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Characters / Digimon Ghost Game - Supporting Cast

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Independent Digimon

    BlackTailmon Uver. 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screenshot_20211003_193947.jpg
"..."

Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus

A mysterious Digimon who vanishes just as quickly as they appear when Hiro first activates the Digivice. They seem to be the only Digimon with the ability to move freely between Earth and the Digital World - and more importantly, they're Hiro's only means of communication with his father.


  • Big Damn Heroes: Saves the group from being caught by MetalFantomon just as their karts begin to malfunction or run out of gas by trapping all of the other Digimon in a portable gate. They later do the same to allow DarkLizamon and Saberdramon to go home to the Digital World and expel Dagomon before he goes against the protagonists for a second round.
  • Cat Folk: They're a Palette Swap of a regular Tailmon.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: They first appeared in Hiro's room, when Hiro activated his Digivice and left immediately. They return later on and show the ability to open gates. They're also the one who takes Bokomon's Digitama.
  • Cleanup Crew: Fills a non-murderous version of the role, in that Uver. tends to handle any Digimon the heroes subdue who is unwilling to reform that wasn't dealt with more permanently by GulusGammamon, escorting them back to the Digital World in a manner, not unlike prisoner transport.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: While the Uver. subspecies is Virus just like normal BlackTailmon, alongside sharing their type of 'Demon Beast', they are described as having no trace of a nasty personality. In their few appearances so far, they've helped Hiro out with getting his Digivice up and running, arrested several nasty troublemakers and saved him and his friends from certain death in several instances.
  • Expy: Of the "Towel Man" from the 1998 Japanese movie adaptation of The Ring.
  • Fully-Dressed Cartoon Animal: Dressed like a delivery person for some reason.
  • In the Hood: Their delivery-person uniform includes a hood.
  • Look Behind You: Upon being seen by Hiro, they point towards Hiro's desk, where Gammamon is, and use the brief distraction to leave the room.
  • Palette Swap: They're one of normal Tailmon, minus the Holy Ring.
  • Shout-Out:
    • To the Japanese Yamato Shipping Company, whose mascot, a black cat, leads to the company/workers being referred to as "Kuroneko" ("black cat") by everyday people.
    • The "Uver." name is referencing Uber delivery, with the "ver." part also being a wordplay for "version".
  • Stealth Hi/Bye: Hiro looks away from them for all of two seconds and they're gone by the time he looks back.
  • Unstoppable Mailman: An Adult-level Digimon enhanced with the data of courier services, who can open gates to the Digital World casually.
  • The Voiceless: They do not speak a single word in any of their appearances.

    MoriShellmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/morishellmon2.PNG
"I don't want to see a softy like you around here ever again."
Voiced by: Taiki Matsuno
Level: Adult
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Mind Fog

A mollusk Digimon who lives in the forest and wants Jyureimon driven away.


  • Anti-Hero: Like most MoriShellmon, this one is very territorial, having claimed the entire forest he resides in as his territory and is none too pleased with Jyureimon trying to invade and devour humans. So he decides to protect said humans, if only so Jyureimon doesn't get stronger from eating them, and is perfectly content leaving them in a Forced Sleep indefinitely. Once Jyureimon is driven off, he tells Hiro and the others he'll try to protect humans still should Jyureimon come back, but he makes no promises.
  • Forced Sleep: He induces this in humans so that he can hide them and deny Jyureimon more prey.
  • Good Is Not Soft: He's not exactly the nicest Digimon, and doesn't hesitate to tear into Hiro when his refusal to delete Jyureimon just gets BetelGammamon hurt.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: Like it or not, he's entirely right that Hiro and co. can't take the pacifist approach forever. Jyureimon is just one of their many opponents that don't care about their misdeeds, and anybody that they can't reform will be free to continue on their villainous ways if they don't kill them.
  • Master of Illusion: He gives off a green mist that he can use to create illusions. He mostly just creates illusions of eyes to guide people to him.

    Monzaemon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/monzaemon_8.png
Voiced by: Miyu Irino
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Vaccine
Attacks: Lovely Attack

A plush bear Digimon who was hunting down WaruMonzaemon and Ex-Tyrannomon.


  • Ambiguous Situation: It's not explained why Monzaemon is hunting down WaruMonzaemon and Ex-Tyrannomon. The former apparently recognize him when the two fight, but Monzaemon never elaborates on what was his relationship with the evil plush Digimon.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Arrives in the digital field to assist Hiro in fighting the evil plushie duo when he's outmatched two to one.
  • Brainwashing for the Greater Good: His Lovely Attack induces a Heel–Face Turn on evil Digimon, allowing Ex-Tyrannomon to release all hostages.
  • Mysterious Watcher: The audience is shown him keeping tabs on Kayono as she befriends WaruMonzaemon and Ex-Tyrannomon, along with him spying on Hiro and Gammamon. He manages to evade their notice somewhat the first time, but when the two rush up to question him on a second meeting, he nervously flees from tree to tree in plain view.
  • Nice Guy: Monzaemon is a kind Digimon who is willing to actively help Hiro in fighting WaruMonzaemon and Ex-Tyrannomon, and convinces Kayono that the two are merely using her to unleash mass destruction.
  • "The Reason You Suck" Speech: He gives one of these to Kayono, but it's not cruel or demeaning- he explains that she was the one who made herself lonely in the end by pushing away people and that, by attaching herself to the first "friends" that fanned her ego, she let herself be manipulated by some evil Digimon that didn't care about her at all.

    Ryudamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ryudamon2.jpg
Click here to see Ginryumon
Click here to see Gyukimon

Voiced by: Masami Kikuchi
Level: Child, Adult (As Ryudamon), Perfect (As Gyukimon)
Attribute: Vaccine (As Ryudamon, Ginryumon), Virus (As Gyukimon)
Attacks: Yatsuka Senbaku, Senhō Tsuchigumo (As Gyukimon)

A Ryudamon who became a Gyukimon and sought Hiro for help under his father's advice. While he was supposed to stay with Bakumon as Hiro's school was on a school trip, Ryudamon managed to infiltrate the resort facilities they're in and lost control of his Gyukimon self, turning most of Hiro's classmates into Gyukimon-like monsters. He's eventually restored to normal thanks to the kids' Digivices and Gammamon reaching out to him and quickly becomes friends with the group.

His Evolutions are as follows:

  • Child: Ryudamon, his default form. A small dragon Digimon plated in armor.
  • Adult: Ginryumon, a much larger dragon Digimon with the ability to fly great distances.
  • Perfect (Dark Evolution): Gyukimon, a vicious Demon Beast Digimon. Ryudamon transformed into this Digimon by thinking how he didn't want to become one.

Tropes exclusive to Ryudamon and his natural Evolution(s):

  • And I Must Scream: Ryudamon still has control over himself at the start of the episode. When he's infected a large portion of Hiro's classmates, however, he loses control completely.
  • Birds of a Feather: He quickly finds himself bonding with Kiyoshiro once he starts hanging around the dorms, sharing similar interests such as a love for the idol group D-Topi, and whenever he's not playing with Gammamon, he can be found hanging out in Kiyoshiro's dorm room.
  • The Bus Came Back: He shows up at the dorm 7 episodes after his debut to play with Gammamon.
  • Fighting from the Inside: At several points, Ryudamon tries to resist his Gyukimon instincts from taking over. It didn't work out for him.
  • Heroic Willpower: His sheer drive to want to save Gammamon as Gammamon did him allows him to evolve into Ginryumon.
  • Mythology Gag: Once he comes to the dorms to play with Gammamon, he quickly finds himself to be on the same wavelength as Kiyoshiro, particularly in their worship of the idol group D-Topi. Ryudamon is voiced by Masami Kikuchi, more well known in the franchise for being the original voice of Jou Kido, who Kiyoshiro is an expy of, so the two being of similar minds serves as a meta-joke.
  • Vampire Refugee: Gyukimon starts to take over his mind the night after he talks to Hiro and quickly consumes him the next day. The times that Ryudamon is able to regain control don't last long. Ruli and Kiyoshiro chide Hiro after the fact for being so quick to help Ryudamon that he ignores the risk that comes with that.

Tropes exclusive to Gyukimon:

  • And I Must Scream: Any human bitten by Gyukimon will suffer from agony trying to take control of themselves when their body starts getting larger and more disfigured.
  • Arm Cannon: Gyukimon's left arm ends in a cannon bound in wrapping that allows him to shoot sticky threads for his Senho Tsuchigumo move or use it as a melee weapon.
  • Body Horror: Turning other Digimon into copies of itself is bad enough, but human beings converted into a Gyukimon is an absolutely horrific process. Rather than turn into Digimon completely, a human mutates into a Half-Human Hybrid with malformed features, complete with horns and spider legs bursting out of their bodies. The resulting form actually makes Salamandamon's gecko children look cute by comparison.
  • The Dreaded: Angoramon warns Hiro that Gyukimon is an absolutely ferocious Digimon that will look for fights and if it wins against them, they bite them and the loser turns into another Gyukimon.
  • Enemy Within: Gyukimon's personality, which by this point has taken over completely, is shown to be a towering dark presence in Ryudamon's mind when Gammamon interfaces with him. Gammamon punches through it to reach Ryudamon.
  • Forced Transformation: Any Digimon who gets bitten by Gyukimon becomes one themselves, and any human who is bitten by it turns into something resembling a mix of their former selves with Gyukimon features. Notably, Ryudamon implies he wasn't bitten, rather he just turned into one suddenly.
  • Laughing Mad: The more Ryudamon as Gyukimon spreads the infection around, the more he descends into bouts of insane, distorted laughter.
  • Make My Monster Grow: Initially, Ryudamon finds himself as a Gyukimon that's small enough to fit in Gammamon's hands, something that Angoramon finds curious as Gyukimon is rather large. Later on, Ryudamon begins to grow with each claimed victim until he's reached full size after everyone besides the main team has been infected. It's never fully explained, but Ryudamon evolving/transforming into Gyukimon before leaving for the human world and materializing may have impeded his full conversion somehow.
  • Painful Transformation: Being transformed into a Gyukimon seems to be an incredibly agonizing process. The victims appear to be in constant, extreme pain both physically and psychologically as they fruitlessly try to take hold of their sanity as they are slowly being mutated and taken over.
  • Superpowered Evil Side: Ryudamon's Gyukimon side is much more malevolent, dangerous, and extremely powerful, being a Perfect when he's a Child. Moreover, to his knowledge, he was never actually bitten, rather he was just thinking how much he didn't want to be one and just turned into one. This, combined with how he was reverted using the Digivice's ability to allow evolution and reversion (something normally impossible) as opposed to Bakumon eating the corrupted data from his human victims and Gyukimon is one of Ryudamon's possible evolutions in the Digimon Vital Bracelet V-Pet, implies rather than being converted as is normal, Gyukimon might instead be a Dark Evolution, making it more inline with this trope for the franchise. The fact he later properly Evolves into Ginryumon further supports this.
  • The Virus: Is capable of reproducing by turning other living beings into copies of itself.
  • Virus-Victim Symptoms: After Niijima is bitten by Gyukimon, she collapses into the ground and suffers from a deep fever. A few hours later, the transformation begins and she turns into a large, crazed, arachnid creature.
  • Zombie Apocalypse: By the end of the episode, every human within the resort facility the Gammamon, Jellymon, Hiro, and Kiyoshiro were in becomes infected by the Gyukimon and come dangerously close to attacking Hiro and Kiyoshiro, before they manage to confront the Ryudamon-Gyukimon next to a cliff.

    Submarimon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/submarimon_7.jpg

Voiced by: Masashi Sugawara
Level: Armor
Attribute: Free

An aquatic Digimon who lives near a seaside town where Cthyllamon's followers are wreaking havoc at.


  • Cool Boat: A Digimon submarine that assists in the party's efforts of locating and defeating Cthyllamon after some convincing. If not for him just happening to show up next to Hiro, the entire party will end up catatonic from the Digital Water and there's not much they could do to stop Cthyllamon.
  • Horse of a Different Color: Voluntarily becomes the party's aquatic transport when the way to the shrine was blocked by deadly Digital Water. Because he's a submarine Digimon with a built-in cockpit, he's immune to the Digital Water's harmful effects and anyone inside him is unaffected.
  • Red Herring: The party first meets him as a shade with sinister green, glowing eyes while leaping up in the air before the show's commercial break, which could make you believe he's behind this or he's working with Cthyllamon. Turns out he was just a nearby Digimon doing his own thing and will gladly cooperate with humans when asked to.

    Terriermon Assistant 
Voiced by: Aoi Tada

A Terriermon in a lab coat who assists Hokuto and shows up when he finally returns to the real world. He is Hokuto's partner Digimon.


    Zubamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zubamon.png
Click here to see his sword form
Voiced by: Minami Tsuda
Level: Child
Attribute: Vaccine

One of the "Legend-Arms", Digimon capable of transforming themselves into weapons. Zubamon has a history with Musyamon and aids SymbareAngoramon in defeating him.


  • Equippable Ally: Rather than engage his enemy in a one-on-one duel, he transforms into a golden sword and lets SymbareAngoramon wield him to defeat Musyamon.
  • Good Scars, Evil Scars: Zubamon has a small one traveling across the left side of his helmet's eye-hole after a past encounter with Musyamon. It thankfully wasn't deep enough to cause an Eye Scream, but Zubamon has been hunting down his rival ever since to pay him back for it.
  • Living Weapon: He can turn into a sword at will.
  • Noodle Incident: In the past he fought Musyamon and was scarred by him, prompting him to seek revenge on the samurai Digimon for his defeat, but nothing is elaborated beyond that.

Jellymon's Associates

    Pillomon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pillomon.png
Voiced by: Ayaka Saitou
Level: Child
Attribute: Vaccine
Attacks: Lullaby Bubble, Nightmare Bubble

A Digimon resembling a cross between a pillow and a sheep, they were key to Jellymon's "Cherry Bloom Sleep Therapy". Unfortunately, Pillomon starts having a bad dream that starts hurting the clients.


  • Animal Eyes: In the brief moment that their eyes are open, they can be seen to have horizontal pupils similar to a sheep or goat's eye.
  • Dream Stealer: Like Bakumon, Pillomon can eat human dreams for sustenance. If they overeat though, they get nightmares.
  • Eyes Always Shut: They only open when Pillomon wakes up. Others, even when awake, they're this.
  • Noodle Incident: The SkullGreymon that appears in Pillomon's nightmares is based on a real one, one that chased Pillomon around in the Digital World once. The details behind what actually happened to cause that are unsaid.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Downplayed. When Jellymon recruited them for her "Cherry Bloom Sleep Therapy", she failed to notice that the coloration of Pillomon's bubbles was off. Turns out Pillomon had overeaten thanks to Jellymon and was suffering bad dreams as a result, causing everyone hit by one of their bubbles to share their nightmare of being chased by SkullGreymon, only with the risk of actual injury due to Your Mind Makes It Real. Once everyone is freed when Pillomon wakes up, the blame is laid more on Jellymon for overfeeding Pillomon in the first place.
  • Your Mind Makes It Real: Any injuries or damage that happens to someone inside of Pillomon's dreams will be reflected in the real world, even Digimon evolving inside their dream will evolve outside of it.

    Sunflowmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sunflowmon_9.png
Voiced by: Hiromi Konno
Level: Adult
Attribute: Data

One of Jellymon's clients who wanted a kimono.


  • Small Role, Big Impact: It was her desire for a kimono that led to Jellymon wandering into Sealsdramon's sights, which led to the death of Bokomon and Gammamon's dark evolution to GulusGammamon.

Library

    Bakumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bakumon_analyzer_ghost_game_7.jpg
"Leave it to me!"

Voiced by: Ai Orikasa
Level: Child
Attribute: Vaccine

A Digimon who initially resides in the library, he later becomes allies with the kids and their partners in stopping Hologram Ghosts, initially serving as Professor Bokomon's assistant before becoming their go-to ally at the library.


  • Accomplice by Inaction: His justification for refusing to heal Kiyoshiro following the incident with Pillomon, is that since the incident was largely Jellymon's fault in the first place, his refusal to heal either of them is Jellymon's punishment for everything.
  • Big Damn Heroes: In his debut, he and Bokomon show up just in time to save Hiro from Clockmon. Much later on, he also saves the entire group from being killed by Lilithmon.
  • Big Eater: Bakumon loves eating computer bugs, and it's during his search for some that he runs into Kinkakumon and Ginkakumon.
  • The Bus Came Back: After being absent from episodes 13 to 22, Bakumon returns to assist the trapped Ruli and Kiyoshiro from their entrapment in Pilomon's nightmare; as well as rescuing the other humans affected by its bubbles.
  • Expy: Being professor Bokomon's sidekick, he's one of Digimon Frontier's Neemon, though unlike him, he's definitely no scatterbrain and can aid in combat.
  • Healing Hands: Bakumon can heal others' injuries or reverse their mutations with his holy ring. It can even remove Lilithmon's Phantom Pain despite the steep power discrepancy between the two.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: He can wipe away other's memories, something that he did to Gyukimon's victims when he was undoing the damage dealt.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: Initially it seemed like he and Bokomon were haunting the library and scaring people for shits and giggles. Turns out that Bokomon was so wrapped up in his research he was being Innocently Insensitive, and Bakumon trying to get more books for him or trying to carry too many at once was the reason people saw books being thrown around.
  • Telephone Teleport: Bakumon can travel via phone connections, and helps to save the day in episode 22 by having Hiro 'text' him to Kiyoshiro. This however, is useless in Episode 39 when Gammamon, Jellymon, Hiro, and Kiyoshiro are attacked by a Gyukimon due to the poor cellphone connections in the island Hiro is in, forcing him (alongside Ruli and Angoramon) to be transported onto the island via Airdramon instead.
  • Verbal Tic: Ends his sentences with "~suu".

    Betsumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/betsumon.png
Click here to see them impersonating Gammamon and Jellimon

Voiced by: Daisuke Kishio (Betsumon!Gammamon), Wasabi Mizuta (Betsumon!Jellymon), Mitsuki Nakamura, Ryosuke Asano, Reimi, Chihaya Terasaki, Ryohei Kitsunai
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Tsukkomi Punch

A group of eccentric Digimon in Tailmon bodysuits who go around and impersonate other Digimon and humans, starting from one that impersonates Gammamon. After Hiro exposes and defeats them, all of them were forced to work for Clockmon.


  • Adaptational Superpower Change: Betsumon seemingly no longer uses their Power Copying attacks from Digimon Fusion, but in place, their disguise ability is actually convincing, which allows them to just outright swap identities with a person or Digimon and Ret-Gone them from other's cognition.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: They are a group of lanky cat-like Digimon that dress up in ill-fitting Tailmon cosplay and go around in bodysuits that hide everything but their Gonk faces. By all means, they look ridiculous — but their memory-manipulation powers can effectively turn their victims into an Unperson and they are still Perfect level Digimon. WezenGammamon's Sedna barely phases them and they knock him skyward with a group Tsukkomi Punch.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: They also overwrite Gammamon on the official site!
  • Cats Are Mean: Goes way past mean in how they steal the lives of others that they covet, smirking about it the whole time. They are also cat-like in appearance and in their default attire, they wear a bodysuit of Tailmon, another cat-based Digimon.
  • Giggling Villain: All of the Betsumon tend to make a strange chuckle, even when they are defeated or supposedly unconscious.
  • Glamour Failure: They cannot mimic their victim's behavior completely. This, however, usually fails to alert their victim's associates.
    • A Betsumon replaced Jellymon offscreen, but unlike the real Jellymon, it can't pass through walls. Kiyoshiro falls for the ruse despite asking why she isn't phasing through and just assumes it's Jellymon being demanding as usual.
    • The Betsumon impersonating Gammamon doesn't tolerate sweet food as much as the real thing, but it likes spicy dressings. This is what eventually alerts Hiro that Gammamon is in danger and renders him immune to the Betsumon's disguises since the real Gammamon can eat a whole pile of Champion chocolate snacks and the fake cannot.
  • Hazy-Feel Turn: In the episode right after they're defeated, Clockmon apparently hired one of them to impersonate a nurse and bring Kiyoshiro to Mummymon. It's still not happy about it.
  • Hidden Agenda Villain: It's never explained why they are replacing humans and Digimon in Hiro's dorm. Clockmon explains to Hiro that they're just there to cause trouble, but the Betsumon themselves never confirm anything.
  • The Horde: The one impersonating Gammamon isn't the only Betsumon around. There's a whole group of 20 Betsumon attacking Hiro's dorm and impersonating everyone from within.
  • Identity Impersonator: Betsumon's main power is to take over the identities of other humans or Digimon. If it goes long enough, that person or Digimon will just vanish as Gammamon found out with Meicoomon, another one of their victims.
  • Kick the Dog: Once they steal a Digimon's identity and start brainwashing their associates into not recognizing them, they love to rub it in their faces.
  • Laughably Evil: They are remorseless Manipulative Bastards asking for trouble, but they're quite entertaining per their species, especially when the whole horde starts preparing to attack the dorm.
  • Lethal Joke Character: The Betsumon here are wacky cosplayers as always, but not only are they still Perfects capable of shrugging off WezenGammamon's attacks without breaking a sweat - the ones in Ghost Game can full-blown erase their victims from existence.
  • Manipulative Bastard:
    • They are able of convincing everyone they meet or not that they are the original thing, regardless of how they completely fail to replicate the real thing from the audience's viewpoint. It's also implied that the Betsumon only look like that for the audience and they resemble the real thing if viewed by In-Universe characters.
    • At one point, a Betsumon (implied to be the pack leader) impersonating Gammamon's new friend, a Gotsumon, tricked him to wait for him at the park. He doesn't come, and this was all it took for the fake Gammamon to completely overwrite the real one from the cognition of the entities around him.
  • Master of Illusion: Their theft of a victim's identity isn't limited by their presence and it appears the victim's appearance changes in the perception of others, even people far away who have had no contact with the Betsumon. Clockmon himself fails to recognize Gammamon, Ruli and Angoramon are unable to over a video call, and neither does Kiyoshiro, who never actually laid eyes on the Betsumon pretending to be Gammamon. Gammamon himself also doesn't seem to notice Gotsumon or Jellymon being fakes.
  • Near-Villain Victory: The group begins to overrun the entire dormitory and has already taken down two of the team's Digimon, with the rest of the heroes completely fooled. Had Gammamon not started chowing down on chocolate and exposed his impostor to Hiro right then and there, it's likely everyone in the dorm would have winded up like Meicoomon.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: From the audience's point of view, their disguises look absurd and impossible to fall for as the Betsumon's Gonk faces remain fully on display, and they make next to no attempt to disguise their voice, letting the mind manipulation powers do the heavy lifting for their infiltration.
  • Reality Warper: Despite their costumes not covering up their faces nor an inability to change their voices, a Betsumon is capable of passively deluding everyone else into perceiving them as the real deal - and if they go at it long enough, their victim starts becoming unrecognizable before eventually vanishing altogether.
  • Sizeshifter: They can alter the size of their bodies to masquerade as those far shorter than they are.
  • Unperson: What they gradually inflict upon whomever they steal the identity of. Even worse, the victim is not only forgotten from memory but seemingly disappears. Gammamon discovers this from Meicoomon, a past Betsumon victim, and by the end of their conversation, Meicoomon has vanished into thin air.

    Professor Bokomon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bokomon_analyzer_ghost_game_0.jpg
"Well, I'm actually that great!"

Voiced by: Yusuke Numata
Level: Child
Attribute: Vaccine

A Digimon who initially resides in the library, he later becomes allies with the kids and their partners in stopping Hologram Ghosts, simultaneously researching why Digimon are in the human world in the first place.


  • Big Damn Heroes: He and Bakumon show up just in time to save Hiro from Clockmon. He later pushes Gammamon out of the way of Sealsdramon's knife at the cost of his life.
  • Death of Personality: While Born-Again Immortality is present in this continuity, Jellymon is quick to remind them that just because Bokomon simply reverted back to a Digitama upon death, he won't retain his memories of his past life once he hatches. Ouch.
  • Dead Star Walking: By all means this guy is set up as a major supporting character like Espimon or Mummymon. Unfortunately, he gets killed by Sealsdramon five episodes after his debut to hammer how dark the series is.
  • Expy: Of his Frontier counterpart, being a Digimon professor accompanied by a sidekick and a major, recurring ally. Unfortunately, unlike that Bokomon, he dies 5 episodes later.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Took Gammamon's place as Sealsdramon's 1000th kill.
  • Go Out with a Smile: Before Bokomon dies from Sealdramon's knife, he is happy to see that he saved Gammamon's life.
  • Mr. Exposition: Bokomon explains to the heroes the various stages of materialization, why Digimon are in the human world, and why some Digimon are attacking people.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: Initially it seemed like he and Bakumon were haunting the library and scaring people for shits and giggles. Turns out that Bokomon was so wrapped up in his research he was being Innocently Insensitive, and Bakumon trying to get more books for him or trying to carry too many at once was the reason people saw books being thrown around.
  • Sacrificial Lion: A unique example in the series where the Sacrificial Lion has nothing to do with lions at all. Bokomon is set up as The Mentor and regularly makes appearances after his debut...only to make his Heroic Sacrifice in front of Sealsdramon a mere five episodes later. While he manages to reincarnate into a Digitama, Jellymon informs the group that he won't have any memories of his past life.
  • Verbal Tic: Just like his Frontier counterpart, he ends his sentences with "~jai".

    Clockmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/clockmon_analyzer_ghost_game_5.jpg
"What time is it now...?"

Voiced by: Mitsuo Iwata
Level: Adult
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Chrono Breaker

A half-man, half-clock Digimon who steals the time from his victims. He is known as "The Sewn-Mouth Man". After he is shown mercy by Hiro and Gammamon despite all he'd done, he decides to go straight and becomes an assistant to Bokomon and Bakumon.


  • A Day in the Limelight: Episode 23 is his first major role as an ally of the heroes, since he's initially the only one not affected by Morphomon's scales, and has to stop the Digimon that are from rampaging.
  • Adaptational Attractiveness: The humanoid half of Clockmon is usually skinny and child-like in appearance with oversized clothes. This version has a more conventional Heroic Build with adult proportions and form-fitting clothes.
  • Adaptational Villainy: Previously seen Clockmon such as the ones from Tamers and Hunters were genuinely friendly, and his flavor text even makes it clear that he prefers to maintain a neutral standpoint and avoids conflict because of the dangerous power he possesses. This version on the other hand hunts down humans to steal their time for the fun of it, at least before his Heel–Face Turn. After that, he's genuinely friendly as usual.
  • Berserk Button: When he asks what time it is, don't reply with "I don't know".
  • Big Damn Heroes: Arrives to save a cargo deliveryman from being attacked by a possessed Potamon, then assists the trio in stopping Morphomon in Episode 23.
  • Elemental Rock-Paper-Scissors: Clockmon is a Data-Attribute Adult Digimon who faced off against the Child Gammamon. Normally, the level difference would give him an advantage, but Gammamon's Virus Attribute was enough to close the gap and let him do enough damage to Clockmon in one attack to force him to retreat.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Despite once priding himself on pushing humans to the brink of death for shits and giggles, both GulusGammamon's aura prior to his Heel–Face Turn and learning that Sealsdramon is killing off random bystander Digimon both horrify him.
  • For the Evulz: He doesn't drain time from humans as part of a plot or even to gain power. He just does it for the sheer sadistic pleasure of draining a helpless victim.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Vows to stop stealing human's time after Hiro and his friends save him. He then plays a major role in stopping Morphomon in Episode 23.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: His Chrono Breaker is reflected onto him by the shadow of GulusGammamon when he attempts to steal Gammamon's time in their rematch, causing his body to rust and fall apart as his own time is stolen. Had Hiro not had BetelGammamon punch him enough to reverse the effects, it's heavily implied he may have died from this.
  • Laughing Mad: Whenever Clockmon steals time from his victims, he laughs like a maniac.
  • Oh, Crap!: Upon seeing the dark creature that emerges from Gammamon after failing to extract his time during their fight, Clockmon suddenly becomes frightened.
  • Rapid Aging: Inflicts this on his victims by stealing their time with his "Chrono Breaker" attack. If it gets reflected on him and there's nobody around to stop it, he will keep aging until he dies.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Upon witnessing a dark creature seemingly summoned by Gammamon and having all of his stolen time literally punched out of him, he wisely books it before they can take him out.
  • Self-Disposing Villain: Defied: he has "Chrono Breaker" returned to himself and would've aged to death. Hiro and Gammamon refused to allow it and saved him.
  • Starter Villain: The first Digimon, Hiro, and Gammamon battled this season.
  • Time Master: Aside from Rapid Aging, he can also use his powers to affect someone's sense of time and space to disorient them, causing Hiro to be constantly late.
  • Villain Respect: Compliments Hiro for using his Rapid Aging powers against him by throwing a chestnut into the Chrono Breaker beam, forcing him to have to dodge the resulting massive tree.
  • Villains Want Mercy: He begs for help when faced with the very fate he wished to inflict on Hiro. Thankfully, Hiro is the merciful type.
  • We Will Meet Again: While fleeing, he proclaims that he'll steal Hiro and Gammamon's time during their next encounter.
  • Would Hurt a Child: His very first scene shows him stealing the time from a young girl, he later does the same to Hiro's friend and is confirmed to have done this to several other students.

    Monitamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/monitamon.png
Voiced by: Naoki Tatsuta
Level: Child
Attribute: Data

One of Bokomon's friends who recorded Sealsdramon killing Salamandamon.


  • Stealth Expert: Managed to get footage of one of Sealsdramon's victims while evading Sealsdramon himself.

Angoramon's friends

    In General 
Level: Child (Muchomon, Floramon, Labramon, Elecmon & Dokunemon), Adult (Potamon, Reppamon)
Attribute: Data (Muchomon, Floramon & Elecmon), Vaccine (Labramon & Potamon), Virus (Dokunemon)

A group of Digimon who choose to live in the city peacefully and meet daily to exchange information. Their group consists of various species, but the ones Angoramon is personally friends with are Floramon and Muchomon.


  • The Bartender: Floramon serves drinks at their gathering spot and fits the Knowledge Broker aspect as well, providing Angoramon with intel. The group of Dokunemon even appear to be gambling with bottle caps at their table.
  • Defeat Means Friendship: A handful of Monsters of the Week have ended up being invited to join the group, Reppamon being the most recurring of them.
  • Hidden Elf Village: As a rule, the members all agree to keep their meeting place a secret from humans, which temporarily causes a rift to form between Angoramon and Ruli.
  • Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant: In a very late episode, Floramon tells Kiyoshiro a ghost story while looking at him with wide eyes with the intention of scaring him on purpose.
  • Tea Is Classy: Floramon is a bit of a tea snob and comments about her desire to show her friends what truly high-quality tea is.

    Airdramon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ai_3.png

Voiced by: Ryōtarō Okiayu
Level: Adult
Attribute: Vaccine
Attacks: Spinning Needle

An acquaintance of Angoramon and Clockmon, who acts as the group's aerial transport.


  • Blow You Away: In his Spinning Needle attack, Airdramon flaps his wings to unleash several vacuum blades in the form of glowing needles.
  • Dangerous Interrogative: A common running gag with him, whenever he's within earshot of someone talking about him in a way he doesn't perceive as sufficiently reverent.
  • A God Am I: Airdramon believes humans should be in worshipful awe of his majesty, which ends up feeding into him quickly bonding with Ruli as she provides exactly the ego stroke he revels in.
  • Horse of a Different Color: He becomes the go-to transport for times when Ruli needs to quickly make a long-distance trip, as Ruli doesn't attend the same school as the boys. Angoramon's flight is slower akin to a helicopter, while Airdramon fulfills a role more like a jet.
  • Giant Flyer: A giant flying serpent large enough for the entire group to ride on if needed.
  • Morality Pet: Despite being extremely arrogant and prideful and quick to threaten violence towards anyone he hears or imagines badmouthing him, he always treats Ruli in an affable and friendly manner.
  • Not So Above It All: For all his boastfulness and air of superiority, he's not above acting goofily if the situation calls for it. Such as pretending to be a human in need of help to distract a police officer trying to bring the kids to the station, badly at that.
  • Odd Friendship: Although he is introduced to the group via his connection to Angoramon, he quickly hits it off with Ruli.
  • Verbal Tic: Ends each of his sentences with "De~aru~".

    Reppamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/reppamon_ghostgame_11.jpg

Voiced by: Masaya Matsukaze (body), Kenji Nomura (tail)
Level: Adult
Atribute: Vaccine
Attacks: Kurukuru Rekkūzan, Jūga Rangeki

A Digimon inspired by the Kamaitachi and believed to be responsible for various incidents of Razor Wind, in truth it's in constant battle with its own tail and has been fighting to stop it.


  • Anti-Villain: Downplayed. Reppamon itself doesn't want to hurt people and tries to keep others away so its tail doesn't hurt them. His tail on the other hand attacks humans out of a desire to prove its strength, hence the two constantly fighting with one another. Ruli only just barely manages to survive her encounter with them thanks to this.
  • Enemy Mine: The tail and head despise each other, and both agree they'd be better off without the other. So while they won't willingly work with each other, when Ruli and Angoramon try to stop them from mutilating themselves, the two just so happen to manage to work in tandem with one another to fight against Angoramon.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Once Ruli and Angoramon manage to calm Reppamon down, his tail stops attacking humans and they settle down in the bamboo forest it had been attacking people in. He is also later shown to have joined Angoramon's friends at their daily meetings.
  • Literal Metaphor: In his debut episode, Reppamon serves as a living example of a single being divided against itself that refuses to reach out or see from the other's perspective; serving as a walking mirror of Ruli and Angoramon's communication issues as a team within the episode.
  • Multiple Head Case: Like other Reppamon, his tail is completely sapient, and the two are constantly at odds with one another. In this one's case, the tail wants to prove its strength by attacking things and doesn't care for civilian casualties, while the main body is constantly fighting it to prevent people from getting hurt.
  • Mundane Utility: After his defeat at Angoramon's hands, he was invited to the Digimon gatherings on the grounds that his tail could sate its desire to cut things by being the gathering's lemon slicer for their drinks.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Reppamon and his tail nearly wind up a victim of the Musyamon-possessed Angoramon's katana, but they survive the encounter due to Angoramon resisting long enough to flee. The tail, having been left with a minor chip in its blade, quickly agrees with Reppamon to inform Ruli and the others about Angoramon's strange behavior. Considering how much of a Blood Knight the tail acted in its first appearance, this speaks volumes about how serious it felt the situation was.
  • Spin Attack: Kurukuru Rekkūzan essentially turns Reppamon into a flying buzzsaw with his tail.

Former hostile Digimon

These were one-shot Digimon of the Week the protagonists fought, but had ceased their activities and pulled off a confirmed Heel–Face Turn in some form of way.

    General Tropes 
  • Back for the Finale: Most of these return at the last few episodes to assist the protagonists in the final crisis or show up to discuss it with them.
  • Heel–Face Turn: All of these were once vicious creatures out to wreck havoc (with a few even attempting to take over the world and have an entire city's worth of victims), but had since turned over a new leaf to assist the protagonists.

    Bastemon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bastemon.png
"In ancient times, cats were gods! Humans who pass this trial will receive our affection."

Voiced by: Hitomi Nabatame
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attack: Vampiric Dance, Helter Skelter

A feline Digimon who brainwashes cats and grants them telekinetic powers, controlling them to take control of humans and make them climb dangerous places. She wants to select a person to become her pet cat and controls those who can't mimic cats to dig their own graves.


  • And I Must Scream: Anyone who is controlled by her cats are aware that their bodies are going awry, they just seemingly don't because they're asleep when she first controlled them. When some controlled people show up on top of high places they're freaked out, and when they're controlled to dig their own graves they're just horrified that they're not in control of their bodies.
  • Bakeneko and Nekomata: Any cat that Bastemon brainwashed turns into a horrifying monster that stands on two legs, can control their owner's bodies, has their fur raised up and their tails split into two like her own, but revert back to normal when exposed to silver vine (or any imitations of). Angoramon refers to these cat monsters as Nekomata.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: She can brainwash cats and turn them into nightmarish creatures through Helter Skelter, a mesmerizing dance move. She can also brainwash Digimon to fight for her with this attack.
  • Cats Are Mean: Definitely so here. Bastemon views humans and human-loving Digimon as beneath cats, aiming to use her power to switch the roles between pets and pet-owners. The cats under her control go from normal animals to hissing monsters that control people's bodies into doing dangerous acts, from running across railings to digging their own graves.
  • Dance Battler: She's very agile and can easily evade attacks, even when Thetismon appears right behind her trying to attack her (though she was expecting her to drain her life force and booby-trap her). She can also deflect projectiles using dance movements.
  • Hazy-Feel Turn: She ultimately accepts defeat and releases the humans and their cats from her control, but still remains somewhat haughty while saying there's no hope for cats in the human world. The only hinting to her legitimately changing is her wondering if she'll ever find a partner that loves her the way humans love their cats, with Hiro and Angoramon assuring her she will, and she did participate in the gathering in Episode 65.
  • Human Pet: Her goal is to select a human who can act like a cat the most and keep them as her own companion.
  • Irony: Despite looking down on supposedly inferior humans, she herself resembles a Little Bit Beastly human woman with exaggerated cat limbs and two tails.
  • Karma Houdini: Her scheme is halted sure, but she's allowed to remain in the human world unsupervised, in spite of being in the act of attempting to murder several humans, the only reassurances being her declaring she'll accept the world the way it is now and won't try to switch cats and humans again and in the sixth credits where she's seen roleplaying pirates with Jellymon and Petermon.
  • Life Drain: Her Vampiric Dance attack drains life force out from foes which makes their bodies shrivel and become monochrome. Thetismon exploits this to stun her by booby trapping herself with silver vine essence so she would absorb them and get stunned.
  • Logical Weakness: Silver vine. The cats she turned into monsters can be reverted back to ordinary animals when they are exposed to burnt celery and olives (which imitates silver vine) and trying to drain a silver vine-laden Thetismon stuns her for an opening for Canoweissmon to finish her off and she remains on the ground relaxed for a short while afterwards. Truth in Television that silver vine elicits an euphoric response on cats, effectively stunning them.
  • People Puppets: Bastemon's Helter Skelter technique allows her to manipulate the bodies of others against their will. If used against an enemy after she drains them of energy with Vampire Dance, as she did with Lamortmon, she turns them into a mindless slave that fights on her behalf. If used against a cat, they outright turn into monsters that do her bidding. Her cat army also has the power to control others, though they usually wait until their targets are asleep beforehand.
  • Powers via Possession: The cats she transforms into nekomata can manipulate the bodies of others, similar to her Helter Skelter dance. Rather than dance, the cats move their front paws in the air as if they were pulling on invisible strings connected to the victim.
  • Spin to Deflect Stuff: Performs a twirling maneuver while dancing to redirect Espimon's Mot Bomb and Airdramon's Spinning Needle attacks back at them.
  • Truer to the Text: Whereas the Bastemon of Xros Heart was a ditzy princess and a sleepyhead, this Bastemon is much more in line with her Digimon Reference Book entry, being sly, manipulative, and bewitching, but with the added trait of having cat supremacy.
  • You Remind Me of X: She notably takes pause upon first seeing Gammamon, initially scrutinizing him before writing him off saying "it can't be him". Much like Witchmon before her, it's implied she realized Gammamon resembled "The Jet-Black Champion", but wrote him off after seeing how innocent he acts.

    DarkLizamon & Saberdramon (Unmarked Spoilers) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/darklizamon.jpg
DarkLizamon
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/saberdramon.jpg
Saberdramon

DarkLizamon Voiced by: Ryota Takeuchi
Saberdramon Voiced by: Masaya Takatsuka
Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus (DarkLizamon), Vaccine (Saberdramon)
Attacks: Dread Fire (DarkLizamon), Black Saber (Saberdramon)

Two Digimon who confront Hiro, believing he can bring them to BlackTailmon.


  • Accidental Murder: DarkLizamon tried to protect a human from a house fire by enveloping him in his Dread Fire attack, but he wouldn't listen when he told him not to move until he said to do so and burnt up as a result. The witnesses were none the wiser to what happened, believing the pair of Digimon to be responsible for the fire and subsequent death.
  • Bad Powers, Good People: They wanted to help humans, but their plan to integrate into society backfired horribly when the man they were trying to save, stepped through the Dread Fire attack too early.
  • Beat Them at Their Own Game: DarkLizardmon is a Lightning Bruiser with fire attacks and is beaten by BetelGammamon, a Digimon with identical powers. Saberdramon is a flying Digimon, requiring KausGammamon to defeat in an aerial duel.
  • The Bus Came Back: Saberdramon makes a surprise return when the kids go to the Digital World following a mass exodus to the human world, finding him having nearly been consumed by a corrupted Rafflesimon before freeing him, with him offering to give them a ride afterwards. When Hiro asks where DarkLizamon is, Saberdramon laments he was corrupted already.
  • The Corruption: Upon meeting Saberdramon in the Digital World, he tells the kids that DarkLizamon succumbed to black corrosion.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: After failing to save a human from a fire, inadvertently causing his death, all they want is to go home to the Digital World and upon being able to return DarkLizamon apologizes to Hiro for the trouble they caused to him and his friends.
  • The Heavy: DarkLizamon does most of the duo's dirty work thanks to him trapping people in black flames.
  • Lightning Bruiser: DarkLizardmon is fast enough to dodge WezenGammamon's blasts and strong enough to knock him flat on his back. Gammamon has to become BetelGammamon — a Lightning Bruiser in his own right — to defeat him.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: They tried to save a human from a burning building, with DarkLizamon using his Dread Fire to protect him. Tragically, he stepped out of the Dread Fire too soon, resulting in him turning to ashes. When his parents and friends saw the two, they assumed that they were the ones responsible for the fire and his death.
  • Playing with Fire: DarkLizamon can shoot and control black flames.
  • Reduced to Dust: Anything that leaves DarkLizamon's Dread Fire disintegrates into ash in seconds. Including people, which leads the two to getting branded as murderers.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: The two are effectively just another pair of monsters of the week faced early on in the series, but their actions and words, DarkLizamon's specifically, continue to affect Hiro throughout the series as he continues to ponder the idea of Digimon-Human coexistence.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Unlike the DarkLizamon who appeared in Digimon Tamers, this DarkLizamon had a better ending as he and Saberdramon were able to go home. The DarkLizamon in Tamers was captured by Hypnos and died after being experimented on. Possibly subverted when Saberdramon tells Hiro that he was taken down by the Black Corrosion, though it's unknown if it killed him or just corrupted him.
  • Then Let Me Be Evil: As soon as they were blamed for Tsuyoshi's death, the two of them gave up trying to integrate into human society and grew ruthless in their hunt for a way home.
  • There's No Place Like Home: After being branded as monsters and murderers by humans. All they want is to go back home, which is why they attacked Hiro under the belief that he knows where the BlackTailmon is.

    Kinkakumon & Ginkakumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kinkakumon_analyzer_ghost_game.jpg
Kinkakumon
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ginkakumon_analyzer_ghost_game.jpg
Ginkakumon

Voiced by: Yuka Komatsu (Kinkakumon), Tetsu Inada (Ginkakumon)
Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus
Attacks:

The Gold and Silver Oni siblings, they seek to challenge stronger opponents... and take the ones they defeat as "spoils" to turn into sake.


  • The Alcoholic: Ginkakumon largely only cares for drinking booze, namely the sake he carries around in the Beni Hisago on his back. Problem is, said sake is composed of all the players Kikakumon has defeated, and if he drinks too much, they can't be restored to normal. He's willing to stop doing this once he's beaten after Hiro offers him Hokuto's stash of alcohol.
  • Blood Knight: Kinkakumon wishes to prove herself in battle and seeks strong opponents to fight, coming to see Kiyoshiro and Jellymon as worthy opponents after they beat her. But whereas her brother is willing to abandon their activity when promised free booze, Kinkakumon refuses due to wanting to keep fighting, requiring Jellymon to offer to spar with her anytime she wants.
  • Brother–Sister Team: Kinkakumon fights, and when they're in Fighters Kingdom, Ginkakumon serves as her player.
  • Carry a Big Stick: Kinkakumon fights with a kanabou.
  • Graceful Loser: After losing to TeslaJellymon, Kinkakumon has her brother restore all the abducted humans without a fuss.
  • Ms. Fanservice: Kinkakumon is an Amazonian Beauty who wears a tiger print bikini and is known in the rumors as a beautiful character.
  • Huge Guy, Tiny Girl: Ginkakumon is gigantic, while Kinkakumon has the size of an average woman.
  • Reformed, but Not Tamed: Ginkakumon readily promises to tone down his act of turning people into alcohol in exchange for Hokuto's alcohol. Kinkakumon, on the other hand, really wants to keep fighting, and rejects the alcohol lest she and her brother manage to win it. Jellymon in turn is willing to take her up on said offer anytime.
  • Religious and Mythological Theme Naming: The two are named after the "Gold and Silver Horned Kings" from Journey to the West. Ginkakumon's Beni Hisago is likewise themed after "The Crimson Gourd and the Jade Pot", a pair of tools capable of sucking victims into them by calling a person's name and having them answer, upon which they will then be melted into a liquid.
  • Shock and Awe: Kinkamon uses lightning attacks.

    Kuzuhamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kuzuhamon.png "They (humans) act following their emotions and commit sins for fun. They are all impure!"
Click here to see Kuzuhamon Miko Mode

Voiced by: Mayumi Asano
Level: Ultimate
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Taizoukai Mandala, Ura Izuna

A God Man Digimon who arrived to Hiro's town to exorcize all humans of their "sins" by extracting their impurities from their bodies and making the remaining husks look like wooden marionettes, who are then returned to the real world with dull eyes and an obsession with "cleansing their impurities". Unfortunately, her definition of impurities are ridiculous things like "meeting a friend 18 minutes late 368 days ago".

Her Evolutions are as follows:

  • Ultimate: Kuzuhamon. A fox-eared woman decked out in purple armor. Wields a silver shakujō staff to channel her powers.
    • Mode Change: Kuzuhamon Miko Mode. Kuzuhamon in a Miko's outfit and her helmet. This form is used for exorcism and is ill-suited to combat.

  • All Crimes Are Equal: Kuzuhamon considers all acts equally sinful regardless of severity, counting people's misdeeds in the hundreds of thousands before "purifying" them and listing off minor misdeeds as though they were atrocities.
  • Asian Fox Spirit: Her Ura Izuna attack has her summon a kuda-gitsune to attack Canoweissmon. It's strong enough to easily overpower him because of the steep level gap between the two Digimon. Once Siriusmon is unlocked, it folds in a single hit since he can now fight with her on the same power bracket. In her datafile segment, Ruli also references the legendary fox spirit Tamamo-no-Mae to scare Kiyoshiro.
  • Barrier Warrior: One use of her Taizoukai Mandala is to create a barrier that erases incoming attacks from existence. Siriusmon is able to punch through it with his stronger attacks.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: Her definition of Impurities are ridiculous things like Ruli breaking a promise to her mother and eating three candies when she was only supposed to have one when she was 6 years and 11 months old. But All Crimes Are Equal, so she extracts their souls from their bodies and return the husks in to clean the town and later on, have them kill themselves.
  • Difficulty Spike: In-Universe example. The previous episodes had Perfects and Adults who can be reliably taken down by at most Canoweissmon or the party's other perfect forms, the sole Ultimate more than 10 episodes ago being more of a Puzzle Boss. Kuzuhamon in the other hand is not only an Ultimate who mandates Canoweissmon to evolve into the Ultimate level Siriusmon to even have a chance and appears without any build-up, but is also a Reality Warper bent on brainwashing and killing an entire town and had to be stopped by non-lethal force.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: She desires to cleanse humanity of their impurities, but the only human whose impurities are listed onscreen are Ruli's and include such atrocities as returning a library book after staining one of the pages, and being 18 minutes late to meet up with her friends once.
  • Empty Shell: Her victims appear as soulless versions of themselves in the real world, with Dull Eyes of Unhappiness, unnatural movements and speech patterns and an obsession with cleaning or tidying things to the point of causing property damage by throwing electronic appliances and personal belongings down the road. Other Digimon also fail to recognize them as who they are, instead claiming that they're not themselves.
  • Familiar: In her base form, she's able to summon a single kudagitsune with Ura Izuna. The kudagitsune is strong enough to cancel out Canoweissmon's attacks and keep him pinned down, but it gets curb-stomped by Siriusmon.
  • Fantastic Racism: Her motive for her attack against Hiro's town is that humans are impure and had to be cleansed and prevented from interacting with Digimon. Once she gets defeated by Siriusmon, she's convinced that if humans can use The Power of Friendship, they might not be so bad after all.
  • Giant Woman: Even when discounting her being Kaiju-sized as Kuzuhamon Miko Mode (likely an illusion she cast on herself), her true size still dwarfs Hiro and towers over Siriusmon.
  • I Shall Return: After she admits defeat and undoes the damage she caused, she tells Hiro and the Digimon that they'll see her again before taking her leave. She makes real on the promise when the protagonists want to go to the Digital World to investigate the black corrosion.
  • Instant Runes: She can create mandalas when using her powers or combine them into one to attack. Her Pocket Dimension is also made of them.
  • Knight of Cerebus: Not only is she an incredibly powerful Ultimate who's bent on essentially killing everyone within an entire town and won't back off without an actual fight unlike Piemon, after her other actual Ultimates start showing up to wreak havoc as opposed to the Perfects and Adults before her, all of which are capable of placing the protagonists themselves into life-threatening incidents without much sweat and are a mile tougher to beat than their lesser brethren.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: When she calls off the exorcism ritual she has done after Siriusmon defeats her, she also wipes all victims of their memories of the event.
  • Ludicrous Precision: Counts her victim's "sins" down to the date, year and number.
  • List of Transgressions: Pulls this on Ruli, counting a total of 107,231 impurities (minor transgressions that happened during her lifetime) on her and uses that excuse to take her soul.
  • Magic Staff: In base form, she channels her powers through a silver shakujō staff.
  • Multiform Balance: Her Miko Mode is more suited to rituals and more complex magic than combat. The reverse is true for her base form.
  • Paper Talisman: She can create swarms of paper talismans to attack with. They're the same ones that Doumon uses.
  • Person of Mass Destruction: She's capable of feats way more openly destructive than the Digimon before her. Not only she can practically wipe out an entire town worth up to hundreds all by herself, the people she brainwashed also throw all of their belongings out in the open, causing tons of property damage as well.
  • Pocket Dimension: She pulls people into one before "purifying" them.
  • Puppet Permutation: After she steals people's souls, she turns the bodies into marionettes.
  • Purple Is Powerful: Dons purple armor when shifting to her true form from Miko Mode and is enough of a threat to warrant Hiro and Canoweissmon unlocking the Digivolution of Siriusmon in order to face her.
  • Reality Warper: She's capable of magical powers so broad that there's not much she couldn't do to her surroundings. Notably, she can outright delete Digital Fields and extend her own field into the city where she still has control over anyone she's claimed.
  • Sizeshifter: Kuzuhamon's Miko Mode looks absolutely massive, both inside and out of her Mandala, but reverts to her usual size when fought. When she shows up in her Miko Mode later on, she shrinks to the size of an ordinary person to fit into the Hazakura dorm.
  • Your Soul Is Mine!: She extracts "impurities" out of her victim's bodies and replaces the husks with wooden marionettes, but according to her they weren't replaced by something else but rather she removed what makes them "impure". It's implied she took their soul away and controlled their bodies.
  • Zombie Gait: Anyone exorcised by her tends to walk this way. It's especially obvious for Aoi and Mika when they're attacking Ruli.

    Mummymon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mummymon_2.png
"I shall grant you...eternal...life!"

Voiced by: Takayuki Sugo
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Snake Bandage, Necrophobia

A mummy Digimon who resides in a museum and hunts those who complain about being exhausted. He wraps up his victims to treat them… via resurrection. After being informed by Hiro about how his methods were wrong, he began studying at a hospital on how to treat humans properly and is now the group's go-to for dealing with medical issues.


  • Adaptational Heroism:
    • Compared to the Mummymon seen in 02, this one is more benevolent in nature, wanting to help "sick" humans the best way he can. Unfortunately, since his knowledge of how to heal people comes from practices from Ancient Egypt, his idea of "saving people" involves mummifying them alive in the hope they resurrect in a better state, which prompts Hiro and Gammamon to fight him.
    • Played wholly straight when it comes to Morphomon and Ajatarmon, which he had a hand deducing the true identity behind the mass possessions in the former, and for the latter, developed a cure for her victims.
  • BFG: His cherished gun, "Obelisk", which he keeps wrapped in bandages when not in use.
  • Chummy Mummy: Even before realizing what he was doing wrong, he only wanted to help people. Afterward, he becomes one of the group's closest allies and their go-to mon when they need a doctor.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: He's a Virus-type Digimon based on the undead, and he genuinely wants to help heal sick humans. Except when Hiro runs into him the first time, he thinks in order to 'heal' them, he has to mummify them. He becomes a straight-up ally in his later appearances.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Though he wasn't evil, to begin with, after realizing his methods of healing people were lethal and useless, he realizes Hiro is right and stops his mummification approach, vowing to learn actual modern medic knowledge in hopes of achieving his goal. He demonstrates it for real in Episode 23, where he correctly deduced the possessed, rampaging Digimon was Morphomon's doing.
  • Innocently Insensitive: Digimon usually do resurrect after their deaths, so Mummymon's misunderstanding is very understandable, especially when his first encounter with human 'medicine' was Ancient Egyptian religious burials with no other context. Mummymon legitimately thought he was helping.
  • In-Universe Factoid Failure: The major crux of his conflict is that he believes mummifying his 'patients' will allow them to resurrect and heal them of whatever ills them. Justified, since he's a Digimon and he can resurrect just fine if he dies, and his 'knowledge' of medicine comes from Ancient Egyptian religious burials he just happened to stumble across, which were used to preserve corpses and slow down their decaying process instead of curing any sickness whatsoever.
  • The Medic: Once given to chance to study actual medicine and human biology, he proves to be a pretty good doctor and becomes the go-to Digimon for the main group whenever they need assistance with Digimon-related ailments. The epilogue after the Digimon become part of the world shows him happily walking around with doctors at the hospital, implying he takes advantage of it to become an actual doctor.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: After Hiro explains to Mummymon that humans don't reincarnate and that doctors aren't supposed to kill their patients, the mummy Digimon drops to his knees in remorse. By the next scene, he's freed all his victims.
  • Nice Guy: At his core, Mummymon is a genuinely good person who just wants to be a doctor and help people. Even his stint as an antagonist was entirely due to a misunderstanding.
  • Nominal Villain: In his first appearance, Mummymon abducts and mummifies humans. However, he only does this because he doesn't understand how modern medicine works and after being informed of his error, he frees the humans he abducted and resolves to learn modern medicine.
  • Noodle Incident: He speaks as if he knows AncientSphinxmon and Pharaohmon personally, but whatever happened between them wasn't quite elaborated on. Based on how he only has horrible things to say about them, however, it's likely not anything pleasant.
  • No-Sell: Despite it being the debut of the form, BetelGammamon's attack has absolutely no effect on him. As expected of an Adult attacking a Perfect.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: He initially appears as a creepy, evil Digimon like Clockmon (at least until his official reformation), but it's eventually revealed his goal behind the mass mummification of people is to cure them from their "sickness" via resurrection, though that still makes him very dangerous. Thankfully, once Hiro clears things up for him, he frees all his victims and goes to study modern medicine.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Mummymon's reaction to AncientSphinxmon's presence is to instantly pull out Obelisk without hesitation and prepare to fight while openly panicking. It's implied in the end this is because he knew him and Pharaohmon personally.
  • Oh, Crap!: Mummymon openly panics when he realizes the enemy they're facing is AncientSphinxmon. He has a bigger one when he realizes AncientSphinxmon plans to resurrect Pharaohmon.
  • Time Abyss: It's implied he was around for the Ancient Digital World Civilization and knew Pharaohmon personally, explaining his utter panic at the prospect of him being resurrected.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Mummymon had the best intentions for the people he wrapped up. He thought they were sick due to mistaking their sighs as a form of illness, and believed mummifying his "patients" would resurrect them into a new life.

    Piccolomon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/picklemon.png
"I'll send you somewhere fun!"

Voiced by: Konami Yoshida
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Bit Bomb

A Pixie Digimon capable of traveling through time, sending various humans to different time periods in a misguided attempt to let them experience the same kind of fun he has. He goes after Hiro and the others because he wants their Digivices.


  • Adaptational Villainy: Subverted. At an initial glance, it would appear to be played straight, since the most significant appearance prior to here, Adventure!Piccolomon, was a mentor to the Chosen Children and all around good guy, while this one is far darker. However, it's actually inverted, as Piccolomon here is Truer to the Text, as the Digimon Reference Book notes Piccolomon as being impish and akin to The Trickster, whereas Adventure!Piccolomon was a case of Adaptational Heroism.
  • "Blind Idiot" Translation: Piccolomon is officially translated as "Picklemon", which carries over into the English subtitles. It's supposed to be based on the Italian word, which means "very small", and we're pretty sure this Digimon has nothing to do with pickles.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: He doesn't see any problem with taking humans from their native time and putting them somewhen else. He even expected to be rewarded with a Digivice -V- for doing so!
  • Defeat Means Friendship: At the start of Episode 33, he's seen playing with Gammamon in Kiyoshiro's room.
  • Entitled Bastard: Convinced himself that he deserved to be rewarded with the group's Digivices for giving them a fun trip to the past.
  • Foreshadowing: He's one of your first hints that there's more to go with GulusGammamon than a simple Dark Evolution. When he travels back in time to eradicate him, he comes back visibly injured and scared shitless. It's implied that he ran into Regulusmon, GulusGammamon's perfect form and the original owner of Gammamon's body.
  • Heel–Face Turn: After seeing Gammamon's future, he decides to become friends and returns everyone to their time. In a later episode, he's seen playing with Gammamon.
  • Mugging the Monster: After being angry at the group for ruining his fun, he decides to go back in time and Ret-Gone the protagonists, starting with Gammamon. He comes back visibly injured, likely having run into something terrifyingly strong.
  • Not Me This Time: In Episode 33, he hit Kiyoshiro with a Bit Bomb, seemingly killing him and he's approached by a voice of a Digimon. However, when Mummymon was hired to check him out, he tells Kiyoshiro that it wasn't Piccolomon's doing. Sure enough, another Digimon is trying to kill him...
  • Spell My Name With An S: Is his (Japanese) name "Picklemon" or "Piccolomon"?
  • Verbal Tic: Ends his sentences with "pi".
  • What the Hell Are You?: Asks Gammamon this after he goes back in time to Ret-Gone him. Just what did he see?

    Pumpmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pumpmon_analyzer_ghost_game.jpg
"Trick or Treat..."

Voiced by: Yasuhiro Takato
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Data
Attack: Trick or Treat

A doll-like Digimon with a Pumpkin for a head, who kidnaps students at Ruli's school to make them his friends. Once the kids offer to become his actual friends, he becomes a minor ally who specifically returns during Halloween.


  • Big Damn Heroes: He arrives out of nowhere to deal with Witchmon when Hiro is at a disadvantage against her on the next Halloween Episode. He gets sent flying by her quickly, but he managed to trap all of Witchmon's minions and turns out to be alive at the end.
  • The Bus Came Back: He comes back at Episode 49, also a Halloween Episode.
  • Eye Scream: Narrowly averted, he tends to start pumpkin carving with the eyes, which causes the person inside to see a knife dangerously close to their actual eyes.
  • Glass Cannon: He's able to keep Gammamon and Angoramon on the run with his powerful attacks, but is quickly taken down by BetelGammamon's attack despite being a level higher and having the attribute advantage.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends: He kidnaps people and carves pumpkins he puts over their heads under the impression that they could become his friends if they have the same face as him.
  • Logical Weakness: It turns out a plush doll with a pumpkin for its head is easily flammable.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: Pumpmon kidnaps humans and carves pumpkins over the faces, but he does it in a misguided attempt to make friends, not realizing he was risking doing serious harm to them.
  • Stealth Hi/Bye: He makes a habit of pretty much vanishing whenever he's done doing what he's doing, with everyone expressing confusion as to his whereabouts whenever they leave the Digital Field.

    Salamandamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/salamandamon.png

Voiced by: Misa Watanabe
Level: Armor
Attribute: Virus
Attack: Backdraft, Heat Breath

An amphibian Digimon that has turned several kids into "gecko humans" and has them steal diamonds so she can eat them, making her flames brighter.
This is a different individual from another Salamandamon that was killed by Sealsdramon, previously in episode 13.


  • Adaptational Superpower Change: This Salamandamon can turn people into gecko humans through her poisonous liquid.
  • Breath Weapon: As expected from the name, her Heat Breath attack has her spew flames from her mouth.
  • Dirty Coward: She hides behind her slaves and only fights the heroes when forced to, and the moment she's officially powerless, she begs for mercy.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Despite her gleefully using her gecko people as hostages and hypocritically lashing out once TeslaJellymon stuns them, when she begs for mercy and Hiro accepts, it's genuine and she holds her promise to no longer create any more gecko humans.
  • Fiery Salamander: What she is based on. She even has the appearance of a Japanese giant salamander. Bizarrely, her venom transforms humans into reptilian hybrids instead of amphibians like herself. It begs the question of whether she is an Amphibian Digimon that somehow gained this power or if she is really a reptile that happens to look like an amphibian, putting her closer to the trope's namesake.
  • Forced Transformation: She can turn people into gecko humans through her poisonous liquid, claiming one of Hiro's friends and Ruli.
  • Having a Blast: Her Backdraft attack has her draw forth air in a pressurized sphere to fuel a massive explosion.
  • Heel–Face Turn: After BetelGammamon beats her, she promises to cease her activities.
  • Hoist by Her Own Petard: After gloating about how much stronger her flames are compared to BetelGammon's and sadistically burning him as he clung to her back, she tries to annihilate the rest of the team in one fell swoop with her Backdraft attack. Unfortunately for her, doing so with BetelGammon right on her puts him in an advantageous spot for him to turn the full brunt of her attack on her with a well-timed Sorblow.
  • Hostage Situation: Salamandamon is one of the first Digimon to utilize converted humans as tools to attack the protagonists. In the climax of their fight, she sics her gecko humans against the heroes, with Ruli being one of them. They go into the Digizone Kiyoshiro setup because of their strong connections with her, forcing him to use TeslaJellimon to disable them.
  • Hot Paint Job: Unlike most examples of this trope, this isn't a paint job, but Salamandamon's body has this type of pattern on her limbs and underbelly. The most prominent one covers her back and head.
  • Hypocrite: She sends her enslaved humans at the heroes to fight them, speaking of delight in seeing how the heroes will fight them... then gets angry when TeslaJellymon shocks them unconscious.
  • Kick the Dog: Rather than fight the heroes herself, she has her "good children" attack them instead, intending to enjoy watching the heroes squirm at fighting innocent victims.
  • Logical Weakness: Her flames are powerful and her Backdraft technique has her gather oxygen to initiate it. However, Hiro recalls how controlled bomb explosions are used to extinguish oilfield fires by absorbing the nearby oxygen to deprive the flames of their fuel. BetelGammamon ends up defeating Salamandamon by using Sorblow on the gathered air in front of her mouth to detonate the explosion early, causing the attack to literally blow up in her face.
  • Playing with Fire: All her attacks are fire-based and match her flame-patterned appearance. Her gecko children also gain this to an extent with their heating ability.
  • Powers via Possession: Anyone converted into a gecko hybrid by her venom gains the power to generate intense heat from their hands. This allows them to commit their diamond robberies more easily by melting through glass.
  • Shown Their Work: Diamonds can burn in the right conditions.
  • Villainous Glutton: Her plan to brainwash several children and convert them into her minions was all to sate her hunger through the diamonds they pilfered. It's just done for the sake of self-sustenance like Digitamamon and not For the Evulz, but her battle tactics and personality are far from pleasant.
  • Wreathed in Flames: She's constantly shrouded in fire and flames, which she makes brighter by eating diamonds.

Asuramon

A trio of Digimon led by an Asuramon to steal faces for him in Episode 27.

    Asuramon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/asuramon_9.png
"Give me... your face!"

Voiced by: Tesshō Genda (Face of Wrath), Toshihiko Seki (Face of Blessings), Takumi Yamazaki (Face of Mercy)
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Vaccine
Attacks: Asura Shinken

A fiery Digimon whose heads can only feel a limited range of emotions, so they steal people's faces to experience new emotions. Hiro and co. get involved with him when he appeared in a graveyard that acts as a shortcut back to their dorm and attacked Kotaro.


  • Adaptational Superpower Change: This Asuramon can remove faces from humans, something that any other Asuramon doesn't do.
  • Assimilation Backfire: He successfully steals Hiro's face to wear, but much to his anguish doesn't know the boy is an Extreme Doormat, so when Angoramon requests Asuramon relinquish his entire collection of faces, he willingly complies.
  • Cool Mask: Each head has a mask of a different color. The masks that they replace their victims' faces with normally resembles the middle head's, but glow in a different color depending on which head is wearing that victim's face at the time.
  • Chromatic Arrangement: Each of the heads has a mask colored with one of the three primary colors, fitting the emotion they represent. The impatient, rageful Face of Wrath wears a red mask, the joyous, upbeat Face of Blessings wears a yellow mask, and the gloomy, solemn Face of Mercy wears a blue mask.
  • Face Stealer: Asuramon steals the upper half of a victim's face, leaving said victim completely emotionless. The head that wears a given face takes on the original person's appearance, though some of Asuramon's features remain.
  • Fantastic Drug: Feeling emotions quickly becomes an addiction for Asuramon after arriving in the human world, prompting him to steal faces from humans to experience what they feel. While he initially lays in waiting and only steals from those that feel some sense of accomplishment, with each face he steals he became more addicted, escalating to him becoming solid and breaking into people's homes in broad daylight and stealing faces wantonly, and would have to stolen an entire stadium's worth of faces had Hiro, KausGammamon, and Angoramon not stopped him.
  • Hand Blast: Asuramon's only known attack in this series is Asura Shinken, which shoots fireballs from his fists.
  • Heel–Face Turn: After he's convinced to let go of everyone's faces, Angoramon invites him to join the Digimon gatherings he attends so he can experience emotions without having to steal faces, with Asuramon gladly accepting. He fulfills his promise in the fourth credits, "Monster Disco".
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: His own fixation on gathering different faces and emotions is what ultimately allows Angoramon to outsmart him, when he puts Hiro's face on mid-battle which changes his mental state to one more good-natured and accomodating.
  • Logical Weakness: Asuramon steals the faces of humans so he can feel what they feel. So when he steals Hiro's face, Angoramon takes advantage of this by playing on Hiro's Chronic Hero Syndrome and inability to say no when asked for a favor, tricking Asuramon into releasing everyone's faces by simply asking him to.
  • Morphic Resonance: Downplayed. While wearing a stolen face, a given head takes on the appearance of the original person though that head's fangs and fiery hair are still there.
  • Multi-Armed and Dangerous: Asuramon has four arms, allowing them to sucker-punch Angoramon with a third arm as the two grapple with each other.
  • Multiple Head Case: In contrast to previous appearances, each of Asuramon's heads experiences a different narrow range of emotions and cooperate so that they can experience more. The three heads also possesses a distinct voice each one.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Angoramon describes Asuramon as a Digimon that normally cares about carrying out justice and stopping injustice. When Canoweissmon points out how what he's doing isn't justice, he yells out that he couldn't care less about that right now, he just wants to experience emotions, and has become so addicted to it that it's making him do all this.
  • Perpetual Frowner: Asuramon's left head has a perpetually sad expression and the middle head is locked in a permanent glare. Though they can speak and change microexpressions somewhat, they never show anything else even while feeling the emotions from a face that one of the other heads is wearing.
  • Perpetual Smiler: Asuramon's right head can only smile, even when feeling things like fear from the faces the other heads put on.
  • Playing with Fire: Asuramon's body constantly gives off flames and his only known named attack uses fireballs.
  • Vocal Dissonance: When Asuramon equips Ruli or Hiro's face, their face are exactly those of the children, but they speak in their own voice (a burly, masculine tone).

    Kongoumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kongoumon_8.png

Level: Armor
Attribute: Free
A golden insectoid Digimon that follows Asuramon around and carries the faces he steals.
  • Bag of Holding: He uses his Vajras to open up a Pocket Dimension, which he uses to store all the faces Asuramon has stolen.
  • My Master, Right or Wrong: His job is to act as Asuramon's attendant, nothing more. He neither enables his master's new addiction to stealing faces nor does he protest against it, only storing them away for him. Once Asuramon decides to give back all the faces he stole, Kongoumon complies without a fuss.
  • Mythology Gag: His following Asuramon is a nod to how, according to the Digimon Reference Book, Kongoumon are considered agents of "God", with Asuramon being based off the Hindu Asuras.
  • Satellite Character: He has no characterization outside of being Asuramon's servant in charge of storing the faces he steals.
  • The Voiceless: He doesn't say a word.

    Mushmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mushmon.png
Level: Child
Attribute: Virus
A mushroom-like Digimon who is part of Angoramon's Digimon meetings, but also serves Asuramon out of fear as the latter has threatened him with stealing his face otherwise.
Not to be confused with the Mushmon who had his Gazimon and Kamemon friends abducted by Petermon in Episode 18.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Abandons Asuramon once they go too far, and tells Hiro and Angoramon where to find him afterwards despite being fully aware he could end up getting attacked too due to serving Asuramon in the past.
  • Karma Houdini: Despite Hiro, Gammamon, and Angoramon confronting him about his connection to Asuramon, they leave him to his own devices right after and it's never confirmed if he received any sort of punishment for his actions. Somewhat mitigated by that he was roped in unlike Kongoumon, and was clearly unnerved whenever a human's face was taken and couldn't even stomach being around Asuramon anymore once he planned to steal an entire stadium's worth of faces.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: Was blackmailed by Asuramon to join him. He leaves once Asuramon's gone too far.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Asuramon planning to steal hundreds of faces from people at a stadium in his spree is what finally causes Mushmon to cut his losses and just take off.
  • Trapped in Villainy: He's not even an evil Digimon, only going along with Asuramon and Kongoumon because the former threatens to steal his face if he doesn't inform him about new victims and potential hunting grounds. Or do worse.

The Ocean God's Curse

A group of Digimon consisting of a huge group of Hangyomon led by a Cthyllamon. They were first seen terrorizing a seaside town and flooding it with Digital Water.

    Cthyllamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cthyllamon_7.png "We'll wring out the lives of everyone on earth and turn them into life water!"
Click here to see him dried-up

Voiced by: Shizuka Ishigami
Level: Ultimate
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Buccal Rush, Ocean Hell, Aqua Grinder

A Digimon that got caught up in a tree and dried out near a village as he tried to make it to the ocean. Once revived he seeks to turn the whole world into a playground for him and his followers.


  • Beware the Silly Ones: He looks like a MarineAngemon with facial features resembling Cherubimon Vice's and acts in a silly way unlike Kuzuhamon or Piemon, but he's an Ultimate for good reason. He easily knocks Thetismon out in one Aqua Grinder then restrains her with Buccal Rush, can easily absorb her attacks like a cushion and his followers are some of the most vicious Digimon minions to date. Not to say his species' design is based on MarineAngemon, a veritable Killer Rabbit on its own.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Was recruited by Black Tailmon Uver. to help expel Dagomon back to the Digital World in Episode 64, just before the Cthulhu Digimon attempts to spring back for another round.
  • Energy Ball: Ocean Hell has him launch a skull-shaped blast of energy from the skull symbol on his chest.
  • Evil Is Bigger: He's an Evil Knockoff of MarineAngemon who is usually smaller than a standard Child Digimon. Cthyllamon is no giant, but he still stands at around the same height as Angoramon or a normal person.
  • Flunky Boss: His minions do most of the dirty work since he's initially dried up at first.
  • Flying Seafood Special: Just like a usual MarineAngemon, he can levitate slightly above ground, though he can't move around on land for long without drying up.
  • Heel–Face Turn: The next time we see him and his minions, he's recruited by Black Tailmon Uver. to assist in dealing with Dagomon.
  • Instant Mass: Just Add Water!: He's initially dried up, mummified and barely recognizable after being stranded up on land and picked up by several townsfolk to be kept at a shrine. Once exposed to water, he reverts to his usual form and comes back to life.
  • Irony: His namesake is from Cthulhu's daughter who is mostly depicted as a Daddy's Little Villain, yet he assists Black Tailmon Uver. in expelling Dagomon (the Digimon Cthulhu) later on.
  • Just Eat Gilligan: He (personally) manages to remove Hiro and Ruli from the equation before the fight even began and unlike most antagonists, he almost immediately deduces that Kiyoshiro is commanding the Digimon attacking him during the fight itself and orders his minions to kill him as well. If it wasn't for Amphimon's debut, he would be dead right there.
  • Lack of Empathy: While he does seem to like his friends and get along well with them, Cthyllamon doesn't think about humans as anything but potential waterspouts after seeing the effect digital water has on them. It takes getting pummelled by Amphimon and chastized for him to agree to try getting out of it, and by the next time he shows up, he does.
  • Laughably Evil: It would be difficult to take him seriously if he wasn't trying to drown the world and turn it into the Digital Ocean and if he wasn't an Ultimate-level potentially capable of world-wide feats.
  • Lord of the Ocean: His dried-up body was thought to be a work of the Unagami (Sea God) and was put in a local shrine to be enshrined in the local Unagami festival.
  • Manchild: He acts like a brat unlike the other Ultimate-levels, who have more composed personalities.
  • Making a Splash: Aside from wanting to flood the world with his digital water to transform every human into life water, Cthyllamon's Aqua Grinder attack has him fire a powerful whirlpool that drills into his enemies. He greatly wounds Thetismon with it the first time, but when it goes up against Amphimon's Raibang Break, she breaks through it.
  • Multipurpose Tongue: Cythllamon actually has three long green tongues in his mouth, and his Buccal Rush attack has him extend them to bind a target.
  • Not Quite Dead: When a few townsfolk found his body hanging from a tree, they thought it was a grosteque, mummified corpse of an unknown creature and planned on enshrining it in the local Unagami Festival, beliving that it was a work of the Sea God. The trio and their Digimon find said "corpse" in the shrine and it's seemingly just a lifeless body, until it suddenly opens its eyes and gets accidentially thrown into the Digital Water...
  • Obliviously Evil: Initially Cthyllamon only wanted everyone to play in his new oceanic playground, and was unsure why humans were being turned into endless fountains of water. As the Hangyomon show humans have the data they need to make an endless ocean, the virus Digimon quickly embraces the evil idea, but still ceases his activities after being beaten by Amphimon and convinced to stop.
  • Original Generation: Like Publimon, Oleamon, and the Chamblemon, he's a new Digimon created for Ghost Game.
  • Pint-Sized Powerhouse: He's no taller than Angoramon, but he's still an Ultimate and is taken as a serious threat. This also makes him significantly bigger than how MarineAngemon is often depicted, who ranges from being smaller than the average child to fitting in a child's pocket.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Despite being an Ultimate, Cthyllamon acts more like a spoiled brat who doesn't acknowledge the damage he and his friends' 'playground' would mean for mankind. It takes Amphimon finally giving him some proper discipline and putting him in his place to make him learn his lesson.
  • Sympathy for the Devil: Cythllamon bursts into tears after getting beat up by Amphimon, thinking they don't want to have fun in his new playground. She comforts him explaining humans have a right to exist as people, not empty shells, and he should try to have fun with them the proper way. Fortunately, he doesn't mind compromising.
  • Truth in Television: His "Buccal Rush" attack has him pull down foes with tentacles from its mouth.MarineAngemon's (and by extension his) species are modeled after Clione (sea angels), who hunt down their prey by extending tentacles from their mouth and eating them.
  • Yellow Eyes of Sneakiness: Compared to MarineAngemon's innocent-looking green eyes, Cythllamon has these, narrow and with slit-like pupils like that of a reptile, highlighting his childish cruelty.

    Hangyomon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hangyomon.png
"Cough it out. Wring it out. Give me your life."

Level: Perfect
Attribute: Data

Cthyllamon's followers. They've been taking data from humans as water to both search for and revive their leader, Cthyllamon.


  • The Atoner: Just like their leader, the Hangyomon were shown to have been atoned by Chapter 64, where they show up with Cthyllamon and Black Tailmon Uver, being shown taking care of Dagomon's victims who were freed from their Deep One transformation.
  • Curse: Their attempts to bring their leader from his dormant state was mistaken for the Sea God's curse.
  • Expy: Of Digimon Adventure 02's Deep Ones, who also take the form of Hangyomon. Unlike the Deep Ones however, these are real Hangyomon and not something that looks like them.
  • Eye Scream: Anyone they pour Digital Water on has their bodies frozen in place and water pouring out from their eyes and mouth and the orifices becoming three black holes. They manage to affect every human being in the town bar Hiro, Ruli and Kiyoshiro.
  • The Horde: There are approximately 9 Hangyomon in the pack under Cthyllamon's service, and they go all around town (and a cruiser) infecting people with a condition where they continuously puke water from their eyes and mouth.
  • The Heavy: They do most of the dirty work in Cthyllamon's incident, infecting people all over the town with Digital Water.
  • Flying Seafood Special: They can fly in the air with their scuba tanks like they swim in water.
  • No-Sell: Digimon are not affected by Digital Water. Submarimon can swim freely within it, and even non-aquatic Digimon survive and move around it no problem. It's just humans who are affected.
  • Rising Water, Rising Tension: Spills Digital Water on people's heads, causing them to puke water from their eyes and mouths. They eventually manage to affect enough people that the entire town becomes a Digital Ocean with all the buildings and victims submerged within. Only Digimon (regardless of type) can freely travel within it.

Other Humans

    Hokuto Amanokawa 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amanokawa_hokuto.png
Voiced by: Hiroki Takahashi

Hiro's father, who mysteriously disappeared one day, and entrusted Gammamon and the Digivice -V-'s to Hiro.


  • Action Survivor: He's spent at least half a year stuck in the Digital World and managed to not only survive on his own but also send Hiro DIM cards of the places he's seen with one of the recordings stating he almost got eaten by a Digimon. Despite he's supposedly trapped in the Digital World, which is usually a dangerous situation, he does get along well with the resident Digimon (including two Digimon of the Week), and he recruited Espimon and Assistant Terriermon.
  • Armor-Piercing Response: When Clockmon suggests finding gates back to the Digital World in a mass Digimon and human gathering, Hokuto sternly rebukes him that even if the Digimon could go back, they would be hit by the Black Corrosion anyways. Given that all the Digimon who were stuck in the Digital World by the final crisis become vicious, blackened predators, he has a point.
  • Big Damn Reunion: He finally returns from the Digital World after Dagomon is defeated, and he's now seen with a new companion, a Terriermon Assistant. Too bad it's cut short when he came just in time to see the Japan-wide blackout and the Digital World is about to be destroyed.
  • Bumbling Dad: Of the Unwitting Instigator of Doom type. In later episodes, there's a chance that he unwittingly throws his son and people around him right into life-threatening situations by introducing dangerous Digimon like Gyukimon, Andiramon, and Oleamon to the human world. Later on, when he makes his Big Damn Reunion near the end of the series, the gravitas of the event is undermined when he trips and falls while walking through the portal.
  • Disappeared Dad: Quite literally. He mysteriously vanished to the Digital World one day during his experiments, leaving nothing behind but a crater and the Digivice -V- in his room. Hiro only learned what happened to him months later from a message after plugging in a DIM card into the Digivice. He comes back to the real world after Dagomon is defeated and is accompanied by an Assistant Terriermon, just in time to witness the nation-wide blackout.
  • Hidden Depths: When we do see him personally in the real world, he has a Digivice V on his wrist, implying that he does have a Digimon partner.
  • Mundane Utility: Lampshaded when he sends Hiro another three DiM Cards, only for them to just contain Augmented Reality simulations of new locations in the Digital World as well as recorded messages exclaiming how wonderful the place is. Ruli basically calls it "a 3D album just to brag to his son".
  • The Tape Knew You Would Say That: Zig-zagged, the message he left in the first batch of DIM cards has parts where he notes whenever Hiro interrupts him, while he was right about Hiro freaking out at his hologram, Hiro has not actually interrupted him the second time.
  • Wardrobe Flaw of Characterization: If one looks closely you can see his overshirt has one sleeve was torn off, which you might initially chalk up to being Clothing Damage from being stuck in the Digital World. However, the material appears to be the same as Gammamon's scarf, indicating that he gave his sleeve to him.

    Mika Kashiwagi 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mika_kashiwagi.png
Voiced by: Kanami Taguchi

One of Ruli's friends who often hang out with her.


  • Energetic and Soft-Spoken Duo: Mika is the wallflower while Aoi is the more outgoing and energetic of the two.
  • Lifesaving Misfortune: A non-lethal example. When Phelesmon's tent appeared in front of Aoi, Mika and Ruli, he announces that he will only take two customers, despite they were a group of three. As a result, a girl told them that she will go in first, with Mika being the second, much to their chagrin. Unfortunately for the girl who went in first, Phelesmon is actually a vicious lunatic who feeds on his victim's fear and then turns them into stone for his own amusement. Aoi and Mika still get into trouble with him when Ruli and Angoramon interfered, but at least they don't get turned into stone, unlike the girl who went in first.
  • Look Both Ways: Averted. In Episode 45, Mika almost got run over by a truck because Publimon baited her to cross in an attempt to induce a lethal traffic accident against her. Thankfully, the truck rammed into a barricade instead and Mika only ends up unconscious very briefly.
  • Muggle Best Friend: As Ruli's friends, they hang out with her and are occasionally responsible for informing her about various mysteries and incidents, which lead to the protagonists discovering the Digimon responsible.
  • Secret Secret-Keeper: By episode 15, she and Aoi are well aware that Ruli is up to something she isn't telling them, because of the levelheadedness she displays during hologram ghost attacks and the way she keeps disappearing into seemingly thin air during crises. But both agree to trust Ruli and let her fill them in on her own terms when she's ready.
  • Weirdness Magnet: Both her and Aoi have been involved with several hologram ghost incidents, sometimes even becoming a target.

    Aoi Udagawa 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/aoi_udagawa.png
Voiced by: Arisa Sekine
Attacks: Aquary Pressure, Baluluna Gale (as a witch)

One of Ruli's friends who often hang out with her.


  • Energetic and Soft-Spoken Duo: Aoi is the more outgoing and energetic of the two, while Mika is the wallflower.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: Aoi was turned into a witch by Shiori using Witchmon's powers to serve the Digimon's cause in Episode 49.
  • Interspecies Friendship: In Episode 62, she devlops a bond with Espimon and even offers him to room with her at the end of the episode.
  • Muggle Best Friend: As Ruli's friends, they hang out with her and are occasionally responsible for informing her about various mysteries and incidents, which lead to the protagonists discovering the Digimon responsible.
  • Secret Secret-Keeper: By Episode 15, she and Aoi are well aware that Ruli is up to something she isn't telling them, because of the levelheadedness she displays during hologram ghost attacks and the way she keeps disappearing into seemingly thin air during crises. But both agree to trust Ruli and let her fill them in on her own terms when she's ready. By Episode 62, she's fully let in on the secret, becoming a Secret-Keeper.
  • Weirdness Magnet: Both her and Mika have been involved with several hologram ghost incidents, sometimes even becoming a target.

    Yuto Takanashi 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/yuto_takanashi.png
Voiced by: Reiji Kawashima

An acquaintance of the Amanokawa family whose family's flower shop was frequented by Hokuto prior to his disappearance, Yuto is a high schooler who became the unknowing target of Ajatarmon's feelings and sought out Hiro's help after people he came in contact with suddenly began to partially transform into vines.


  • Arc Words: "It will go well", a statement of encouragement he uses often for budding plants, which later becomes twisted into Ajatarmon's Madness Mantra.
  • Break Them by Talking: Yuto had only meant to help Ajatarmon realize that she wouldn't be able to turn him into her species and ask why she had gone down her path. He didn't mean to push her to the point of resorting to poisoning herself so she could become human, die a horrible death and spend her final moments in severe emotional and physical agony.
  • Companion Cube: He's fond of his family's little assistant robot, which he dubbed GW-1 (Go Well 1), saying that it's been around the shop since he was a child and insists that it's still in its prime when the others note that its an older model. His affection towards it unfortunately further fuels Ajatarmon's obsession with him since it's the electronic device she spends most of her time inhabiting.
  • Distressed Dude: After he follows the group along to rescue the kidnapped Kiyoshiro, he soon finds himself taken hostage by Ajatarmon as well.
  • Green Thumb: His family owns a gardening shop, so he's been fully immersed in botany since childhood.
  • Secret-Keeper: As of his debut, he's one of the very few of the group's friends who knows about the true nature of Digimon instead of being led to believe that their partners are state-of-the-art holograms.
  • Talking to Plants: He's a believer in the practice, and often speaks words of encouragement to the plants at his parent's greenhouse. Little did he know the affection and encouragement he gave to his plants were being heard by Ajatarmon as well.

Hazakura Academy

    Kotarou Nomura 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kotaru_nomura.png

One of Hiro's classmates at Hazakura Academy.


  • A Day in the Limelight: The first half of Episode 46 is told from his viewpoint as Oleamon's first target, with the main trio being largely Out of Focus.
  • Beady-Eyed Loser: His eyes are noticeably small, and he has the unfortunate role of Muggle Best Friend.
  • Butt-Monkey: Half the time he appears in an episode, expect him to become the next victim of the Monster of the Week. From having his youth drained by Clockmon to having Asuramon steal his face, Kotarou really can't catch a break.
  • Chivalrous Pervert: A downplayed example as he's more of a flirt than anything. After the encounter with Clockmon, he spent more time in the hospital than necessary because he was hitting on a cute nurse, he joined the Gardening and Caretaking Club of his school because he found the third years cute, and he did the 20-win streak in "Fighter's Kingdom" so he could see Kinkakumon.
  • Distressed Dude: Happens many, many times over the course of the series. His encounters with Oleamon and Lilithmon center on him in particular, with the gang coming to his rescue in the nick of time for both.
  • Everyone Has Standards: Kotaru is a bit of a coward and his attitude toward girls is somewhat pervy, but when Lilithmon and Cerberumon force him at the threat of death to take them to some 'angels' (mistakenly believing him to know about holy Digimon, rather than some girls he was fawning over), he deliberately picks a long path to their school that he knows will be closed at night. When Lilithmon threatens him again, he doesn't try to pawn off his fate on another hapless victim and worries about the poisoned Gammamon the entire time more than himself. At his core, he is a reliable and trusted friend to Hiro.
  • Horrible Judge of Character: He has many of Vamdemon's victims followed on Lirurun. When he shows them (in obviously disfigured states) to Hiro, he calls them "lame" and insists that they're all red because of SV and not because they had become vampires.
  • Rapid Aging: Was made old by Clockmon in the first episode, but got better by the end.
  • Weirdness Magnet: He's been involved in the shenanigans of as many Digimon as Mika.

    Niijima 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/niijima.png
Voiced by: Sakura Kawaguchi

The manager of Hiro's dorm. She's been involved in at least four Digimon-related incidents.


  • Butt-Monkey: Expect her to become the first victim of the Digimon of the week when she appears.
  • Nerd Glasses: Wears one to emphasize her meekness.
  • Weirdness Magnet: She has fallen victim to at least four Digimon incidents. The first time she was attacked by the Zassoumon horde, the second time she was turned into a water droplet by Splashmon, the third time impersonated by Betsumon, and after that, got bitten by Gyukimon and turned into a Gyukimon-like monstrosity.

    Riku Fukatsu 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fukatsu.png
Voiced by: Hiroshi Okamoto

A first-term student of Hiro's school who arrived from Osaka to Tokyo. In his first appearance, he came across Jellymon and the Andiramon's delivery service site, "Reward Elf" and uses it to give his fellow students valuable goods with no money required whatsoever, leading to the Andiramon nearly destroying the whole building without his knowledge.


  • A Day in the Limelight: A good chunk of Episode 50 is told from his viewpoint of being chosen as the partner or love interest of a Pucchiemon/Meicrackmon Vicious Mode.
  • Butt-Monkey: When he appears, expect him to not just get into trouble with Digimon, but nearby people too. His attempts to calm them down usually fall flat without outside intervention.
  • Elevator Failure: When Jellymon was finding his laptop to cancel his orders for the Andiramon, he was trapped in a malfunctioning elevator and an instructor had to pull him out. However, he dropped his laptop there and Jellymon was able to find it across the Digital Field and cancel all of his orders accordingly.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends: He made most of his friends by using Reward Elf to give them valuable goods. When these goods vanish because Jellymon and Hiro get the Andiramon to return them all, he's instantly surrounded by a bunch of pissed-off students who had their valuable goods seemingly vanish out of thin air. In Episode 50, his desire to have friends gets him involved with a Pucchiemon who quickly degenerates into a Yandere Meicrackmon.
  • The Idiot from Osaka: He was an Osakan who moved to Tokyo six months ago, and he's a very stereotypical depiction of a bumbling Osakan Butt-Monkey, down to having the thickest accent possible.
  • Locked Out of the Loop: He's kept in the dark about Jellymon and Andiramon's involvement in the delivery service he's using. He also thought Pucchiemon/Meicrackmon who was attracted to him was just an advanced hologram, not a real living Digimon whose feelings were genuine. Riku finally becomes aware in Episode 66 that Mei wasn't a hologram, when all the Digimon flee the Digital World in mass exodus to escape the GRB plague.
  • Loners Will Stay Alone: Every time he tries to make a friend or more, he'll lose it in no time because he only made them through being unknowingly involved in Digimon incidents that were later absolved by Hiro. In Episode 44 he befriended the whole dorm by "ordering" rare goods using Jellymon and Andiramon's site only to lose all of his connections when Hiro found out the Andiramon were destroying the dorm to craft them and told the Digimon to undo the damage they caused, and a Pucchiemon he befriended later on degenerates into a Yandere Meicrackmon Vicious Mode who outright freaks him out because of her feral mannerisms, and refuses to even make amends for him and runs despite Canoweissmon, Thetismon, Hiro, and Kiyoshiro's words because she took them a bit too literally.
  • No Social Skills: Fukatsu seemingly can't make friends without getting involved with dangerous Digimon he has no business dealing with. In Episode 50, Meicrackmon Vicious Mode tearfully screams at him to make human friends, but he's shaken and sullen from the experience, and can't confide in Kiyoshiro or Hiro he's woefully unable to. He does go on a fishing trip with Hiro and Kotarou in episode 65 however, showing that he is at least developing a friendship with them.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: He just happened to come across Jellymon's site and used it to place orders for other students. Little does he know he's inviting a trio of Andiramon to effectively eat the whole Hazakura Dorm building.

Kiyoshiro's friends

    Emma Hanes 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/emma_hanes.jpg
Click here to see her when possessed by Eyesmon
Voiced by: Marina Inoue

A student from Kiyoshiro's overseas school who was infamous for being incredibly gossipy and noisy, being responsible for leaking Kiyoshiro's diary. She was attacked and possessed by Eyesmon in an airport restroom when she traveled to Japan.


  • Back for the Finale: She comes back in Episode 65 to communicate with Kiyoshiro through analog phone as a Hippogriffmon sweeps right above her.
  • Body Horror: Like other victims of Eyesmon, she has dozens of red eyes that appear all over her body that she tries covering up with clothes. She tries scratching at them, picking them, and even is tempted to do impromptu surgery using a sewing kit before stopping herself, and each time it only creates more eyes. By the time of the battle with Eyesmon, the eyes are hanging off her body like flaps of skin, and she's become a puppet of Eyesmon.
  • Clothing-Concealed Injury: Wears a long coat and a pair of glasses to conceal the grating Body Horror induced all over her body.
  • Demonic Possession: Was attacked and possessed by Eyesmon the moment she arrived in Japan. When Hiro and Kiyoshiro (and Gammamon and Jellymon in secret) meet her for the first time, it was largely Eyesmon influencing her. While she's able to resist somewhat initially, Eyesmon eventually takes control of her completely during the fight with the main cast, even firing attacks from the eyes on her body.
  • Fighting from the Inside: At several points she actively resists Eyesmon's influence on her, excusing herself to the bathroom before trying to do something about the eyes on her body, initially trying to pick them off, then trying to do impromptu surgery with a sewing kit she had but was unable to go through with. Doing this one too many times is what allows Ruli to notice something is wrong and find out about the eyes.
  • The Gadfly: According to Kiyoshiro, she's this during his days studying abroad, when she took pictures of his secret journal and put it all over social media as a prank. Because of this, Kiyoshiro calls her "Emma Devil Hanes" and he doesn't seem to be too pleased when she nags him for dates.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: To keep her in control, Eyesmon would regularly wipe out portions of her memory about having extra eyes on her body or noticing something was wrong, in turn stopping her from seeking help from the gang until Ruli finds out herself.
  • Not Herself: Viewers can notice that she's easily excitable, more than willing to get information from Kiyoshiro, and has a lower vocal pitch when being possessed, but she's a lot more subtle at it otherwise. This fails to alert the heroes that something bad is going on, however, since Emma was known to be that type of person. It's not until Ruli exposes the Body Horror that she's concealing that alerts them to a Digimon's work, but her unusual behavior changes aren't a part of their concern.
  • Phenotype Stereotype: She's all but said to be American, and is noticeably blond, has pale skin, and her natural eye color when not possessed by Eyesmon is bright blue.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: Double Subverted. Just like Eyesmon's other victims, she has red eyes, but she doesn't seem all that threatening or creepy, just a bit annoying. Aside from that's actually Eyesmon, not Emma, who isn't the nicest of Digimon, to begin with.
  • Ship Tease: It's hinted that part of the reason she keeps bugging Kiyoshiro over whether he has a girlfriend or not is because she has a thing for him, to the point that, after learning he doesn't and was just hiding Jellymon, she goes to kiss him herself, only being stopped thanks to Jellymon, something that only amuses Emma and has her squish the both of them against her for a selfie. It's unclear if Kiyoshiro reciprocates, just that, despite his issues with her being The Gadfly, he does care about her, and is happy once she's freed from Eyesmon.
  • Stalker with a Crush: Even before Eyesmon, she's notably been gossip-happy back in the days, and is implied to be in love with Kiyoshiro.

    Meru Soma 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/souma_meru.png
Voiced by: Eri Nakao

A friend of Kiyoshiro who was invited to sponsor the Kuraishi Sentai Jiraiya's tokusatsu show.


  • Geek: Meru is a geek in favor of the same anime franchises as Kiyoshiro.
  • Interspecies Adoption: After the incident is resolved, TonosamaGekomon and Gekomon decide to live alongside her. Hiro even thinks to himself how this is the kind of bridge he wants to build between humans and Digimon.
  • Red Herring: Considering she did ask about Gammamon and she trailed the group believing that they were acting suspicious, one might believe that she's hiding something more than she lets herself with (such as her being a Digimon in disguise, her somehow knowing about Digimon or was researching them or Hiro and Ruli being brainwashed by something else). She doesn't and ends up just being a normal girl who has no problems around Digimon.

    Tamotsu Ihara 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tamotsu.png

Kiyoshiro's senior and fellow researcher. Nanomon implanted a dying Shadramon on him in an attempt to resurrect the Digimon.


  • Body Horror: At the start of the Nanomon incident, Shadramon's arms and horns protrude out from his body. It evolved to the Digimon's head, wings, and limbs growing out of him and taking over his mind. At the end of the episode, Shadramon becomes solid and was stuck inside him, with the human being merely a part of the Digimon's body, which was also taken control of by Nanomon.
  • Demonic Possession: He was implanted with a Shadramon by Nanomon, who can take control of his consciousness and walk around with his body intact.
  • Otaku: He complains about not being able to watch his favorite anime in front of Kiyoshiro, and his apartment is filled with posters of anime girls and anime character figures.

Igashira Household

    Kotoha Igashira 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kotoha_6.png
Voiced by: Hisako Kanemoto

A girl who contacted Ruli over a haunting incident that happened after her brother Toru brought the corpse of his dead girlfriend Manami back to her home.


  • Break the Cutie: Her brother's fiancee Manami died days before their wedding, then she has to endure constant nightmares and hauntings, see her grieving and insane brother play with Manami's reanimated corpse and spotting said corpse walking around on its own for ten days before she decided to seek help. Yeah...
  • Haunted House: Her home became this after Toru brought Manami's seemingly resurrected corpse back to her home. The hauntings happened because of a large group of Evilmon and Tsumemon that were attracted by Moon=Millenniumon, which was inside Manami's corpse and taking control of it.
  • Invisible Parents: Her parents are working overseas, so they don't know about her brother keeping his fiancee's corpse in their house. He also tells her not to tell her parents about it.

    Toru Igashira 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/toru_igashira.png
Voiced by: Shinji Kawada

Kotoha's elder brother. His fiance died from a lab accident days before their wedding, but her body was seemingly resurrected and moving, so he brought her back to his home under the delusion that she was resurrected. It's not good for his mental health.


  • Exhausted Eye Bags: Has a pair of sullen eye-bags that make him look more creepy, implied to be a side effect of Moon=Millenniumon feeding on his data. They wear off significantly after ZeedMillenniumon was taken down.
  • Love Makes You Crazy: He's so traumatized by Manami's death, that when her corpse is suddenly moving, he brings her back to his house and plays with it for ten straight days until his younger sister called Ruli to their house to investigate. Even when ZeedMillenniumon is threatening to destroy the world, he still hesitates for a while until Manami tells him that she will sacrifice herself.
  • Morton's Fork: By the end of the confrontation against ZeedMillenniumon, he's faced with only two choices; lose his already-dead beloved or let an apocalyptic abomination wipe out the entire world. It took him a short while to choose the former over the latter.
  • Mummies at the Dinner Table: Played for tragedy. Manami's death drove him so insane that, when her corpse was seemingly reanimated, he's been obsessively playing with it for more than a week and he does cuddle it on-screen. Though it's not a sign that he's depraved than he really couldn't accept the reality that his fiancee was dead.
  • Skewed Priorities: Apparently facing a world-wiping Eldritch Abomination is nothing compared to him losing his (already-dead) beloved who's reanimated by said abomination. He gets out of it thankfully and makes no attempts to stop the group from doing the job once said beloved tells them to bring it.

    Manami Jinno 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/manami_4.png
Voiced by: Fumiko Orikasa

A researcher who gets killed by a lab accident involving Moon=Millenniumon. After killing her, the Digimon takes over her deceased body to get close to Tohru and several others before assuming its true form to destroy the world.


  • Achilles' Heel: Her disembodied consciousness becomes this for ZeedMillenniumon. Initially, Toru is very hesitant about letting the group land a hit on her because he would lose his beloved, but she assures him not to be worried about it and let them dispel her consciousness alongside ZeedMillenniumon.
  • Drop Dead Gorgeous: Despite one of the attendees of her funeral comments that her corpse is heavily mangled, what the audience sees is a surprisingly well-preserved body, despite being hit point-blank by Moon=Millenniumon and her back hitting straight into a wall.
  • The Lost Lenore: She got killed by Moon=Milleniummon days before her wedding with Toru would commence.
  • Mercy Kill: Much like RareRaremon before her, the group make the tough decision to destroy what remains of her consciousness trapped in a monstrous shell.
  • Posthumous Character: Was killed days before episode 61, with the one Hiro meets personally being Moon=Millenniumon moving around in her corpse.
  • We Hardly Knew Ye: Dies right at the start of Episode 61, so we don't know much about her.

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