly.
  • Cool Old Guy: He gives Isaac a distance mirror as a gift because he believes Isaac hasn't received many gifts in his life and wants to improve that balance. It's enough that Isaac is willing to extend mercy to his city as a result of his kindness.
  • Handicapped Badass: Blind, but heavily implied to have personal experience bending Hell to his will.
  • The Nose Knows: He can smell Hell on Isaac, and mark him as a forgemaster as a result. That can be expected, since he knows well enough the marks of Hell, but he can also smell Isaac's faith and accurately peg his religious denomination.
  • Self-Deprecation: Cheerfully admits he'll probably go to Hell and so it's a good idea to get in Isaac's good graces.
  • Uncertain Doom: It's not shown whether he is slaughtered with the rest of the village by the Night Creatures or whether he was ignored for the kindness he showed Isaac.

    The Captain 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thecapitanjpg_0.jpg
"If you don't have your own story, you become part of someone else's."
Voiced By: Lance Reddick (English), Hiroki Matsukawa (Japanese), Humberto Vélez (Latin American Spanish)

"I've been cruel. It's a cruel world. Maybe we do all deserve to die. But maybe we could be better, too. If you kill us all, you end human cruelty, yes. But you end human kindness, too."

A ship captain that ferries Isaac and his demons from Tunis to Europe and engages in philosophical debates with him in the meantime.
  • Anachronism Stew: How does he have a modern Jamican accent nearly two decades before Europe's arrival in the New World? The mysteries pile on.
  • The Anti-Nihilist: The Captain agrees that mankind is capable of great cruelty, and perhaps may deserve complete extinction, as Isaac claims. But the captain points out that humanity is also capable of great kindness and that killing off all humans will also destroy their kindness, which makes Isaac question his goals. He also encourages Isaac to try and teach people with his knowledge to be better in the aftermath of his campaign instead of killing them off.
  • Bald of Authority: He's the Captain of his own ship, and he has enough charismatic leadership to easily talk Isaac out of killing him and his men.
  • Bald Mystic: The philosophical conversations he has with Isaac show just how wise this bald ferryman is. And his wisdom does not fall on deaf ears, as Isaac rethinks his entire plan to take over the world because of their conversations.
  • The Charmer: The fact that the Captain was able to not only talk Isaac out of killing him and his men, but also potentially reevaluating his mentality speaks volumes of Captain's persuasion skills.
  • Coat Cape: The Captain wears his coat over his shoulders in this fashion.
  • Cool Old Guy: This eccentric old man manages to gain the respect of a omnicidal forgemaster with his unflippant attitude in face of danger and wisdom during their conversation.
  • Dissonant Serenity: He isn't one bit disturbed by Isaac and his demon army, and manages to remain completely unscathed despite the very likely prospect that him and his crew could be easily massacred by them.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": Due to having apparently forgotten his own name, he simply goes by as "the Captain".
  • Guile Hero: He's amicable to Isaac, doesn't betray him, and leaves as soon as Isaac gets to his destination. All of these decisions likely kept him and his crew alive.
  • Humans Are Flawed: The captain counters Isaac's Humans Are Bastards mindset by mentioning that humans are just as capable of being nice or even reasonable as they are selfish.
  • It Amused Me: The captain willingly ferried Isaac because he was bored and knew Isaac at the very least wouldn't be a bore.
  • Pragmatic Villainy: Not done by himself, but he invokes this when Isaac ponders about killing him and his crew and taking the ship himself. The Captain points out that he can't sail a ship — something that isn't easy as it seems — so he needs him.
  • Seen It All: He says so himself, which may explain his extremely muted reaction to facing Isaac's demon army.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: His meeting with Isaac wasn't long but his philosophy of living for the future and trying to improve the world rather then destroy it are pivotal to Isaac's character development and ending.
  • Take Over the World: A more benevolent example. He suggests Isaac should try to rule humanity instead of destroy it, since he could teach them to rise above their wickedness.
  • Wisdom from the Gutter: The Captain's words manage to get Isaac to rethink his original conquest of humanity extinction.

    Miranda 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/miranda_1.png
"There are worse things in the world than vampires in Styria, Isaac. There are worse things than betrayal."
Voiced By: Barbara Steele (English), Yukari Oribe (Japanese), Norma Iturbe (Latin American Spanish)

"Kill them all, pretty Forgemaster. They'll thank you for it. And they'll thank you for turning them into instruments of revenge against the human race."

A solitary old woman who lives in an abandoned village who crosses paths with Isaac.
  • Affably Evil: While she's an evil witch who encourages Isaac to double down on his own villainy, she is nice to him and expresses sorrow at the deaths of her neighbors. Her advice to Isaac comes from a desire to help him, in her own twisted way, and she's happy to learn he succeeded.
  • Ambiguously Evil: It's not made clear if she was always as malicious as she appears, or if the pain of being unable to save her neighbours has left her cruel and bitter.
  • Cool Old Lady: A evil version of this trope, providing advice and direction to Isaac in his quest.
  • The Corrupter: In contrast to the Merchant and the Captain who tried to give Isaac a new, better perspective, she encourages Isaac to add the Magician's army to his own after he kills him. However, she also encourages him to use evil for good ends.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Downplayed, but she does seem sad about the fate of the villagers, and frustrated that she could do nothing but watch as they were enthralled by the magician. She even tells Isaac that he should murder them, as it would be a mercy.
  • Feeling Their Age: She's an incredibly powerful forgemaster, if Isaac's reaction is anything to go by, but her old body can't withstand the strain of her own power anymore.
  • Humans Are the Real Monsters: Her last words to Isaac before he goes to attack the Magician that there are worse things in the world than vampires and betrayal, seem to indicate that she sees humanity's evil to be just as bad as if not worse than supernatural horrors.
  • In the Hood: Wears a long grey robe with a hood.
  • Loners Are Freaks: Lives completely by herself in a deserted city whose population was enslaved by the Magician.
  • The Mad Hatter: By her own admission.
    Miranda: I should have mentioned, I am quite mad.
  • Mask of Sanity: She is able to pretend to be perfectly rational up until she tells Isaac to kill everyone from her town and claim them as his army of revenge.
  • Mercy Kill: She asks Isaac to give this to all her neighbors who've been enthralled by the Magician's mind-control spell.
  • The Nose Knows: She recognized Isaac as a forgemaster by his smell.
  • Old Master: She's an elderly devil forgemaster whose power is still great enough to convince the Magician he's less at risk if he ignores her.
  • Purple Is Powerful: Her magic is colored purple and she can flex her magic to intimidate demons and put Isaac on guard. However, she quickly stands down as she gave up fighting years ago.
  • Retired Monster: She is most certainly an evil witch, but has pretty much settled down in the deserted city after its depopulation. It doesn't stop her from giving evil advice to Isaac.

    Saint Germain's Loved One 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/adventlady.png

A woman who is trapped in the Infinite Corridor whom Germain desperately searches for a way to get back to throughout season 3.


  • Action Girl: Immediately deals with a man who was trying to grope her by twisting his arm around, breaking his fingers and punching his face in. Germain is absolutely flabbergasted but intrigued when he sees this.
  • Bold Explorer: She and Germain were both fascinated by the possibilities of the Infinite Corridor, and she was the first one to step in. Season 4 reveals that she's spent her time in the Corridor exploring, and even when he manages to open a portal to her, she turns her back on it to continue traveling the Corridor.
  • The Faceless: Her face is not shown until Season 4.
  • Futile Hand Reach: Germain tries to reach out to her and tells her to take his hand in his dream. She initially reaches out, but then changes her mind as she instead throws Germain the stone. Season 4 implies that she wanted to remain in the corridor.
  • I Will Find You: She's the entire reason Germain wants to find a way into the Infinite Corridor. He does see her back one final time as he sits dying and her back is to him when the portal closes.
  • The Lost Lenore: Germain is in love with her and what drives him to find a way back into the Infinite Corridor. He even admits that he wants to find her again so he can tell her he truly loves her.
  • No Name Given: We never do find out her name. Even her concept art just lists her as "Adventure Lady".
  • Satellite Love Interest: Almost entirely defined as Germain's lover. This hints Germain's love is actually an unhealthy obsession, explaining why he went to the awful lengths he did. He never reflects on his lover's actions, words or personality. Germain only thinks about the way that she made him feel, after a lifetime of being a wandering disrespected alchemist/magician.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: Never says a word and is barely seen, but her disappearance causes Germain to almost destroy the world.
  • Trapped in Another World: She seems to be trapped in the Infinite Corridor, either willingly or unwillingly is left up in the air. Season 4 seems to imply that she's staying in there willingly.
  • The Voiceless: She has no voiced lines. From the way Saint Germain's flashbacks are framed, it's implied that she is physically capable of speech, but he simply doesn't remember her voice or words... which further plays into the issue that Saint Germain's "love" for her is more about him than anything else.
  • Uncertain Doom: It's hard to tell how time passes in the Infinite Corridor and how she has been affected. And given by the end of the series where Germain gets a dying glance at her back one last time before the portal closes, it's likely while she won't die, she's certainly never coming back out.
  • The Unreveal: She's almost completely shrouded in mystery, beyond having a passion for alchemy like Saint Germain and a willingness to kick some ass if she needs to; we don't know her name, her personality, what drew her to the much older Germain, or why she coldly walked away from the dying Germain... She almost comes off as a parody of tough girls who exist just to provide a love interest. What we do know is that she has to no plans to leave the Infinite Corridor, but her reasoning for that is also a mystery.
  • You Can't Go Home Again: More like "won't" go home again. As Germain sits dying and sees her back one last time as the portal begins to close, it appears she'll remain in the Infinite Corridor forever.

Season 4

    The Alchemist 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/alchemist.JPG
Voiced By: Christine Adams (English), Edurne Keel (Latin American Spanish)

An alchemist inhabiting the Infinite Corridor, traveling between worlds at her leisure. She informs Saint Germain that his loved one has moved on to different worlds, and that he will need a Rebis, the ultimate goal of Alchemy, to find her.


  • Amazing Technicolor Population: She may be meant to be conventionally dark-skinned but her skin looks grey instead, likely just to accentuate that she is not a normal human. In fact, she isn't human at all but instead the spirit called "Death" in human form, so the skin color is fitting.
  • Canon Character All Along: She's seemingly a new character invented for the show to expand on Saint Germain's quest, but in reality she is another disguise assumed by Death in order to manipulate Germain to his own ends.
  • The Corruptor: She convinces Germain that the only way to attain a Rebis and freely travel the infinite corridor is through mass death and summoning Dracula.
  • Gender Bender: She's a mysterious woman who is actually the male-presenting Death in disguise.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: If her claim that Dracula is her Rebis are true, she's almost certainly indirectly responsible for all suffering in the series. She's lying, but she's still the greater scope villain by virtue of being Death.
  • The Unfettered: She believes that an alchemist seeking to complete the great work of creating the Rebis must sacrifice compassion, morals and ethics, and has clearly done so herself. More understandable once it's revealed she was Death all along, who himself has outright Blue-and-Orange Morality.
  • Unreliable Expositor: The Reveal she has been Death the entire time puts into question whether anything the Alchemist said about the Infinite Corridor, alchemy, the Rebis, or Saint Germain's loved one is true.

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