Follow TV Tropes

Following

Characters / Lonely Wolf Treat Spoiler Characters

Go To

Lonely Wolf Treat Main Character Index
Mount Sorbet: Main Characters | Others
Secret Content: Spoiler Characters

This page contains unmarked spoilers for the game's hidden content. It is recommended that you do NOT proceed if you haven't experienced this content beforehand. You Have Been Warned.

But then again, getting spoiled on a story you come to love could be considered a bad ending in itself, couldn't it?

    open/close all folders 

The Theater

    Orchid and Lilium 

Orchid and Lilium

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/orchid_portrait_small_fix.png
"Lilium is the playwright here. She opened this theater a long time ago, in order to share her tragedies."
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lilium_portrait_small.png
"Since you're here... Are you perhaps interested in seeing any BAD ENDINGS?"
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.
  • Demoted to Extra: In BAD END THEATER, TRAGEDY and You are important characters to the plot. Here, they're reduced to side characters who provide the way to the hidden alternative storylines.
  • Flower Motifs: Both of them are named after types of flowers.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: Lilium is this for the bad endings as a whole, as she is the one fabricating and showing them to the player.
  • 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.
  • Perpetual Smiler: Lilium is literally always in a good mood. Her constant smiling coupled with her eyes being completely devoid of shine looks quite eerie.
  • 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 Endings

    Timber and Tundra 

Timber and Tundra

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/timber_portrait_small.png
"The name's Timber. Wolves oughta stick together, so let's be friends."
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tundra_portrait_small.png
"Treat... You've left their pack, haven't you? Should I say... welcome home?"
Appear in: Lonely Wolf Treat (bad ending), Mochi in Frosting (bad ending; flashback)

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.


  • Affably Evil: At least compared to her son, Tundra doesn't seem to hide any malice behind her politeness, and her conversations with Treat are more or less amicable.
  • Alliterative Family: Timber and Tundra both have names starting with T. It is unknown if the father also has one, though.
  • Arc Villains: For the bad ending of the first game, which is their only major 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.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: The two seem to get along fine, and they were both so upset by the death of Timber's father that they started killing rabbits for payback.
  • Evil Counterpart:
    • In a way, Timber is this to Juju: Both of them were children when their fathers were taken away from them, thus creating vile individuals who hate the species they blame for the incident, now doing whatever they can to stop/get revenge on them. However, Timber is clearly the bigger threat of the two, mercilessly killing rabbits in order to provide meat for his pack; Juju on the other hand, is a mere Villainy-Free Villain who is a bullying jerkass and never resorts to actual violence or crime to deal with wolves. Although, her attempted murder of Treat in Bad End 1 and carelessness displayed over the slain wolves kept in the Warren shown in Bad End 3 might make up for it, further emphasizing the two as not so different.
    • As they are the mothers, Tundra is this to Castella. Both lost their husbands which affected their child as described above; Castella was saddened but never lost hope that Mango was still alive (which is true) and she also wished Juju wouldn't have turned out the way she did because of the incident. On the other hand, Tundra took her husband's murder (that happened right before her) as reason to raise Timber into a wolf who kills rabbits as payback.
  • Eviler than Thou: Timber pulls this on Juju in the first Bad End. While the bunny is cornering Treat to push her off a cliff, Timber comes out of hiding at the exact moment to push Juju off instead.
  • 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.
  • Floral Theme Naming: Both of them are named after terms relating to trees: Tundra is region in the world without trees due to frigid temperatures, and timber is the wood retrieved from chopping down trees.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Precision F-Strike: Timber is the first character in the series to use profanity, as he talks about his father's murder at the hands of rabbits to Treat:
    Timber: They beat him to death. Didn't even eat him... Fuckin' animals.
  • 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.
  • Tragic Villains: Timber and Tundra presumably used to be happy wolves when Timber's father was alive, but then he was murdered by rabbits and that drove them both to want to get payback by killing and eating those rabbits.
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: At the least, the flashback in Chapter 6's bad ending shows that he wasn't always the murderous wolf he is now.
  • 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.
  • Yellow Eyes of Sneakiness: Tundra has the yellow eyes to go with her subtle manipulative personality.
  • You Killed My Father: Timber grew to loathe rabbits since his father was beaten to death by them.

    Glaze Wolf Pack 

Glaze Wolf Pack

Appears in: Lonely Wolf Treat (bad ending)
Also appears in: Syrup and the Ultimate Sweet

The wolves led by Timber and Tundra. Eleven in number, they are fiercely protective of their territory and remain in their animal forms at all times.


  • Ambiguously Evil: While some of them seem oblivious, there are hints that they could be well aware Timber leaves dead rabbits for them to scavenge and only play along to trick Treat.
  • Intelligible Unintelligible: Due to always remaining in wolf form, they can only communicate by making dog noises. Treat, Timber, and Tundra can understand them just fine, though, and all of their dialogue in chapter 1 is conveniently subtitled.

    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.

    Warren Rabbits 

Rabbits in the Warren

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/warren_portraits.png
From top to bottom (L-R): Rude Receptionist, Bad Boyfriend, Dazed Rabbit, Snickering Jerk, Grumpy Grandpa, Parsnip
Appear in: Dreaming Treat (Grandpa, Receptionist, and Boyfriend only), Mochi in Frosting (bad ending)

Formerly an inn, the Warren was converted into apartments when more rabbits started moving into Frosting full time. It is the hiding place of the vandal who wrecked Mochi's garden, as well as many terrible secrets from Frosting's past...


  • Alliterative Name: Or rather, Alliterative Nickname. There's Rude Receptionist, Bad Boyfriend and Grumpy Grandpa.
  • Ambiguous Gender: The rabbit in room 208 is said to have a gender-neutral name, and Mochi never bothers finding out more about them.
  • Ambiguously Evil: Parsnip claims his grandfather is a kind and respectful man... who also happens to be the Warren's owner and a fan of wolf taxidermy. Whether or not he hates wolves or was actively involved in their deaths is not known, and his supposed kindness is something we can only take Parsnip's word for.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: Receptionist, Boyfriend and Grandpa appeared in Chapter 5 as minor characters before their appearance in Bad End 3.
  • Cycle of Revenge: Rabbits kill wolves because they accuse them of eating the rabbits who have gone missing on the mountain. Timber happily kills and eats rabbits since they beat his father to death, but Mochi doesn't know that.
  • Delicate and Sickly: Parsnip is a kindly rabbit who can't go out much due to his weak body. He came to live in Frosting because the mountain air is supposed to be good for his health.
  • Fat and Skinny: Snickering Jerk and Dazed Rabbit, one overweight slob of a man and his lanky roommate.
  • Fat Bastard: Snickering Jerk is both more overweight and more unpleasant than his roommate.
  • The Ghost: The Warren's owner who's also Parsnip's grandfather is only mentioned.
  • G-Rated Stoner: Dazed Rabbit has a shaggy appearance, talks like a surfer dude, and is, well, dazed all the time. Meanwhile, Snickering Jerk is constantly giggling uncontrollably and unable to keep a straight face even when Mochi starts beating him with a shovel. No drugs are mentioned in-game, but both of them are implied to be on some kind of substance.
  • Grumpy Old Man: The appropriately named Grumpy Grandpa. He's not nice, and is not friendly.
  • Hidden Depths: During battle, Grandpa boasts that he used to be a wrestler back in the day. Not that it helps him against an enraged Mochi.
  • Human Head on the Wall: The Warren proudly displays the head of Timber's father in the lobby. Okay, yes, it's a wolf's head, but wolves are also people in this universe, so...
  • The Hyena: The appropriately named Snickering Jerk, who thinks Mochi getting mad at him over the garden is just hilarious.
  • It Amused Me: The Snickering Jerk can't stop laughing over angering Mochi by destroying the garden.
  • Jerkass: Almost all of them have zero sympathy both for Mochi's garden and for the dead wolves that were stuffed and put on display.
  • Karma Houdini: Dazed Rabbit and Snickering Jerk remained undiscovered and unpunished in the true storyline.
  • Karmic Death: Mochi beats up the culprits with the very shovel they used to destroy the garden.
  • Morality Pet: Parsnip's medical condition and Nice Guy attitude stop Mochi from attacking him. The reveal that he's related to the Warren's owner who filled it with taxidermy of wolves is what ultimately snaps Mochi out of her rampage.
  • Nice Guy: Parsnip is the one rabbit with absolutely no ill will towards Mochi. He is polite, well meaning, and happily shares some carrot soup with Mochi to help her get her strength back. Mochi doesn't even bother attacking him, because she feels too guilty to.
  • No Name Given: Even though Mochi knows the rabbits' names from the list she obtains, the names themselves never actually come up in the game, so the rabbits are just called things like "Grumpy Grandpa", "Rude Receptionist", and so on. The sole exception is Parsnip because he politely introduced himself.
  • Not Worth Killing: When Mochi finds the resident of room 208 passed out drunk on the couch, she spares them on the grounds that their life is probably miserable enough already.
  • Oh, Crap!: This is the reaction most of them have upon Mochi attacking them. Except the Grandpa who stands fearless and eagerly attacks Mochi to stop her.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: In the grand scheme of things, Dazed Rabbit and Snickering Jerk are not important and don't even appear in the proper storyline but their act of destroying Mochi's garden is what drives the entire plot of Chapter 6, then motivates Treat and Mochi to move out, thus leading to the events of Chapter 7.
  • Taxidermy Is Creepy: The Warren's owner likes to make taxidermies of slain wolves, which in a world of anthropomorphic animals is equivalent to Dead Guy on Display.

    Timber's Father 

Timber's Father/"The Big Bad Wolf"

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/timbersfather.jpg
Appears in: Mochi in Frosting (bad ending; deceased/flashback)

Timber's father was a wolf beaten to death by rabbits twenty years prior to the series, resulting in Timber and Tundra becoming gleeful rabbit killers.


  • Ambiguously Evil: It's hard to say whether or not he was actually a decent person, considering he's mourned by two villainous characters willing to commit murder. Then again, it is implied that his murder IS the reason why Timber and Tundra are who they are in the present, though you also have to consider that the Glaze pack he was a member/leader of have been hunters for a long time, and rabbits in the Warren dub him "The Big Bad Wolf".
  • Disappeared Dad: Didn't get to see his son grow up because he was killed.
  • The Dreaded: Implied. According to the journal in the Warren, his murder was considered a very triumphant moment for the rabbits, suggesting that he was seen as too dangerous and had to be put down, and his head is displayed on the wall of the Warren. Plus he's known by the name of The Big Bad Wolf.
  • The Faceless: You can briefly see him as he's getting swarmed by rabbits in Chapter 6's bad ending, but any distinguishing characteristics, let alone his face, aren't clear.
  • Posthumous Character: He's long gone at the hands of rabbits by the present time. The journal in the Warren's basement reveals he's been dead for 20 years.
  • Red Baron: The reason his head is hung on the wall of the Warren's lobby is because he's considered a fearsome wolf, being known as the Big Bad Wolf.
  • Satellite Family Member: Aside from providing Timber and Tundra's Freudian Excuse, not much else can be said about him.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: His death is what shaped Timber and Tundra to be what they are today.
  • Unknown Character: No characterization has been given to him, only his role in the lore.
  • Unnamed Parent: His name is not known.

    Senbei 

Senbei

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/senbei_portrait_small.png
"Wolves cannot be trusted. Left to their own devices, they will kill and eat us all."
Appears in: Mochi in Frosting

A charismatic and wealthy rabbit, Senbei encouraged his family to move to Frosting because he was interested in the dark history it shares with the local wolves. The vandals who destroyed Treat and Mochi's garden were no doubt acting on his orders.

For tropes about his appearance in the main story, see Lonely Wolf Treat Mount Sorbet under "Senbei's Family".


  • Arc Villain: Of Chapter 6's bad ending, where his role in destroying the garden is revealed fully.
  • Boss Banter: He spends the entire boss battle either taunting Mochi or explaining his motivations to her.
  • Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: To Timber, particularly their motivations. Both of them are awful people, but Timber seems to have turned out the way he is because he witnessed his father getting beaten to death by rabbits, giving him a genuine reason to hate them. Senbei on the other hand, doesn't have any sort of Freudian Excuse and only moved to Frosting for its dark history, abuses his power and has no actual concern for his community.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Deals a very one-sided beating to Mochi, leaving her critically injured.
  • A Day in the Limelight: Has only six words of dialogue in the main story, but becomes a full-blown antagonist with Character Focus in Mochi's bad ending.
  • Evil All Along: Because he didn't have a substantial role in the main story, it was hard to tell, but Chapter 6's bad ending reveals it: He is bad news.
  • Final Boss: He is the final opponent fought in Bad End 3, and he effortlessly beats Mochi.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: For the main storyline and specifically Chapter 6. Mochi's garden was destroyed on his orders.
  • Hopeless Boss Fight: He takes every swing Mochi throws at him in stride, then eliminates Mochi in one fell blow.
  • I Am Not Left-Handed: Throughout his battle, Senbei is taking all of Mochi's like they're nothing while explaining his motives. Then he ends the battle when he's done.
  • Interrupted Intimacy: He was just about to "make Juju his woman" when Junior Guard comes in and warns them about Mochi's rampage.
  • Karma Houdini: Canonically, since he was never caught in the proper story because Mochi gave up on finding the culprit.
  • Minored in Ass-Kicking: His fighting ability is not foreshadowed in any way, but he casually wipes the floor with Mochi regardless.
  • One-Hit KO: Ends his fight against Mochi with one critical hit.
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: A clearer example than Juju. He is behind the destruction of the garden out of hatred for wolves, and is generally interested in Frosting for its dark history of violence between rabbits and wolves, with him feeling justified in killing the latter.
  • Rich Jerk: Comes from a wealthy family and he has little to no regard for predators and even his fellow rabbits.
  • Smug Smiler: He's smiling condescendingly at Mochi throughout his whole fight.
  • Smug Super: Overly confident in his ability to fight Mochi and for good reason; he KO's her in one hit.
  • Viler New Villain: Amazingly, to Timber who was this himself to Juju and Moxie's mom. Timber is driven to kill rabbits out of a misguided feeling to support wolves due to past trauma. Senbei, on the other hand, is only interested in getting back at wolves out of pure racism and has no actual concern for previously killed rabbits.
  • Villain with Good Publicity: As Juju puts it, he is popular and has many friends in Frosting. He abuses this in order to get what he wants.
  • Walking Spoiler: Due to the sheer amount of stuff revealed about him in Mochi's bad ending, a separate character sheet was created for him here to avoid clogging up the other page with spoilered-out entries.
  • Would Hit a Girl: Despite rabbit society having rather old-fashioned views on gender, Senbei beats the living daylights out of Mochi without a second thought, an act that causes even Juju to lose sympathy for him.

Top