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Mount Sorbet

  • Main Charactersnote 
  • Othersnote 

Travelers

    Boreas 

Boreas

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/boreas_portrait.png
"A wolf being followed around by a little bunny... Frosting sure is a strange town."
Appears in: Lonely Wolf Treat, Friendly Bunny Mochi, Wandering Wolf Trick

A traveling rabbit who visits Frosting from time to time.


  • Dead Hat Shot: In Chapter 1's bad ending, Treat comes across his scarf shortly before discovering his corpse.
  • Killed Offscreen: Timber seems to have pushed him off a cliff edge for the other wolves to find.
  • Kill the Cutie: Unfortunately gets hit with this offscreen, courtesy of Timber.
  • Nice Guy: While he has some reservations about helping Trick get to Daifuku, he is simply worried about how other rabbits might react to their presence. All in all, he is very pleasant and quick to trust others.
  • Perpetual Smiler: He's never depicted showing a frown on his face.
  • Put on a Bus: Boreas hasn't made an appearance since Wandering Wolf Trick.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: He briefly reappears in Wandering Wolf Trick to give Trick a ticket so they can continue their journey. The ticket ends up being to Daifuku, where you can meet Mochi's aunt and learn the truth about Juju's missing father. He still gives you the ticket even if you don't do the sidequest, but it's not as significant then.
  • Tastes Like Friendship: In his first meeting with Trick, he agrees to give them a ticket to Daifuku in exchange for some food. Trick finds an apple tree and gives him one, which he accepts.
  • Walking the Earth: Like Trick, he is a traveler who often visits many places.
  • Wandering Minstrel: He is a traveler who plays the flute for a living.

    Nameless Couple 

Nameless Couple

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cat1_portrait.png
"...You don't look like someone who'd own an inn. I'm not convinced!"
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cat2_portrait.png
"Ahh I didn't want to raise a fuss...!"
Appears in: Clever Fox Moxie, Trick Comes Home

These two traveling cats are the first visitors of the Foxy Lodge, a hotel that Moxie improvises on the spot as part of her latest money-making scheme.


  • Big Eater: The first cat prefers to scarf down food when she eats. She hates the spicy food at Krem because she can only eat it slowly.
  • The Bus Came Back: The two only showed up in the third game then disappeared, only to return again in Trick Comes Home in Krem.
  • Butt-Monkey: Something always seems to go wrong for them in their vacation. First it was Frosting banning non-rabbits then it was Krem having food too spicy to eat.
  • Cloudcuckoolander's Minder: The second cat tries to keep their partner's impulses under control, but rarely succeeds due to how timid they are.
  • Eyes Out of Sight: The second cat's eyes are perpetually hidden.
  • Hidden Depths: The second cat is rather timid and shy, but seems to be good at solving mysteries, given their accurate observation during the murder mystery roleplay about how it doesn't make sense for Madam Saltsworth's fiance to kill her before getting married since he won't inherit her money that way. Their partner commends this too.
  • Hot-Blooded: The first cat is impulsive, excitable, and has a tendency to shout. It's a major reason for why the two end up staying at the Foxy Lodge in the first place, because she just gets so excited about the murder mystery that her partner has no choice but to go along with it.
  • Hypocrite: They complain about Frosting discriminating against cats, yet they express reluctance to trust Moxie because she is a fox. Right in front of her, no less.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: Although the first cat is a bit rude towards Moxie out of skepticism, she is unknowingly right about her not being a real inn owner.
  • No Name Given: Nami outright calls them "a cute nameless couple".
  • Plain Palate: The first cat doesn't like spicy food at all since it makes her unable to eat a lot.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: The first cat is brash and loud, while the second cat is meek and levelheaded.


The Netherworld

    Kamilla 

Kamilla

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kamilla_portrait_8.png
"What business does an angel have befriending a demon?"
Appears in: Friendly Bunny Mochi, Wandering Wolf Trick
Also appears in: First Contract, DATE TREAT, another piece of candy, First Kiss at a Spooky Soiree, Dress Treat! (costume only), Contract Demon

A contract demon from the Netherworld. She gets summoned by Eleni in the latter's efforts to become friends with a demon.


  • Ascended Extra: Like Eleni, she ends up receiving a starring role in Contract Demon to retell the story from their perspective.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: She is completely and thoroughly evil! According to herself, anyway.
  • Celibate Heroine: Kamilla is repulsed by clients who summon her for sexual favors, suggesting she's averse to it.
  • Cloudcuckoolander's Minder: After she gets together with Eleni, every second of her time around the latter is spent keeping her in check.
  • Deal with the Devil: As a contract demon, it's her job to be summoned to bargain for people's souls. She doesn't accept people who summon demons for sex, though.
  • Harmless Villain: When summoned, she tries to act like she's an embodiment of hatred and malice from the most mind-numbingly horrifying pits of the infernal domains, because that's how she thinks demons are supposed to act. In reality, she's just a plain old demon from the plain old Netherworld. Mochi is quick to note the similarities between Kamilla and Moxie.
  • Hidden Eyes: Her eyes disappear into shadow whenever she is acting scary.
  • Incoming Ham: "WHAT FOOL DARES AWAKEN THE GREAT KAMILLA?"
  • Large Ham: Her "scary evil demon" act involves speaking loudly and dramatically and saying "fool" a lot. Once the facade comes undone, though, she becomes an awkward, flustered mess.
  • My Nayme Is: A retroactive example. Kamilla's name could be seen as a corruption of "camellia", but actually Nami just got Kamilla's name from a random name generator and didn't start deliberately naming demon characters after weirdly spelled herbs and spices until a while later.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: She really only acts evil because that's how demons are expected to be like. In reality, she's easily flustered and insecure about doing her job correctly.
  • Really 700 Years Old: According to the webcomic's cast list, she's 2480 years old.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Lasagna, according to the webcomic's cast list.
  • Yellow Eyes of Sneakiness: Ultimately subverted. While she has yellow eyes and is a demon, she's not really evil or scary.
  • You Remind Me of X: Mochi remarks that Kamilla' acting tough and scary reminds her of Moxie.


The InsteRail

    Thyme and Spice 

Thyme and Spice

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thyme_portrait.png
"Spice told you we're cosplayers...? How embarrassing..."
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/spice_portrait.png
"Have you heard of a story called her tears were my light? Thyme and I are huge fans."
Appear in: Clever Fox Moxie, Wandering Wolf Trick, Dreaming Treat, Trick Comes Home
Also appear in: her tears were my light (as Time and Space), another piece of candy

Two witches who manage the InsteRail system. They are huge fans of her tears were my light and enjoy cosplaying as its main characters.


  • All There in the Manual: Their role in the games is very small, so most of what is known about them is found in NomnomNami's webcomic another piece of candy.
  • Ambiguously Human: Ambiguously witch in this case. While almost all witches in the setting could easily pass for a human, Thyme and Spice's skin color and pointy ears make them stand out. You may think it's just a part of their costumes, but in reality, they've always born an uncanny resemblance to Time and Space, even before they got into cosplaying. However, several pointy-eared witches appear in Krem, so it's not as uncommon as one might think.
  • But Not Too Bi: Like Mochi, Spice has only ever shown interest in her girlfriend, but this strip from the webcomic implies she's also interested in men, but that's where it begins and ends.
  • Casual Time Travel: They also offer time travel services, though it is very expensive and strictly regulated to prevent the frivolous creation of alternate universes.
  • Companion Cube: Spice is almost never seen without her doll Nil.
  • Cosplay Otaku Girl: They are always in full cosplay when running the InsteRail, but Thyme doesn't want everyone to know that.
  • Creator's Show Within a Show: It is unclear exactly how her tears were my light can exist as a story in the Treat universe given that both works were made by the same developer. The notion that Thyme and Spice are incarnations of the "real" Time and Space only muddles things further.
  • Cute Witch: They are basically Time and Space in witch costumes.
  • Dimensional Traveler: Spice's spatial magic allows her to travel to parallel universes and even access a Void Between the Worlds. This comes in handy whenever her girlfriend gets lost in an alternate reality after abusing time travel too much.
  • Fourth-Wall Observer: In the Complete Series, Thyme and Spice speak to the player on the chapter select screen, and in the story proper Spice may ask the player if they're enjoying the story so far, to the confusion of whomever the player is controlling.
  • God in Human Form: The webcomic indicates that Thyme and Spice are Time and Space incarnated as witches (which means they are technically cosplaying as themselves). The reason Nil isn't with them is because, as the embodiment of nothingness, she is afraid of what would happen to her if she tried to take on a physical form. Even so, she doesn't feel completely left out thanks to the doll that Spice is always carrying.
  • Have We Met Yet?: In chapter 8, Trick wonders why Spice is so familiar with them if they've only used the InsteRail a few times, and Spice thinks it might just be from her point of view.
  • Irony: In her tears were my light, Time is relatively calm and rational while Space is sensitive and prone to crying. In another piece of candy, Spice is the calm and patient one while Thyme is the one prone to intense emotion.
  • Leitmotif: Insterail, which is a remix of the title theme of her tears were my light.
  • The Perfectionist: Thyme has a bad habit of using time travel to correct even the smallest errors in her life, such as incorrectly guessing her girlfriend's favorite candy flavor.
  • Portal Crossroad World: The InsteRail in a nutshell. Spice describes it as a train with infinite entrances and infinite exits.
  • Textile Work Is Feminine: Spice makes costumes and dolls as a hobby.
  • Timey-Wimey Ball: One comic shows that Thyme gets erased from existence whenever she travels back in time and corrects her past mistakes. A later comic indicates that even though Thyme herself disappears, the timeline that she came from continues to exist, implying there are countless timelines where Spice is alone and the InsteRail is crippled because Thyme abruptly ended her own existence. Spice would then travel to the new timeline in order to reunite with Thyme, though the problem of two Spices occupying the same timeline is never addressed.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Spice likes fruit salad, while Thyme likes shumai (a type of traditional Chinese dumpling).
  • Welcome to Corneria: Spice gives the exact same tutorial on using the InsteRail in every chapter she appears in, even to people she already knows.

Nameless Witch Town

    Nougat 

Nougat

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nougat_portrait.png
"I wouldn't mind if you came to keep me company more often! Always happy to see a friend, yanno?"
Appears in: Clever Fox Moxie, Wandering Wolf Trick, Dreaming Treat, Trick Comes Home

A friendly mouse who hails from the witch town. He takes up the Frosting Post Office And Border Checkpoint as Nutmeg's replacement.


  • Fantastic Racism: Since he is a mouse, the rabbits in Frosting don't want anything to do with him. Presumably, he is only allowed to enter the town because he is a government worker, like Brickzo.
  • Nice Guy: He is very considerate of others and is always up for a friendly chat.
  • Nice Mice: Despite being discriminated against by the rabbits, he's very good natured towards others.
  • Perpetual Smiler: Nougat always seems to be in a good mood.
  • The Pollyanna: He knows why none of the rabbits want to talk to him, but doesn't let it keep him down.
  • Predator-Prey Friendship: Nougat is friends with many of the cats that live in the witch town. He is not at all wary of Moxie and Trick when he meets them. He is also very close with Nutmeg and does his best to cheer her up after they are forced to swap positions.

    Lost Cat Child and Mother 

Lost Cat Child and Mother

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"Mummy will get very angry if I talk to big woofs. You should go far far away."
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"Guh! I thought I smelled a dog... Could you not stand so close?"
Appear in: Wandering Wolf Trick, Dreaming Treat (child only)
One day, a little cat becomes separated from their mother in the middle of the witch town. The mother eventually finds her child talking to Trick, which doesn't end well for the wolf.
  • Ambiguous Gender Identity: The child self-identifies as "not a girl", but their mother still refers to them with feminine pronouns. Closet Trans, or do they just not like being called that? Trick, for their part, interprets this as the child being nonbinary like they are.
  • Cats Are Mean: The mother is certainly not pleasant towards Trick. The child, not so much since they're more innocent.
  • Children Are Innocent: While initially scared of a wolf, the child quickly accepts Trick's to find their mother after being reassured they won't be eaten.
  • Fantastic Racism: The mother outright calls for the death of all wolves simply because one of them was talking to her child.
  • Kick the Dog: The cat mother's extremist remark about the extermination of wolves towards Trick.
  • Mama Bear: When the mother finds Trick talking to her child, her behavior escalates from "a bit rude" to "bloodthirsty".
  • Missing Child: When Trick meets the child, they're lost and looking for their mother.
  • No Name Given: Neither of them are ever given names, and the child is only called "lost cat child" in the art collection.
  • Parental Neglect: The mother doesn't seem at all concerned about her child being missing until she finds them with Trick.
  • Pulling Your Child Away: The mother does this upon seeing Trick near her child.

    Angelica, Biscotti, and Cassia 

Angelica, Biscotti and Cassia

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/angelica_portrait_5.png
"Those two are so easily distracted, I lose track of them every time we go anywhere together..."
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/biscotti_portrait_9.png
"I've never had candy that isn't made with magic. I'd like to try some."
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cassia_portrait_3.png
"Don't hugs just make you feel so warm and fuzzy inside~?"
Appear in: Clever Fox Moxie (Biscotti and Cassia only), Dreaming Treat, Starry Flowers: Tempered Desire
Cassia also appears in: Starry Flowers, Charm Studies, another piece of candy (audition event)

A polycule of two witches and a cat. They appear exclusively in the Complete Series, and Treat can meet them in an optional sidequest in Dreaming Treat.


  • Big Fun: Biscotti is described as round and fluffy and having a calming presence.
  • Big, Thin, Short Trio: Angelica is tall and slender, Biscotti is rotund, and Cassia is only slightly taller than Mochi.
  • The Cameo: Cassia originally had a supporting role in Starry Flowers. In the Treat series, however, she only shows up for optional sidequests in the third and fifth chapters.
  • Cool Big Sis: Treat looks up to Angelica as a fellow polyamorous person, and Angelica gives Treat some encouragement as she prepares to confess to Mochi.
  • Cuddle Bug: Cassia likes giving hugs to absolutely everybody. In the third chapter, she shows up at Atelier Sweets for the express purpose of hugging Gumdrop, and is more than happy to hug Moxie on request.
  • Interspecies Romance: Biscotti is a cat, while Angelica and Cassia are witches. They are together.
  • Nice Girl: All three of them are incredibly friendly and affectionate, showing none of the usual wariness towards Treat or Moxie.
  • Polyamory: A trio of girlfriends. Treat considers them her role models, as seeing them together gives her hope for her own polyamorous feelings.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: Two red onis and one blue oni. Biscotti and Cassia are passionate and playful, and the more responsible Angelica often loses track of them.
  • Rose-Haired Sweetie: Cassia has pale pink hair and is very cuddly. Biscotti has pink hair with a brown streak and is very easygoing.
  • Unseen No More: Cassia makes her debut appearance in the Starry Flowers novel, while her partners are only alluded to. While their appearance was revealed in a piece of supplementary artwork for Starry Flowers, the Treat series remake marks the first time Angelica and Biscotti actually appear in a Nami game.

    Genoise 

Genoise

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/genoise_portrait_1.png
"Such a good little kitty— Ah, I mean, foxie. That's right, you're a fox."
Appears in: Lucky Number Moxie

A kindly old witch who runs a clothes shop in the witch town. She provides Moxie with a job and a place to stay after the Foxy Lodge is shut down.


  • Affectionate Nickname: Moxie calls her "Gen".
  • All Witches Have Cats: She used to have a cat familiar named Madeleine.
  • Benevolent Boss: Between buying Moxie her favorite yogurt, giving her time off to travel with her girlfriends, and giving Treat and Mochi new clothes for the road, it's not hard to see why Moxie enjoys working for Gen.
  • Cloud Cuckoo Lander: She's a bit eccentric to say the least.
  • Cool Old Lady: Gen is a very kindhearted and caring towards Moxie, and gets along well with Treat and Mochi when she meets them.
  • Establishing Character Moment: In the beginning of chapter 7, she lets Moxie have her favorite food for breakfast, then makes Moxie say a silly catchphrase when she gets to work, establishing her as a somewhat kooky Benevolent Boss.
  • Granny Classic: Visibly looks like an old lady, is kind and softspoken, likes to bake and serve tea to her guests, and often shows Moxie pictures of her old cat. Genoise definitely fits the "kindly grandma" bill.
  • Kindhearted Cat Lover: She's sweet to Moxie and all her customers. She also used to own a cat named Madeleine whom she loved.
  • Replacement Goldfish: Gen seems to consider Moxie as a replacement for her old cat Madeleine. The fact that Moxie and Madeleine have very similar hairstyles doesn't help.

    Madeleine 

Madeleine

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/madeleine_photos.png
Madelene's Album Photos
Appears in: Lucky Number Moxie (pictured)
Genoise's old cat familiar. She used to live with her before Moxie moved to start working, and Genoise misses her greatly.
  • Cats Are Mean: Inverted. Madeleine seems to have been a nice cat. Genoise notes that her attitude was quite the opposite of Moxie's feisty one.
  • The Ghost: She's only mentioned occasionally in Chapter 7. The closest you get to seeing her is in Genoise's album and even then, the photos aren't clear like Myrrh's one in Chapter 8.
  • Posthumous Character: invoked In-game, there is no direct confirmation on why Madeleine and Genoise are no longer together. It is implied, however, that the apparition that torments Moxie throughout the first half of chapter 7 is actually Madeleine's ghost. Word of God confirms that she did die.

Daifuku

    Castella 

Castella

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/castella_portrait.png
"Good luck, and come back when ya can. Auntie Castella's crepes will be waitin' here for ya."
Appears in: Wandering Wolf Trick

Mochi's aunt, a sweet old lady who sells crepes in the rabbit city of Daifuku.


  • Chekhov's Gunman: She is briefly mentioned by Mochi in the beginning of Friendly Bunny Mochi, and shows up in person two games later as part of a sidequest that reveals Juju's backstory.
  • Cool Aunt: She's Mochi aunt and a rabbit with no fear of wolves.
  • Cool Old Lady: An older woman with a kind heart.
  • Explosive Breeder: She mated with three partners and had many children.
  • I Will Wait for You: She never gave up the hope that her husband Mango is still alive, despite everyone else in the family thinking otherwise. She turns out to be right.
  • Nice Girl: Like her niece, she's not wary of wolves and is very nice to Trick upon meeting them.
  • One-Shot Character: Only appeared in the fourth chapter.
  • Polyamory: She has two partners in addition to the one who went missing. It is apparently very common for rabbits to have multiple partners, since it makes it easier to take care of their many children. She finds it unusual that her sister only has one partner and one child.
  • Sweet Baker: She offers Trick a free crepe because she can tell Trick is exhausted from their travels, and happily chats with Trick while preparing it, all without a second thought.
  • White Sheep: She is considered an oddball among her family due to being one of the few rabbits to not be irrationally hateful towards wolves.

Wormwood

    Drop 

Drop

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/drop_portrait.png
"It rains a lot back home... I wonder if it's raining there now?"
Appears in: Clever Fox Moxie, Wandering Wolf Trick, Dreaming Treat
Also appears in: another piece of candy (audition event)

A mouse who hails from the mysterious village of Wormwood. She is initially too scared to leave her home, but that changes when she meets Trick.


  • Ambiguous Gender: The fifth chapter's art collection uses feminine pronouns for Drop, but her gender or pronouns are never made clear in the series proper. The mice of Wormwood call each other "brothers", but that is just a formality and has no bearing on their actual gender.
  • Anti-Villain: Despite being part of a cult, it's clear Drop wants no one to be hurt by them. Once she gathers her courage, she leaves them without hesitation.
  • Caring Gardener: She is seen running a flower shop in the fifth game.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: Briefly introduced in "Clever Fox Moxie" before her more prominent roles in the two following games.
  • Cult Defector: The mice of Wormwood are... an odd bunch, though it is unclear whether Drop's reluctance to leave her home is caused by her own fears or by the manipulations of the other mice. Nevertheless, hearing about Trick's travels makes Drop realize the world is not as dangerous as she thinks it is, which encourages her to leave Wormwood and start a new life in the witch town.
  • Emotionless Girl: Drop is rather passive and doesn't change her expression at all. At least until the fifth game.
  • Expository Hairstyle Change: She loses her bangs after getting settled in the witch town and changing her life for the better.
  • Grew a Spine: Meeting Trick inspired Drop to stop being scared of leaving Wormwood and going about life in her own way.
  • Grey Rain of Depression: Her gloomy nature seems to attract rain wherever she goes.
  • Hiding Behind Your Bangs: Some of her hair covers her left eye, befitting her gloomy personality.
  • In the Hood: This is the case for all the mice in Wormwood, wearing raincoats and covering their heads with the hood. We see Drop without it for the first time in "Dreaming Treat".
  • Leitmotif: Drop's Garden, an upbeat remix of the darker and spookier Wormwood.
  • Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: It's not clear why Drop seems to attract rain whenever she goes, though it seems to be connected to her gloomy nature because once she becomes more upbeat and smiley, the rain disappears.
  • Meaningful Name: "Drop" is an appropriate name for someone who is always followed by rain.
  • Nice Mice: Gloomy aura aside, Drop is a considerate mouse.
  • Nominal Villain: It's unknown exactly why she remains with the Wormwood cultists despite being against why they does, but it is implied that she's afraid of leaving.
  • Teru-Teru Bōzu: All citizens of Wormwood wear white raincoats and smiley masks, giving them the appearance of a Teru-Teru Bōzu. Considering it always rains in Wormwood, it's quite fitting.
  • Took a Level in Cheerfulness: Opening a flower shop seems to have made her more upbeat.
  • Token Good Teammate: The only mouse in Wormwood who isn't at all eager to eat travelers, and is implied to have always been helping them get away.
  • Uniformity Exception: Back in Wormwood, Drop's differently-colored ears are all that distinguish her from all the other mice.
  • When She Smiles: Drop's Character Portrait always shows her with passive expression. When she appears in Dreaming Treat at her flower shop, we see her smiling for the first time.

Krem

    The FCF 

The Free Chicken Foundation

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"Say NO to meat! Say NO MORE eggs!!"
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"Eliminating the need for witch farms would make the world a better place. That's what we believe!"
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sesame_portrait.png
"You're too intense, Saffron. You can't radicalize anyone with a single conversation."
Appears in: Trick Comes Home

A group of animal rights activists based in Krem. Basmati is the leader, and Saffron and Sesame are the only active members.


  • Affectionate Nickname: Saffron is called "Saffy" by her dad.
  • Giver of Lame Names: Basmati.
    • The name "Free Chicken Foundation" was Basmati's idea. Sesame thinks the name is terrible, because it sounds like the group is handing out free chicken, not freeing chickens. Trick has the option to suggest a new name for the group, or leave it as is.
    • She also tries to call their egg heist "Operation: Jackal in the Hen House". Sesame turns it down, because it sounds too predatory.
  • Graceful Loser: Basmati takes it surprisingly well that Trick decided to ditch the group and adopt the chick as their own. Even though her whole plan was derailed, Basmati is touched that Trick would care about the chick even more than she does, and vows to reach her goals another way.
  • Hot-Blooded: Basmati is an enthusiastic, passionate and very shouty leader.
  • Little Miss Con Artist: Saffron makes use of her small, cutesy appearance when infiltrating the chicken farm, pretending to be a curious little girl to make sure the manager doesn't suspect anything. When things start to go wrong, she drops the act and reveals she is 22.
  • Nice Mice: Unlike Sesame, Saffron is very friendly to Trick in their first encounter.
  • Older Than She Looks: Saffron looks smaller and younger than even Mochi, who's already often mistaken for a child because of her stature and appearance. Saffron is somehow older than her.
  • The Password Is Always "Swordfish": The password to their hideout is "Open Sesame". Sesame is the one who opens the door.
  • Pet the Dog: Sesame acts aloof and negative in front of his friends. When the others are out of earshot, though, he admits to Trick that he is grateful to have met the other two.
  • Vegetarian Carnivore: Basmati is vegan and Sesame is vegetarian. Both are jackals.
  • You Know I'm Black, Right?: Sesame tells Trick to take off their hood because they look like a mouse. Saffron immediately pipes in with "Hey, that's not a bad thing!"

    Marmalade 

Marmalade

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/marmalade_portrait.png
"Was there a particular position you were interested iiin? Or just looking for a tour todaaay?"
Appears in: Trick Comes Home

The witch in charge of Chickpea Enchanted Farm. Because they're understaffed, she works as the manager, receptionist, and tour guide.


  • Ambiguously Evil: It is rumored that chickens are animal folk who were cursed to forever remain in animal form so they could be farmed and eaten. If this rumor is true, then Marmalade and her company would be guilty of mass slavery and genocide.
  • Perpetual Smiler: She's always so cheerful and smiley.
  • Verbal Tic: She tends to draw out the words at the end of her sentences.

    Saffron's Papa 

Saffron's Papa

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/papa_portrait.png
"This is my daughter, Saffron. She's not causing you any trouble is she...?"
Appears in: Trick Comes Home

A worker at the Chickpea Enchanted Farm. His daughter is a member of the FCF, but he himself has no interest in their shenanigans.


  • Accidental Hero: Unwittingly helps Saffron and Trick in their mission to smuggle one egg out of his workplace.
  • Conveniently Timed Distraction: Him noticing his daughter on the tour creates the perfect distraction for Trick to steal an egg.
  • The Mole: Subverted. The FCF gets information about the chicken farm via their "man on the inside", only it turns out he isn't actually a member of the FCF and just happens to be Saffron's dad.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: If he hadn't called out Saffron, she wouldn't have created a distraction and allowed Trick to steal one of the eggs in the facility.
  • Unnamed Parent: His name is not stated.

    Phoenix 

Phoenix

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/phoenix_portrait.png
"Cheep, cheep!"
Appears in: Trick Comes Home
Also appears in: another piece of candy
Trick's beloved son, a baby chick rescued from Chickpea Enchanted Farm.
  • Give Him a Normal Life: Trick decides to adopt Phoenix as their own rather than hand him over to the FCF as originally planned, because they'd rather Phoenix live a normal life than let the group use him to further their agenda.
  • Hello, [Insert Name Here]: Phoenix is his canon name, but in-game you can name him whatever you want.

Miscellaneous

    Grenadine and Capillaire (SPOILERS) 

Grenadine and Capillaire

Mentioned in: Trick Comes Home
Myrrh's coauthors who collaborated with him on the All-in-one Book of Lore series. After controversy stirred up from the books, they parted ways and went into hiding, and Myrrh wants to meet up with them again to write a third volume to undo the damage.
  • Ambiguous Gender: Neither is referred to with gender indicators.
  • Satellite Character: So far, their characters are solely defined by their relation to Myrrh.
  • Unknown Character: Just like Myrrh, they're yet to appear physically due to them going into hiding. Unlike him however, no distinguishing characterization has been given to them.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: As writers of the controversial All-in-one Book of Lore series, they might've unintentionally perpetuated Fantastic Racism.
  • Walking Spoiler: Their mere existence is a spoiler for Myrrh's involvement with the All-in-one Book of Lore.

Secret Characters (SPOILERS!)

    The Two Witches 

Orchid and Lilium

Appear in: Wandering Wolf Trick, Trick Comes Home
Also appear in: BAD END THEATER
The keepers of BAD END THEATER, these two beings have the power to write entire worlds into and out of existence. Orchid likes good endings and Lilium likes bad endings.
  • Addressing the Player: Lilium's offer of bad endings is not meant for Trick; it is meant for YOU.
    Lilium: Oh, Trick. How many times do I have to tell you, this doesn't concern you.
  • Affably Evil: Lilium is oddly pleasant for someone who enjoys making people suffer with her bad endings.
  • The Cameo: They appear to be witchy counterparts of BAD END THEATER's TRAGEDY and her lover.
  • Late-Arrival Spoiler: Orchid and Lilium are counterparts to certain Walking Spoiler characters of BAD END THEATER, so their very existence is already kind of a spoiler for that game's plot developments.
  • The Little Shop That Wasn't There Yesterday: If you decline Lilium's offer for a bad ending in chapter 4, the theater disappears from existence and Trick is returned to the Netherworld with their memories wiped.
  • Named in the Sequel: When they debuted in BAD END THEATER, the former only went by a pronoun, while the latter went by a stage name. Here, they are properly named as Orchid and Lilium.
  • Place Beyond Time: The theater itself. Orchid says the real world is "paused" while Trick is inside the theater, and Lilium is able to manipulate events in the past after you talk to her in the present.
  • Reality Warper: Their abilities range from making small changes to the real world to bringing entirely new worlds into existence.

    The Bad Wolves 

Timber and Tundra

Appear in: Lonely Wolf Treat (bad ending)
Timber and his mother Tundra are leaders of a suspicious wolf pack based in Glaze. Treat's family used to live among them, until they parted on bad terms.
  • Arc Villains: For the bad ending of the first game, which is their only appearance in the series.
  • Cannibal Clan: They're not literal cannibals, but since wolves and rabbits are both people in this universe, the vibe is definitely there.
  • Evil Old Folks: Tundra is an elder among her pack.
  • Eye Scream: Tundra's scuffle with Candy ended with her being blinded in one eye.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Timber is a liar and a murderer with a polite front.
  • Freudian Excuse: As mentioned below, Timber hates rabbits because his father was beaten to death by a bunch of them.
  • Gaslighting: When Timber saves Treat from Juju, he convinces Treat that she is the one who pushed Juju to her death, knowing Treat was in too much of a panic to notice what really happened. When Treat accuses him of having murdered other rabbits, he simply doubles down and insists that Treat herself is no better.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: In a broader sense, they're kept in the background in the proper storyline, only appearing and taking action in the alternative ending of Chapter 1. Additionally, it's because of their nature as hunters that makes Treat's current pack leave and move near Frosting, setting up the events of the series.
  • Hate Sink: They manages to surpass Moxie's mom in this aspect. Not a single thing about them is likable.
  • The Heavy: Between the two, Timber is the more proactive whereas Tundra takes a backseat due to her old age.
  • Karma Houdini: As far as we can tell since their appearance concluded with No Ending, neither Timber nor Tundra face repercussions for their actions.
  • Knight of Cerebus: The fact that they only appear in the darker alternative endings says it all.
  • Light Is Not Good: Tundra has white hair and clothes with lighter colors, and she is not a good person.
  • Make It Look Like an Accident: Timber claims the pack only eats scavenged meat from rabbits who are already dead. As it turns out, he is the one who has been killing the rabbits and leaving their bodies around for the pack to find.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Their every interaction with Treat is a subtle and insidious tactic to force her to live by their rules. These include telling sob stories about hunger and desperation for sympathy points, shutting down Treat and calling her rude whenever she tries to argue, having Treat change into her wolf form to further isolate her from the rabbits, claiming that not eating a freshly killed rabbit would be a waste of resources, and offering backhanded words of comfort when Juju ends up killed.
  • Resignations Not Accepted: Nobody was killed, but Tundra's reaction to Treat's family's desertion was still rather violent.
  • Savage Wolves: They are wolves, they eat rabbits, and they are some of the most vile people in the entire setting.
  • Viler New Villain: They surpass BOTH Juju and Moxie's mom (the only villainous characters thus far, but only because they're antagonistic and not actually evil) in terms of depravity with their sick and twisted manipulations and willing to kill with no remorse.
  • Vile Villain, Saccharine Show: Even more so than Moxie's mom. They're unambiguously evil wolves with manipulative and murderous tendencies.
  • Villainous Mother-Son Duo: Timber and his mother Tundra lead their pack of hunter wolves together.
  • Walking Spoiler: They only appear in the bad ending of Chapter 1, so you can't really talk about it without spoiling their existence.
  • You Killed My Father: Timber grew to loathe rabbits since his father was beaten to death by them.

    Chai's Brother 

Chai's Brother

Mentioned in: Clever Fox Moxie (bad ending)
A shady guy living in Ginseng who's involved in dealings at the black market.
  • Ambiguously Evil: Moxie describes him as shady, something Chai doesn't deny. Though it's still unclear to what extent he could be called evil.
  • Friend in the Black Market: Or brother in the black market. Chai suggests going to him to sell the gold bar Moxie finds.
  • The Ghost: So far he's only mentioned and never appears in person.
  • No Name Given: His name wasn't stated.
  • Remember the New Guy?: He's never mentioned by any of the foxes in the storyline, so his casual introduction to the narrative in the bad ending is a bit surprising.
  • Walking Spoiler: His existence spoils the plotline of Chapter 3's bad ending where Moxie finds a gold bar in the backroom's safe and wants to sell it, so Chai suggests seeing their brother.

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