Ohsama Sentai | The Five Kingdoms

The characters of Ohsama Sentai King-Ohger.
Shugods
The arthropod guardian deities of Tikyū.- The Chooser of the One: The King Shugods are sapient and, as shown with God Kuwagata allowing Gira to transform when he otherwise shouldn't be able to, they decide who can and cannot use their power to become rangers.
- Create Your Own Hero: The Shugods are creations of Dagded that are vulnerable to his control, as #40 demonstrates. They and Gira all collectively rebel and power through his influence; the Shugods employing a Heroic Sacrifice to ultimately help do him in in the finale.
- Demoted to Extra: The Shugods' active combat role gets suppressed to a significant degree in the second arc, and they don't return to prominence until the very last episodes.
- Divine Right of Kings: The King Shugods are the guardian deities of the five kingdoms, and God Kuwagata shows they're sapient and capable of deciding who uses their power to become rangers. They can also deny this right if they deem a king lacking or grant it to one they deem more suitable. Despite Racules being the ruler of Shugodom by right of being the crown-prince, God Kuwagata chose Gira instead, and Racules only manages to become a King-Ohger via a false shugod. In fact, of the current set, only Rita and Hymeno inherited the throne in a traditional manner.
- Doesn't Trust Those Guys: While the King Shugods were still willing to trust humanity enough to co-exist with them beyond Legend King-Ohger's dissolution two millennia ago, the Greater Shugods couldn't bring themselves to trust humanity and had thus sealed themselves in a separate realm away from humans. However, this doesn't stop Racules from attempting to brainwash God Kabuto into his control via corrupting his Shugod Soul after being found, which actually justifies their distrust. They do come around to trusting the team after seeing their genuine goodwill however.
- Fantasy Pantheon: The Shugods are collectively the pantheon of Tikyū as a whole, which each of the King Shugods being the Patron God of one of the five kingdoms.
- Fashionable Asymmetry: The Shugods all bear somewhat asymmetrical designs that indicate years of battle damage. God Kuwagata shows this the most, with portions of its red body seemingly chipped off to reveal the silver underneath akin to scars.
- First Church of Mecha: The Shugods are the guardian deities of the five kingdoms, capable of combining into King-Ohger.
- God Is Good: They're guardian deities of their respective kingdom, empower superheroes to protect them, and it's implied by God Kuwagata empowering Gira, after he openly rebelled against Racules' tyrannical ambitions and chewed him out, that they share Gira's criteria for what The Good King is. It's later revealed Kaguragi rebelled against his queen and took the throne via revolution, showing that it's not even the first time it's happened.
- Heroic Sacrifice: The Shugods sacrifice their physical bodies to overclock Ultimate King-Ohger enough to lay a beatdown on Dagded and critically damage him enough the King-Ohgers can finish him off. Fortunately, their souls survived intact so Yanma can just build them new ones.
- Meaningful Name: "Shugod" is a Portmanteau of shugo ("protection") and "god".
- Mechanical Insects: They take the form of giant robot insects and other bugs.
- Noodle Incident: Something happened that caused the Greater Shugods to turn their backs on humanity, but it's never revealed what that is.
- Patron God: Each of the core five King Shugods serves as the guardian of a kingdom — God Kuwagata for Shugodom and God Tombo for N'Kosopa, to name a couple.
- Pieces of God: The main five are each a piece that make up KingOhger, the guardian deity of Tikyū itself.
- Phlebotinum Rebel: #42 reveals that the Shugods themselves are the creation of the Galactinsects, which is why they were mind-controlled by Dugded in #40. They and Gira both manage to overpower this control through collective willpower.
- Physical God: Well, they have "god" in their names. They are massive in scale and are very strong and resilient.
- Power Crystal: They are powered by Shugod Souls, amber crystals that serve as each Shugod's consciousness and will.
- Robo Romance: The three Greater Shugods are in a Type 5 Love Triangle (Hopper → Scorpion → Kabuto).
- Senseless Sacrifice: Defied. Corsus' initial plans for the Shugods involved grounding up their Souls and feeding them to Gira to make him a berserk Tyke-Bomb; the ruler unaware that Dagded wanted him to do that so he could sabotage the result and destroy the planet. Racules hiding the boy away dents this plan.
- Unwitting Pawn: In a sense. The Shugods are inherent creations of the Galactinsect King, meaning they were always intended to contribute to the drama in Tikyu...and were always vulnerable to Mind Control.
King Shugods

- Affectionate Nickname: Is dubbed "Kuwagon" by Gira.
- Do Not Taunt Cthulhu: It's implied that it agrees with Gira on Racules being unfit as a king and intentionally screwed him over, given it instantly awakens and empowers the former when he openly rebels and chews out the latter on being an Evil Overlord.
- Interspecies Friendship: While all Shugods eventually turn into True Companions with their kings, the God Kuwagata is particularly close to Gira and treats him less like a king or master and more like a friend. Their friendship is so strong that in episode #45, the moment it heard Gira being upset it was ready to crash into Shugodom Castle for him and only turned around when he calmed down.
- Japanese Beetle Brothers: It's a giant mechanical stag beetle.
- Leader Forms the Head: Zig-Zagged; while it forms the torso and arms of King-Ohger, the head proper is formed by God Papillon's lower half.
- Racules also brings up this trope when Yanma asks him why he should lead the other monarchs, pointing out that God Kuwagata is the linchpin of King-Ohger's formation.
- Living MacGuffin: Powered by one. God Kuwagata is unique among the Shugods for lacking a Soul. #43 reveals that was intentional: Causus crushed up and fed its Soul to a young Gira to aid the boy in devolving into a Tyke-Bomb. Racules stepped in before the other Shugods could meet the same fate. It wouldn't be entirely inaccurate to say Gira is its Soul.
- Sealed Good in a Can: At the series' beginning, it's shown to be petrified and used as a power source. How it got petrified was never revealed in the main series.
- Soul Jar: Affected by one. Gira was unknowingly fed its Soul by Corsus in the form of Rainbow Jujuria, hence why God Kuwagata can operate despite its lack of interior crystal.
- Super-Strength: It is strong enough to lift giant monsters over its head with its jaws and toss them a fair distance.
- Worf Had the Flu: Gets taken out of action by an injury after the monarchs' return from Earth, leaving King-Ohger unusable. Fortunately, Earth's Zyudenryu Gabutyra had snuck aboard and stowed away with them back to Tikyu, allowing the monarchs to use King Kyoryuzin until God Kuwagata recovered.

- Affectionate Nickname: Gira dubs it "Tombokkuri".
- Cool Sword: Its tail forms the majority of King-Ohger's sword.
- Dreadful Dragonfly: It's a giant mechanical dragonfly, but subverted in that it's a heroic guardian deity. As with its partner, its color scheme also helps.
- Power Gives You Wings: Its upper body and wings attach to King-Ohger's back and form its wings.
- Super-Speed: It's the fastest flyer of all the Shugods, able to travel back and forth between N'Kosopa and Shugodom in a matter of minutes.

- Affectionate Nickname: Is dubbed "Kamarina" by Gira.
- Sinister Scythe: A heroic example, befitting its nature as a praying mantis. One of King-Ohger's finishers is a series of kicks using its right leg, bolstered by the cutting power of God Kamakiri's scythes.
- Slaying Mantis: It's a giant mechanical praying mantis.

- Affectionate Nickname: Is dubbed "Papinton" by Gira.
- Cool Sword: Alongside God Tombo and God Ant, God Papillon's upper body forms King-Ohger's sword.
- Leader Forms the Head: Although Papillon Ohger isn't the leader, God Papillon's lower half forms King-Ohger's head.
- Pretty Butterflies: More noble than pretty, but it's a giant mechanical butterfly that acts as the protector god of Gokkan.

- Affectionate Nickname: Is dubbed "Hachisuke" by Gira.
- Beehive Barrier: Appropriately enough, it can create these.
- Beware My Stinger Tail: Naturally, as a giant hornet/bee, it can use its stinger in combat.
- Virtuous Bees: It's a giant mechanical bee fighting on the heroes' side.

- Evil Knockoff: It's not a true Shugod, but part of an artificial recreation of the original God Kuwagata. N'Kosopa began work on it and the rest of King-Ohger ZERO, but abandoned it, only for Racules to take it and complete it. When its cockpit is shown, it's revealed to lack a Shugod Soul, having some kind of blue crystal in its place. Unlike a true Shugod, it's also not sapient, and never shown moving unless being commanded by Racules or put on autopilot. It's also not clear how powerful it actually is compared to the original, but Racules only uses it for trickery or in ambushes rather than straight fights.
- God Guise: God Kuwagata ZERO is not a true Shugod, just a modern day, artificial copy of the original lacking a Shugod Soul. Racules passes it off as a true Shugod as part of his Fake Ultimate Hero act.
- It Can Think: Inverted: at first it appears to be another Shugod, which are all sapient. However, it's eventually revealed to be an artificial recreation without a Shugod Soul. As a result, it's incapable of thinking on its own and can only either act on Racules' orders or on autopilot.
- Japanese Beetle Brothers: Like the original God Kuwagata.
- Leader Forms the Head: Like God Kuwagata, it forms the majority of King-Ohger ZERO by combining with the other Shugods.
- My Hero, Zero: It's surnamed ZERO to distinguish it from the original God Kuwagata.
- Power Crystal: Also powered by one, like the Shugods. Unlike the Shugods, this Crystal isn't a Soul.
- Red and Black and Evil All Over: Downplayed, but as Racules' partner false Shugod it serves as an antagonistic counterpart to God Kuwagata. It is primarily colored black with red accents.
- Uncertain Doom: After being beaten by Extreme King-Ohger, it and King-Ohger ZERO are last seen seemingly exploding. It's not revealed whether or not they were actually destroyed however, as Racules can still transform, but whether or not he actually needs God Kuwagata intact for that is unknown. It is most likely destroyed, as Racles' father and predecessor, Corsus, was also able to become Ohkuwagata Ohger, and he did it long before the ZERO Shugods were ever created.
Portrayed by: Takahiro Yoneoka (motion capture, Knight form)


- Affectionate Nickname: Is dubbed "Taranchino" by Gira.
- Arm Cannon: Gains one on its right arm upon assuming Knight form.
- Big Entrance: When summoned, it arrives by blotting out the sun as it climbs down from the sky with a roar.
- Finishing Move:
- Tarantula Knight + Guardian Pede: Tarantula Knight immobilizes the target with a spiderweb before dealing a powerful slash with the Pede Chainsaw.
- Friendly Neighborhood Spider: Despite being a gigantic spider, it's ultimately firmly on the good guys' side.
- Goggles Do Something Unusual: What acts as God Tarantula's eyes in Shugod form turns into a set of these when in Knight form, resting above its face. With them, Tarantula Knight can analyze the enemy's movement patterns.
- Lean and Mean: Unlike King-Ohger which has more armor, Tarantula Knight has a much slimmer build.
- Light Is Good: Has the same white-and-gold color scheme as its chosen Ranger.
- Lightning Bruiser: Tarantula Knight's specialty; it rarely stays stationary in combat for more than a few seconds, and far outruns King-Ohger in every regard to speed.
- People Puppets: It can manipulate other Shugods via its silk.
- Shoulder Cannon: Turns into two of these for Extreme King-Ohger dubbed the Extreme Cannons.
- Spider Tank: It's an eight-legged mecha that can fire spider silk from its abdomen or use its front claws in close combat.
- Transforming Mecha: It can transform between Shugod and Knight modes.
Portrayed by: Yohei Fujita (suit)


- The Big Guy: Towers over the other Shugods in all forms, and utterly decimated a Shugod Soul-empowered Daigorg. At 220 meters tall, it's also the largest Sentai mecha ever.
- Cool Starship: #33 reveals that God Caucasus Kabuto was the spacecraft used by the ancient heroes to travel from Earth to Tikyū.
- Finishing Move:
- King Caucasus Kabuto Finish: King Caucasus Kabuto delivers a devastating slash to the enemy with the Hercules Axe.
- Healing Factor: It is able to repair itself from battle damage almost instantly.
- Overly Long Name: Its official name, according to Kofuki, is the Transforming Armored Titan King Caucasus Kabuto.
- Japanese Beetle Brothers: It's themed on a Caucasus beetle.
- Transforming Mecha: It's able to transform from a fortress to either Shugod or robot modes.
Sub Shugods

- Affectionate Nickname: are dubbed "Kuumo" (red legs) and "Kumomo" (silver legs) by Gira.
- Friendly Neighborhood Spider: Two giant spider mecha who are unambiguously on the side of the Ohsama Sentai, forming the front of King-Ohger's torso.
- Palette Swap: There are two God Kumo that form the front of King-Ohger's torso — one with a red body and silver legs (lower torso), and the other being a reverse silver body with red legs (upper torso).
- Projectile Webbing: As part of King-Ohger, it grants the latter the ability to fire webbing to restrain enemies.

- Affectionate Nickname: Is dubbed "Arrin" by Gira.
- Amicable Ants: An ant mecha who is unambiguously on the side of the Ohsama Sentai, forming part of King-Ohger's sword.
- Cool Sword: It forms part of King-Ohger's sword.

- Affectionate Nickname: are dubbed "Tete" (left) and "Toto" (right) by Gira.
- Tag Team Twins: The two of them form King-Ohger's forearms, though unlike God Kumo they look exactly the same and are not palette swaps of each other.
Greater Shugods

- Affectionate Nickname: Gira dubs it "Kabutan".
- Arm Cannon: Turns into a bazooka for King-Ohger dubbed the Kabuto Cannon, that doubles as a melee weapon.
- Japanese Beetle Brothers: It's a giant mechanical rhinoceros beetle. It starts out as antagonistic towards God Kuwagata, but is eventually won over by Gira in #4, making it both an example of the Rival and Ally type.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning: Its eyes are a deep violet when fighting God Kuwagata, turning green upon Gira befriending it.
- Wave-Motion Gun: It fires a blast that's powerful enough to cause King-Ohger to split into its component Shugods or to disintegrate a Kaijim in one shot.

- Affectionate Nickname: It's dubbed "Sasorine" (based on Sasori, the Japanese word for scorpion) by Gira, and "Scorpy" by Hymeno.
- Poisoned Weapons: Its stinger contains a venom powerful enough to incapacitate King-Ohger.
- Scary Scorpions: Zig-zagged; while it ultimately opposes the Bognaarok, it's not too fond of humans.
- Tsundere: Turns out it's very fond of God Kabuto. When Hymeno asks if this fondness is purely platonic, God Scorpion reacts very bashfully, much to God Kabuto's confusion.
- Wolverine Claws: Turns into a clawed gauntlet for King-Ohger, dubbed the Scorpion Claw.

- Affectionate Nickname: Gira dubs it "Batta" (based on the Japanese word for grasshopper).
- Armed Legs: Its hind legs provide additional armaments to King-Ohger's legs.
- Chest Blaster: It can attach to King-Ohger's chest to form chest armor that can fire blasts of energy.
- In a Single Bound: Is capable of covering great distances in just one jump, and its hind legs attach to King-Ohger's legs to do likewise.
Auxiliary Shugods

- Epic Flail: Turns into a morningstar for King-Ohger, dubbed the Rolling Hammer.

- Gatling Good: Turns into a Gatling cannon for King-Ohger, dubbed the Snail Gatling.
- Punny Name: Its name is a play on "garden snail
". - Speedy Snail: It has wheels under its base that allow it to move at surprising speed when it needs to.

- Blade Below the Shoulder: Becomes a double-bladed gauntlet for Tarantula Knight.
- Palette Swap: The Semi-Shugods that ravaged all over Tikyū in the Wrath of God look like a green-colored Guardian Cicada. This causes Hymeno to believe that Jeramie was responsible for the disaster for a while.
- Razor Wings: Its wings serve as the blades for the Cicada Blade.

- Chainsaw Good: Turns into one for Tarantula Knight dubbed the Pede Chainsaw.

- Brutish Character, Brutish Weapon: Turns into an axe for King Caucasus Kabuto, which in addition to being gargantuan is slow and brutish in combat.
- Gold-Colored Superiority: It's solid gold except for the eyes, and is associated with King Caucasus Kabuto, the more powerful of the Shugods in terms of raw power.
- Japanese Beetle Brothers: It's themed on a Hercules beetle.
Other Shugods

- Dark Is Not Evil: Looks like an Evil Knockoff of God Tarantula on the surface, but is so nice that it's Dethnaarok's Morality Pet.
- Morality Pet: It's the only one that Dethnaarok will not harm, nor let any harm come to.
- Palette Swap: It's a miniature, black-and-gold version of God Tarantula.
- Pint-Sized Powerhouse: When it assists Dethnaarok against Kamejim, it is shown to be as powerful and as efficient as God Tarantula when he supports Spider Kumonos through Ryouga Issen, but with none the drawbacks.
Combinations
Portrayed by: Yohei Fujita (suit)

- BFS: The Shugod Sword, formed from God Tombo (blade and hilt), God Papillon (cross-guard), and God Ant (sliding section). It's as long as King-Ohger is tall.
- Came Back Wrong: Downplayed. Its revived form in present day is still no less a threat to the Bognaarok, but clearly incomplete compared to its Legend form. It's explained in #4 that this is due to the three Greater Shugods choosing to seclude themselves from mankind.
- Chest Blaster: Formed from God Kumo, allowing it to fire Projectile Webbing.
- Early-Bird Cameo: First appears in #45 of Donbrothers, before the series proper.
- Finishing Move:
- Base Form:
- King-Ohger deals a powerful slash to the enemy with the Shugod Sword.
- King-Ohger leaps into the air, charging the blades on its right leg (God Kamakiri) with energy and delivering several roundhouse kicks to the enemy, before finishing with a heel drop.
- King-Ohger + God Kabuto: King-Ohger unleashes a powerful blast from the Kabuto Cannon.
- King-Ohger + God Scorpion: King-Ohger charges the Scorpion Claw with energy and delivers a claw strike to the enemy.
- King-Ohger + God Hopper: King-Ohger charges the Hopper Armor and performs a ramming attack.
- Base Form:
- Identically Named Group: For some reason, this combination of Shugods have the exact same name as the group of rangers who pilots them. (However, currently the rangers have not been referred or refer themselves as "King-Ohger" in-universe.)
- It Can Think: Provided its pilots have Team Spirit of any kind. Even the pilots' united Agree to Disagree squabble over who gets to lead was enough to allow King-Ohger to seize control of itself and fight the enemy autonomously.
- Physical God: Akin to Daizyuzin, the three God Generals, and GaoGod, King-Ohger is explicitly a god in the form of a giant robot. This quickly becomes clear in #5, where the mecha seizes control of itself during a squabble for control by the pilots.
Legend King-Ohger

- All Your Powers Combined: It has access to the powers of all three Guardians at the same time, including Kabuto's Arm Cannon, Scorpion's claw, and Hopper's Chest Blaster armor and enhanced legs.
- Famed in Story: As its name suggests, it's the legendary form of King-Ohger that the original heroes used in the past to save Tikyū.
- Gold-Colored Superiority: It's a more powerful version of King-Ohger that gains golden accents from the Guardian Shugods it wields.
- Sizeshifter: It's capable of at least doubling in size.
- Super-Speed: It's capable of traveling at or close to light speed, allowing it to deal with multiple threats near-instantaneously.
Extreme King-Ohger

- Finishing Move: King-Ohger charges the Extreme Cannons, the Tarantula Buster, the Hopper Armor, the Kabuto Cannon, and the Scorpion Claw and unleashes a barrage of energy blasts at the enemy.
- Multi-Armed and Dangerous: God Tarantula' legs form extra arms that can be used to attack enemies.
- Walking Armory: In addition to the numerous weapons it wields as Legend King-Ohger, it adds extra arms and two Shoulder Cannons from God Tarantula.
God King-Ohger

- All Your Powers Combined: It's the combination of every single Shugod except the ZERO ones and has access to all their powers. Notably, it has the record for the Sentai mecha combination with the most components at 20.
- Awesome, but Impractical: Out of universe, the physical suit is this. While it gives a better sense of realism than the CGI render, there are two major flaws preventing the thing from being used regularly; the suit's bulk and weight makes it very cumbersome and uncomfortable to wear, and what little movement it allows for is very slow and minimal, not particularly ideal for the dynamic action shots the CGI render can pull off.
- Finishing Move: King-Ohger creates a giant energy "G" emblem with the Shugod Sword before performing a slash, launching it towards the target.
- Godzilla Threshold: It takes a potentially planet-ending crisis for the King-Ohgers to even consider deploying God King-Ohger, even if Yanma had already created plans for it the moment God Caucasus Kabuto went online. Justified given that the combination requires every single component Shugod to be piloted by a compatible pilot.
- Hour of Power: Downplayed. While the combination itself has no time limit, it can only last in hot magma for 79 seconds before it has to withdraw to the surface. It's just enough time to get Dethnarok out of the planet's core.
- Necessary Drawback: Downplayed. It's a powerful 20-piece combination that taps into the power of every Shugod, yet it requires every single one of them to have a pilot who's compatible with them. Fortunately, the OhgerCalibur and Kumonoslayer can detect who's most suited to do so. Subsequent uses of the formation, however, only seem to need the six King-Ohgers to use.
- Sizeshifter: Like Legend King-Ohger, God King-Ohger is capable of increasing its size several times over.
Transcendental Raging Ultimate Final Form King-Ohger
An upgraded form of God King-Ohger using all six pieces of the King's Proof.- 11th-Hour Superpower: Its existence is only hypothesized and planned in episode 48 and it's not actually formed until episode 50. This is due to the fact that Jeramie's Proof was used to defeat Grodie and there was no acceptable substitute until Gira figures out that they could just use the people's will instead.
- The Big Guy: Yanma's goal when designing it was to allow it to be equal in size and power to Dagded at his strongest, making it universe-sized, and thus the largest Sentai mecha ever by a gigantic margin.
- Expy: To the titular mecha of Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, both being universe-sized robots with an Overly Long Name who are introduced in the series finale to battle a godlike being and are powered by All Your Powers Combined.
- Foreshadowing: The fact King-Ohger is able to grow this huge was set up by both Legend King-Ohger and God King-Ohger magically growing far larger than they originally were.
- Only I Can Kill Him: Yanma states it's the only thing capable of defeating Dagded at his full power and scale.
- Overly Long Name: The full name of the combination, as dubbed by Yanma, is the "Transcendental Raging Ultimate Final Form King-Ohger"note . No one really humors trying to shorten it in-series due to Yanma's insistence on the full name.
- Physical God: While King-Ohger as a whole is a god, Yanma suggests that Ultimate King-Ohger would be so powerful that it can stand toe to toe with Dagded, putting it on a whole other level.
- World's Strongest Man: If Yanma is to be believed, it's on par with Dagded's full power, making it not only tied with Dagded for the strongest being in the series, but the most powerful Sentai mecha to ever exist.
Portrayed by: Yohei Fujita [episode 6/Secret of King Racules], Hirotsugu Mori [episode 18] (suit/motion capture)

- Dark Is Not Evil: Played With. The ZERO is a dark-colored, non-sapient Evil Knockoff of King-Ohger piloted by the resident tyrant; serving as an enemy to the heroes. Turns out its creator had nothing but noble intent and actually intended to sic it on the Galactinsects the whole time.
- Effective Knockoff: Played with; According to the official website, King-Ohger Zero is several times more powerful than normal King-Ohger. Unfortunately, the only time both mechas clashed, the original King-Ohger had accessed far stronger combinations, rendering this trope moot.
- Evil Knockoff: Of King-Ohger, complete with monochrome copies of the other King Shugods. It turns out to not even be composed of true Shugods, but artificial recreations that lack Shugod Souls. Supplementary material states that it's several times more powerful than the original, but Racules only uses it as a propaganda tool or against Kaijim. The one time it does fight King-Ohger, it's when Extreme King-Ohger confronts him, and King-Ohger ZERO doesn't stand a chance. #42 reveals the "evil" part is subverted since Rcules completed the mech to use against Dagded due to its artificial nature making it immune to Dagded's control over the Shugods, but its premature destruction prevented it from being used for its actual purpose.
- Gold-Colored Superiority: Befitting its pilot's many allusions to Char Aznable, King-Ohger ZERO has gold streaks over its body and is overall stronger than the original King-Ohger.
- Immune to Mind Control: The ZERO was created to be an anti-Dagded weapon; it's lack of sapience hopefully preventing the Galactinsect King from hijacking it like he can the Shugods.
- Just a Machine: Unlike genuine Shugods, it lacks a Shugod Soul and thus isn't sapient, which makes it just an artificial machine whose independent moves come from an autopilot function.
- Loophole Abuse: In the form of a mech. ZERO was stronger than the original King-Ohger at-launch and was intended to replace it since the Shugods are Galactinsect creations vulnerable to Mind Control. However, King-Ohger evolved past ZERO by the time it saw a proper engagement again and it ended up junked.
- Superweapon: Is one. ZERO was intended to be deployed against the Galactinsects to defy their ability to hijack the Shugods. The heroes evolve past it and it's eventually canned.
- Uncertain Doom: It's last seen seemingly exploding after Extreme King-Ohger defeats it, but as Racules can still transform, it's unclear if it or at least God Kuwagata ZERO survived. #42 confirmed it was truly destroyed with Rcules never needing a Shugod to transform in the first place due to using the OhgerCalibur ZERO.
- Villain Forgot to Level Grind: By the time it finally faced the genuine King-Ohger, the mech was already upgraded to Extreme thus leaving it scrapped.
Portrayed by: Yohei Fujita

- All Your Powers Combined: Uses both the power of the Shugod souls and Bravery, with Gabutyra using the Brave inherent in both the King-Ohgers and Shugods as a power source that lets him bypass the need for a Zyudenchi.
- Carry a Big Stick: It can use its sword (made out of God Tonbo's tail and God Papillon's wings) holding the pointed end to use as a bludgeon.
- Dance Battler: It uses samba-influenced moves to deftly move around the battlefield.
- Flaming Sword: For its finisher, Gabutyra sets the Shugod Sword on fire.
- It Can Think: The Zyudenryu are just as sentient as the Shugods, being dinosaurs transformed into mecha, so King Kyoryuzin has a fully self-aware Tyrannosaurus head jutting out of one shoulder.
Underground Empire Bug Naraku

A vast subterranean empire comprised of humanoid arthropods, who were defeated 2,000 years ago by King-Ohger and its chosen warriors after attempting to conquer Tikyū. They return in the present day with the goal of rewriting the balance between humanity and empire by taking the three Greater Shugods to grant their wish.
After Dethnaarok's death and Jeramie's ascension to the throne, the empire is officially recognized as Tikyu's sixth nation and renamed the "Kingdom of the In-between".
- Alien Blood: Their blood is black in color.
- Always Chaotic Evil: Subverted. Most of the Bug Naraku are aggressive to the kingdoms of Tikyu for social reasons rather than some inherent hatred. It was the deliberate manipulation of Kamejim that prevented any chance of peace with Jeremie unknowingly dividing the races further with his prophecy.
- Ancient Evil: They've been around for at least 2,000 years.
- Arc Villain: They are the antagonists from #1 to #26.
- Atrocious Arthropods: They are an evil race of insectoid creatures.
- Brought to You by the Letter "S": Exaggerated. The Bug Naraku's emblem is the empire's name spelt out in full stylized English, which their leaders have emblazoned on their bodies.
- Canis Latinicus: The empire's motto: "Pestes rex eris!", which roughly translates out to "You will be the king of pests!"
- Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: The Nōto were a group of vigilantes that were moreso "antagonists" than "villains" in the traditional sense (they opposed the Monster of the Week in the same vein the Donbrothers did and were only malicious in the sense of how unfettered they were compared to the heroes, having no greater plan or motive than stabilizing their realm), were led by a reclusive Council over-reliant on its generals as proxies, having only ever acted on its own once, and its generals were Punch Clock Villains with various redeeming traits that fraternized with (and eventually joined) the enemy. Inversely, the Bug Naraku are Obviously Evil and do not hide it — being clearly hostile to humanity and seeking the Greater Shugods for an Evil Plan. The Empire's higher-ups are not only the source of the show's monsters but frequently confront the heroes alongside their troops - possessing a veritable army led with a We Have Reserves mentality.
- Designated Villain: Invoked: The Galactinsects are not only implied to have been the ones that destroyed the Bugs' homeworld, but they deliberately orchestrated the Bug Naraku to be seen as villains to cause a Forever War between them and humans for their sadistic games.
-
Easily Forgiven: Downplayed. While Gira says that the Bug Naraku's attacks on humanity are unforgivable, he does understand where they are coming from and sincerely apologizes for not seeing things from their perspective. - Elaborate Underground Base: It's occasionally this for the monarchs post-Time Skip.
- The Empire: They're an expansionist horde of humanoid arthropods seeking to conquer Tikyū and exterminate the human race.
- Explosive Breeder: Dethnaarok's boast to Gira in #9 implies as much, feeding into their We Have Reserves mentality.
- Fantastic Racism: They are actually the victims of this. It was revealed that there wasn't any official historical document stating that they are the enemies of Tikyū and/or humanity to begin with. The truth is that the Galactinsects forced Tikyū's human rulers to attack the Bug Naraku and they were treated as murderous monsters for two millennia, with the Legend of King-Ohger written by Jeramie further painting them as such.
- Grim Up North: Heroic variant: Upon Jeramie taking the throne, he moves Bug Naraku's capital to below Gokkan.
- Heel–Race Turn: They end all hostilities with the Five Kingdoms — and by extension, mankind — upon Jeramie taking the throne.
- Meaningful Name: "Bug Naraku" is based on a Portmanteau of "Bug", "Ragnarök" and "Naraku".
- Mole Men: As their name suggestions, they live underneath the earth in a tunnel network.
- The Morlocks: A subterranean throng of beastly note humanoids driven by oppression to wage war on the surface.
- My Nayme Is: Pronounced "Bug-narok", but spelt as "Bognaarok", according to their emblem. The romanization officializes it as "Bug Naraku."
- Not Afraid to Die: Dethnaarok boasts to Gira that his species is flawless because they do not fear death. Thus, they have no qualms about sending thousands of Sanagim to die in battle. Much of Jeramie's rule has been dedicated to trying to convert these attitudes into helping people instead, while also reminding them the value of their lives.
- Out of Focus: In a stark departure from Sentai norm, the Monster of the Week they deploy usually seem almost like an obligatory afterthought to whatever interpersonal drama the episode is focusing on. Downplayed, post-Time Skip. Bug Naraku is sired as an official sixth nation, until Jeramie is quickly forced to enact a haphazard Zero-Approval Gambit to save the other monarchs from political headaches and the majority of its "citizens" are eventually killed and reanimated by Grodie as Mooks later on; effectively reducing the kingdom's role to "occasional monarch meeting room" during the show's latter half. It's not until #47 that Bug Naraku has a chance to really contribute: serving as a shelter for refugees during the second Fury of the Gods.
- Powered by a Forsaken Child: #22 reveals what the Kaijim use to turn into giants: Shugod Souls. While it was assumed that ingesting Shuggod Souls kills the consumer, it was later revealed to induce Loss of Identity and potentially Death of Personality.
- The Prophecy: #10 reveals the Empire as operating under the machinations of one, in which they're fated to crush all other forms of life. It was a centuries-long grift by Jeramie to ensure they stole the Greater Shugod souls for him.
- Retcon: Early into the show, Hymeno's research established the Bug Naraku as a parallel evolution of humanity caused by the species' consumption of Shugod Souls. #47 reveals that the Bug Naraku were instead former alien victims of the Galactinsects that migrated to Tikyu the exact same way Earthlings did.
- Sigil Spam: Like the five kingdoms, all its members have the empire's insignia on their persons.
- Sixth Ranger: They join the Quintet Alliance after Jeramie takes over and requests their accession to his fellow monarchs, which they accept.
- Standard Evil Empire Hierarchy:
- The Emperor: Dethnaarok, as the empire's ruler.
- The Right Hand/The Oddball: Kamejim, as imperial prime minister and chief researcher.
- The General: Daigorg, as Dethnaarok's chief enforcer.
- Unwitting Pawn: #10 reveals that The Empire's pursuit of the Greater Shugods was on behalf of a prophecy, which they had following to the letter. Said story was a fabrication by Jeramie, who strung them along to this exact point to steal the three souls from under their noses.
- Was Once a Man: #26 shows that Bug Naraku DNA is remarkably similar to human DNA (which also explains why Jeramie was able to exist in the first place), but years of being forced underground combined with consumption of Shugod Souls has caused them to take on a monstrous, insectoid appearance.
- We Have Reserves: Their idea of a Rousing Speech involves declaring to their soldiers that they're completely disposable. It doesn't matter how many Sanagim die — as long as they kill a greater number of humans in the process, even if it's just one more, the Bug Naraku Empire will call it a victory. Horrifyingly, this works.
- Worth It: The official stance of the Bug Naraku is exterminating humanity and winning the war is worth any price. If they launch an attack it doesn't matter how many of their own die, they consider any human death toll being more than their death toll by just one as a win for them.
Royal Family
Portrayed by: Tomoyuki Shimura (voice), Riichi Seike (suit)

- Habitat: Shugodom (morning, noon)
Favorite: Tikyu
King: Abyss King
The supreme ruler of the Bug Naraku Empire. His goal is to rewrite the balance of power between humans and the Empire.
- Alas, Poor Villain: He was pushed by Jeramie's prophecies to become a genocidal maniac and was killed just as he was about to give humans a chance.
- Anatomy Arsenal: Can extend worm-shaped tentacles from his person to attack his enemies, which can be further enlarged to titanic size to destroy buildings. He can also create weapons from his body material.
- Back from the Dead: Returns from Hākabāka to provide aid in the final battle with Dagded before dragging Kanejim off to the underworld to personally oversee his punishment.
- Big Bad Ensemble: With King Racules. While they're both on opposing sides, Dethnaarok's main goal is to replace humankind with the Bug Naraku as the dominant species.
- Big Damn Heroes: In episode 48.
- Casting Gag: This isn't the first time that Tomoyuki Shimura voiced an non-human character with a Then Let Me Be Evil mentality after he and others like him suffer prejudice by others for being villains in a story, being talked down by the main protagonist with a more dangerous antagonist taking over for the duration of the series.
- Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: To Great King Boccowaus. Both are Evil Overlords who turn out to be Unwitting Pawns of the Greater-Scope Villain of their story and were manipulated by a Treacherous Advisor into opposing the heroes. Boccowaus, a mechanical lifeform who utilized highly advanced technology, was the king of Kikaitopia and led the Tozitend in conquering multiple worlds to bring them under his rule. Dethnaarok, on the other hand, is the king of the Bug Naraku Empire, which was defeated in the past; he now seeks to exterminate humanity out of revenge. Boccowaus was a total despot and despite his comedic moments, he delegated most of the heavy lifting to his subordinates. Dethnaarok, by contrast, is grim and serious at all times, personally leading the charge on the battlefield. His extreme nihilism stems from humanity labeling his kind as evil, leaving him with no hope for coexistence between the two races. Both of them ultimately die due to the actions of someone they trusted—Boccowaus is killed after Gege, possessed by the Creator of Worlds, exposes his weakness to the Zenkaigers without him ever learning the truth. Dethnaarok is mortally wounded in a sneak attack by Kamejim—who had been working for Dagded all along—after being defeated by Jeramie in their duel. However, he returns from the afterlife to aid the King-Ohgers and the people of Tikyu in defeating Dagded, dragging Kamejim with him into Hākabāka when the latter is finally defeated.
- Death Seeker: Implied repeatedly in his ideals if it means his death would take a large amount of humans down with him. But following the reveal of his motives, he believes that wiping out all life on Tikyū is the only way true peace could be achieved.
- Disc-One Final Boss: He's the main antagonist of the first half of the series. He gets killed by Kamejim once his role as an antagonist ends.
- Didn't See That Coming: Had a very clever plan to disable Legend King-Ohger at the right time so the monarchs are unable to prevent him from sealing the three Greater Shugods. The only reason it didn't work was due to Jeramie stealing their Shugod Souls for his own ends. Justified as Jeramie fabricated the legend along with being the last person Dethnaarok would have ever expected to betray him.
- The Dreaded: A name like "Abyss King Deathnarok" has that effect.
- The Emperor: Of the quintessential Evil Overlord, bloodthirsty conqueror variety.
- Et Tu, Brute?: Does NOT take the revelation that Jeramie has been using him and his forces all along for his own goals well AT ALL.
- Evil Sounds Deep: Tomoyuki Shimura uses a subterranean-level, guttural voice for him.
- Even Evil Has Loved Ones: #26 reveals that he has a companion in the form of a mini-Shugod, Tarantula Abyss; notably, it's the only being whom he will never harm, nor let any harm come to.
- Expy: Of Ransik, a ruthless nonhuman dragged into a Cycle of Revenge between his kind and humans with the ability to produce weapons from his body. Both have a Treacherous Advisor who act on their own hidden agenda.
- Face Death with Dignity: Fatally stabbed with a focused beam of light about to vaporize him, Deathnarok accepts his demise as Jeramie tried to free him and get him to safety.
- Freudian Excuse: He actually has a good reason why he despises humans so much because of a legend made by Jeramie 2,000 years ago that causes Bug Naraku to be discriminated therefore he sees no reason to coexist with humans and tries any means to wipe them all out.
- Frontline General: One of the few Sentai main villains who is willing to lead troops into battle or fight the rangers himself. Episode 9 has him confront each of the Ohsama Sentai personally and wipe the floor with them as part of his greater plan to unleash his cocoons upon the kingdoms.
- Good Cop/Bad Cop: While his advisor Kamejim is willing to feign negotiation, Dethnaarok doesn't bother and will usually just settle for a show of force.
- Heel–Face Door-Slam: Initially he seems to be on the verge of atoning for his misdeeds, but Kamejim then proceeds to betray him.
- Humiliation Conga: He gets one starting in episode 11 when Jeramie immobilizes him after sabotaging his plans and then shooting him at point-blank range. Then the next episode sees Jeramie poisoning him as Spider Kumonos during their fight, forced to fall back as the poison becomes unbearable while watching Spider Kumonos walk away at his leisure.
- King Bob the Nth: He's the eighth of his name.
- A Lighter Shade of Black: While he is a ruthless ruler willing to exterminate humanity, his motive ultimately stems from the Bug Naraku being pitted against humanity and becoming the villains of Jeramie's story in the process, in contrast with Racules willing to gain power at any cost and Dagded seeking amusement by igniting wars all over the universe.
- Madden Into Misanthropy: Jeramie's prophecy caused the humans to depise his kind, eventually resenting them.
- Meaningful Name: His name is a Portmanteau of "death", "Ragnarök", and "Naraku".
- My Nayme Is: His name is pronounced "Desnarok", with the highlighted part spelled the same as that of the empire he rules.
- Names to Run Away from Really Fast: Pretty sure that someone with the title of "Abyssnote King" isn't one of the good guys here, much less someone with "death" in their name.
- No-Nonsense Nemesis: Dethnaarok doesn't waste words or time on complicated schemes. He's blunt and straightforward when when making his demands, will tear down entire city blocks as a show of force and will go out of his way to confront his foes as part of his plans. He also shows little patience for Kamejim and his schemes and throttles him when one of them goes awry.
- Ominous Opera Cape: Dons a long, voluminous black cape, complete with High Collar of Doom.
- Omnicidal Maniac: Justified. Due to Jeramie's prophecies depicting the Bug Naraku as evil, Dethnaarok became an Absolute Xenophobe seeking to slaughter humankind and conditioned his forces to sacrifice themselves if means killing as many humans as they can. He ultimately follows his own dogma when he infects Tikyū's core to commit an act of mutually assured destruction."Kill all the humans. Kill them, even if it kills you."
- Rank Scales with Asskicking: Is the emperor of the Bug Naraku Empire and has demonstrated the capability of wrecking multiple buildings at once. #9 of the series showcases the four ruling rangers try to take him on individually, each battle ending them in beaten to the point of unconsciousness. Gira himself gets quickly disarmed and captured without too much effort on Dethnaarok's part.
- Rasputinian Death: It takes a lot to finally bring him down. His defeat at the hands of God King-Ohger only shrinks him down back to normal size, and even in a weakened state he manages to go toe to toe with the heroes. Then during his duel with Jeramie he gets impaled by Kamejim's staff, which still doesn't kill him, but leaves him open to getting vaporized by a beam of light, presumably fired by an outside force.
- Red and Black and Evil All Over: He's the main villain, and is clad in crimson and black armor.
- Repetitive Name: His name and title in Japanese is Naraku-ō Dezunaraku.
- Royals Who Actually Do Something: Unlike previous Sentai main villains, he's shown to be more willing to confront the heroes personally to get the job done.
- Serrated Blade of Pain: His BFS Naraklaymore has a jagged edge, and he's the main villain of the first arc.
- Take Up My Sword: In an odd anti-villain to hero version, a dying Dethnaarok passes on the Bug Naraku's throne to Jeramie while entrusting their people will thrive under his heir's rule.
- Then Let Me Be Evil: #24 reveals that his hatred of humans stems from the discrimination his species faced as a result of Jeramie portraying the Bug Naraku as the villains of the legend of King-Ohger. This resulted in him Becoming the Mask and, believing it to be the only way to make things equal, is scheming to outright wipe out the planet.
- Tragic Villain: Ruling the Bug Naraku, the racism his kind suffered at the hands of humans forces him to embrace their views and become a monsterous tyrant willing to kill everyone and himself to achieve his ideal peace.
- Villain Ball: Surprisingly subverted. At first, it seemed like it was played straight when he let Gira go in order to have him fall into despair when he sees the fall of humanity first hand, allowing him and the others to summon and form Legend King-Ohger. However, the very next episode reveals that them doing so was exactly what he wanted so that Nagabajim is able to secretly plant bombs to disable that form at the right time to so he can execute the true plan.
Portrayed by: Kikuko Inoue (voice); Yuichi Hachisuka [episode 12], Yuki Miyazawa [episodes 30-31, 49] (suit)

- Habitat: Ishabana (daytime), Shugodom (daytime)
Favorite: Jeramie Brasieri
King: Mother King
Jeramie's mother, who was exiled from the Bug Naraku for falling in love with a human.
- Action Mom: Jeramie's mother is one of the most powerful Bug Naraku in the series, strong enough to not only take on but actually kill Daigorg himself one-on-one.
- Be Careful What You Wish For: She tries to stop the civil war among the Bug Naraku, but dies when the factions band against her.
- Combat Stilettos: Her design incorporates high heels, which she uses to devastating effect.
- Deceased Parents Are the Best: From what little we see from her, Nephila was an incredibly kind, yet strong soul dedicated to protecting Jeramie at all costs, even on her deathbed.
- Dying as Yourself: Nephila, being turned into an instinct-driven zombie, regains enough of her mind to allow God King-Ohger to destroy her.
- Fallen Princess: #24 has Jeramie reveal that he's related to Dethnaarok himself through her, making her of Bug Naraku royalty.
- Genghis Gambit: Subverted. She attempted to end the Bug Naraku civil war by defeating Daigorg in combat, but only ended up having the other Bug Naraku gang up on her instead, leading to her demise.
- Gun Fu: Primarily relies on punches and kicks, with her using the Venomix Shooter as a sidearm 2,000 years ago.
- Interspecies Romance: With the sixth hero of the first Ohsama Sentai.
- Lightning Bruiser: Her fighting style relies on her delivering fast, powerful attacks from both close and long range.
- Mama Bear: She's willing to face the Deathblow General himself, if it means protecting her son. When she's revived, all her actions are driven by her need to save Jeramie and be saved by him.
- Exploited as a zombie acting on base instincts, leaving Jeramie in Stunned Silence as she delivers a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown on Grodi with the other rulers caught in her attack. And then demands where her son is while attacking Shuggodom, calling the other rulers a bad influence to her son.
- Meaningful Name: Her name is derived from the eponymous genus of spiders
. - Ms. Fanservice: Compared to almost every other Bug Naraku, she's an absolute looker, looking very feminine despite her notably monstrous features. It helps that her design features Elegant Gothic Lolita elements alongside features that look quite similar to lingerie.
- Posthumous Character: It's initially not elaborated upon what became of her after she sealed Jeramie's powers 2,000 years ago, though Jeramie refers to the Venomix Shooter as a "memento of her", implying that she passed away prior to the series. #31 reveals that she was mortally wounded by the other Bug Naraku ganging up on her after her fight with Daigorg.
- Purple Is Powerful: Features purple in her design, and is one of the strongest Bug Naraku warriors.
- Spider People: She's themed on an orb-weaver spider.
- Seductive Spider: Not so much in terms of personality, but definitely in her looks.
See his section under here for more details.
Generals
Kamejim Unka
Portrayed by: Shin-ichiro Miki (voice), Masato Tsutamune (suit)

The chief minister of the Bug Naraku Empire, and the brains behind the Kaijim. He is later revealed to be an agent of the Galactinsects and the true culprit behind the human-Bug Naraku war under orders from his master.
- Alien Among Us: As it turns out, he's not actually a Bug Naraku, but a Galactinsect agent and one of the Jesters the entire time.
- Big Bad Wannabe: For the ruthless manipulator he is presented as in maintaining the conflict on Tikyu while disposing of loose ends in the first half, Kamejim ends up being a low-level flunky compared to the other Galactinsects once they join the fray. Downplayed in being the only remaining Jester after the others were dispatched.
- Black Widow: While posing as Hymeno, Kamejim plots to select a suitor, preferably one of the King-Ohgers, and kill them after their marriage in stir chaos in Ishabana.
- Butt-Monkey: He quickly becomes the runt of the litter when the rest of the Galactinsects show up, as whatever competency he had in the first arc gave way to being comedically thrown around by the heroes and even his allies.
- Character Tic: Revealed retroactively. Kamejim has a tendency to make a very specific gesture with his hand. Two notable characters duplicate this gesture while he's posing as them.
- Clark Kenting: While his disguises as humans are very accurate and effective, his disguise as a Bug Naraku consists of...using the Bug Naraku logo instead of the Galactinsect one. It works because no one except Racules actually knew about the Galactinsects, and if he knew, then he was in no position to tell anyone.
- Didn't Think This Through: Kamejim deliberately poisons Hymeno and her people with a substance from space, forcing her to be his captive while he ruled Ishbana by stating that only he has the cure. But he underestimated Hymeno, who simply created her own cure from scratch.
- Disc-One Final Boss: He seems to be set up to become the main antagonist of the second part but is driven off by God King-Ohger and is then revealed to be nothing more than one of the many Galactinsects Jesters, with the much more powerful Dugded serving as the main antagonist from that point forth .
- Double Reverse Quadruple Agent: He killed and replaced Boshimar to act as a double agent for Dethnaarok. However, it turns out he was actually a Galactinsect agent and one of the Jesters from the start.
- Dragged Off to Hell: After being killed by Rcules and Dethnaarok, Dethnaarok personally drags him off to be tortured in the afterlife.
- The Dragon: He serves as Dethnaarok's right-hand man. Or so he pretended, in truth he's one of many Co-Dragons to Dugded Durjarin. However, he winds up going back to this by the end as the only Galactinsect Jester left in the series finale.
- Even Evil Has Standards: Subverted. While he mastered the ages-long conflict between humans and the Bug Naraku for his true master's amusement, he is disturbed by Dethnaarok's plan to completely destroy the planet yet is too afraid to directly stop him. In hindsight it was also probably less him objecting to it morally given his lack of them, but out of fear of what Dadged would do to him when he found out one of his planets was destroyed.
- Evil Counterpart:
- To Rita. Both of them are the smartest of their respective factions, but while Rita is determined to maintain a sense of neutrality when dealing with political affairs, Kamejim has been manipulating the humans and Bug Naraku for years.
- To Hymeno, as both rule over Ishabana. But while Hymeno is a human who encourages people to better themselves and tends her subjects' health, Kamejim is an alien who manipulates others for his amusement and poisoned the Ishbanans.
- To Jeramie as both have shaped Tikyu's history through the human/Bug Naraku conflict. But while Jeramie sought atonement after realizing his prophecies made things worse between his parents' races, Kamejim remorselessly perpetuated the conflict for his amusement.
- To Racules. Both are manipulators who managed a long-term plan for most of the series: Kamejim's role acting as Dethnaarok's right-hand is to bring upon his downfall to make way for the Galactinsect invasion. While Racules has been molding Gira to be strong enough to bring upon Dagded's downfall.
- Expy:
- Being a Dirty Coward who outlives the other day one villains and lasts until an ignoble end in the final episode, Kamejim could be considered King-Ohger's equivalent to Rage Flying Boma Zulten.
- To Brajira, working for multiple villains as their righthand before revealing himself to have manipulated them for his own agenda. Bonus points in disguising himself as Boshimar like Brajira did in his Bladedrun aliases.
- To Deviot, being an insectoid Big Bad's deceptive general who served more than one group. He ultimately gets his boss killed with his former employee's surviving relative taking command of his forces.
- Eye Beams: He can fire blasts of light from his eye, which he uses to kill Karras in #30.
- Fantastic Slurs: He calls those beneath him "Insects".
- Faux Affably Evil: He appears to put up a polite front, but it doesn't change the tone of his own threats. He more or less instigated the main conflict between the humans and Bug Naraku.
- Foil: To Jeramie. Both of them turn out to be a Treacherous Advisor to Dethnaarok who has Been There, Shaped History in regards to perpetuating the history of conflict between the humans and Bug Naraku. However, Jeramie has had a Heel Realization in regards to the damage his actions have caused despite how unintentional it was, having wanted unity between the two races and worked to fix the situation the best he could, which heavily contrasts Kamejim's own attitude and actions, having deliberately maintained the destructive Cycle of Revenge in the name of the amusement of his true liege. This difference is most highlighted with their final interaction with Dethnaarok: after defeating him in head-to-head combat, Jeramie pleas for him back down and let go of his hatred for humans before he desperately tried to save Dethnaarok's life while Kamejim attacks Dethnaarok In the Back, mocks him as he reveals his manipulations before going on to kill him.
- Foreshadowing:
- Kamejim looks very visually different from the rest of the Bug Naraku, who tend to look much more insectoid while he barely resembles his insect basis. That's because he's not a Bug Naraku at all, but a Galactinsect. When the rest of his kind finally shows up, he fits in much better with their designs.
- In Episode 16, he enlists Wogerajim to kill Siron for unknown reasons before canceling the order upon deeming the human as harmless. It's later revealed he is an ally of the culprit behind the Fury of the Gods, Grodie Leucodium, and wanted to silence anyone who knew of Galactinsects' role in the engineered event since Siron's wife knew enough of the truth.
- In #20, Kamejim explains to Dethnaarok that he justified his actions as The Mole in Racles' court as deceiving allies to best deceive enemies. Episodes later, he has Dethnaarok killed while outing himself as a member of the Galactinsects who manipulated both sides from the very beginning.
- Good Cop/Bad Cop: Dethnaarok doesn't bother with pleasantries and will threaten others to get what he wants. Kamejim is all about pleasantries, which consist of politely threatening others to get what he wants.
- Karmic Death: He gets killed by Rcles and Dethnaarok, whom he played and manipulated during their respective reigns.
- Kill and Replace: He killed the real Boshimar and assumed his appearance long before the series' events.
- Large Ham: He may look quiet, but there is a reason he is called "The Flamboyant" amongst the Galactinsects.
- Mad Scientist: In addition to his role as prime minister, he also serves as the Empire's head researcher.
- The Man in Front of the Man: He is revealed to have caused the human/Bug Naraku conflict for his own amusement and then mortally wounds Dethnaarok when he no longer needs him.
- Master of Disguise: Similarly to Gerojim, he can assume the appearance of others.
- Meaningful Name:
- His first name is derived from kamemushi (亀虫), the Japanese name for the stinkbug. The last two syllables are switched, and shi is changed to its voiced form, which allows him to match the rest of his comrades.
- His last name is derived from Kiboshimaruunka (黄星丸浮塵子), the Japanese name for the Ishiharanus iguchi
species of plant hopper, which has the ability to impersonate ladybugs.
- The Mole: To both Shugodom (in his guise as Boshimar) and the Bug Naraku, with his true allegiance lying with Dagded.
- Not Quite Dead: #27 reveals that he survived God King-Ohger's attack.
- Out-Gambitted: Disguising himself as Hymeno in #35 and #36, Kamejim expected to assassinate the team and kept her sword on him so he could claim her an imposter if she confronts him while using the cure to an unknown poison to keep her and her inflicted subjects in line. But Kamejim didn't count on Sebastian's interference as Romane or that Hymeno would prove herself as the real princess by curing herself and the Ishbanans with an antidote she made from scratch.
- Red Baron: He's known as "the Flamboyant" among the Galactinsect Jesters.
- Significant Wardrobe Shift: Downplayed. He switches the Bug Naraku emblem on his head for the Galactinsect emblem after the other Galactinsects arrive and his true allegiance is revealed.
- Staff of Authority: He's second only to Dethnaarok in the Empire's pecking order, and carries a long staff dubbed the Mushimarupin. It's also the weapon he uses to kill Dethnaarok.
- Treacherous Advisor: He shows his true colors after he betrays Dethnaarok by impaling him with the Mushimarupin, explaining how he instigated the human/Bug Naraku conflict, then leaves him to take a blast from a Kill Sat.
- Villainous Breakdown: In #36, not taking well to his plans falling apart while trying to maintain his charade as Hymeno in vain. In the Final Battle, nothing going his way has left him absolutely rabid. This soon fades into absolute terror as Dethnaarok prepares to land the final blow and then literally drags him to Hell.
Portrayed by: Kosuke Takaguchi (voice); Takuma Komori [episodes 17-18], Yohei Fujita [episodes 19-22, 31], Hajime Kanzaki [episode 23], Hirotsugu Mori [episode 41] (suit)

- Habitat: Shugodom (morning, noon, evening, night)
Favorite: Shugod souls
King: Giant King
A Bug Naraku warrior who is regarded as the Underground Empire's hero.
- Back from the Dead: He presumably died sometime after the Bug Naraku civil war, and was brought back to life in the present day using Shugodom technology as part of the peace treaty between them and the Bug Naraku. #31 reveals that his first death was by Nephila's hand. Ironically, his corpse is the only one not seen during the final battle(s).
- Blood Knight: He refuses to let anyone get in the way of a good fight, not even those who are supposed to be his allies.
- Boom, Headshot!: His fight with Nephila ends with her shooting him in the head at point-blank range.
- The Brute: He's the chief powerhouse of the Bug Naraku, and serves as Dethnaarok's left hand.
- The Dreaded: Even the normally-unflappable Jeramie reacts with fear at hearing Daigorg's name.
- Half the Man He Used to Be: He meets his (second) end when he is cleft in twain from scalp to groin by King Caucasus Kabuto.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from daikokukogane (大黒黄金), the Japanese name for the horned dung beetle.
- One-Man Army: According to Jeramie, he won Dethnaarok the throne by single-handedly crushing all the opposition.
- Powerful Pick: His main weapon is a massive pickaxe dubbed the Daikocrusher. It's strong enough that the shockwaves it generates alone can cause massive damage.
- Red Baron: He's renowned in-universe as the "Deathblow General" (一撃将軍/Ichigeki Shōgun).
- Samurai: His overall design.
- Shout-Out: According to character designer Yuki Yogo
, Daigorg's design was greatly inspired by Laomoto Khan from Ninja Slayer. - Tough Beetles: He's themed on a horned dung beetle — the strongest insect on Earth — and has the strength expected of an enemy general, shrugging off Jeramie and Yanma's finishers with ease.
Portrayed by: Tomokazu Seki (voice), Kenya Saitō (suit)

- Habitat: Shugodom (daytime)
Favorite: Whisper Voice
King: Surprise King
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of a mayfly. While initially serving the Bug Naraku cause, he becomes Jeramie's retainer after the king of the in-between saves his life.
- Ambiguous Situation: There are many ambiguous aspects about him presented over time, such as a half-Bug Naraku nature like Jeramie as well as how he was able to survive all of his defeats, getting poisoned, and even consuming Shugod Souls, which should have killed him. He often hand waves it off as "being everything and nothing all at once" thanks to his Master of Illusion powers. It then gets Subverted when it is revealed that eating Shuggod souls causes memory loss with Gerojim luckily suffering Loss of Identity at worst.
- Ascended Extra: Originally presented as just another one-off Kaijim, he later becomes Jeramie's retainer after being rescued by him.
- Beware the Nice Ones: Gerojim is typically a Shrinking Violet, but when Jeramie's in a Heroic BSoD due to potentially having to cut down his kinsman Dethnaarok, Gerojim pretends to pull a Face–Heel Turn and puts on a very convincing performance: he convinced an entire platoon of Sanagim to help him out off-screen, attacks Jeramie outright and deconstructs his entire mindset in seconds. Thankfully, the whole thing was an attempt to pull Jeramie out of his funk. Not only does it work, but the exchange flags Gerojim as one of God King-Ohger's chosen pilots.
- The Consigliere: To Jeramie, with #25 showing that he's willing to call him out when necessary.
- Contrasting Sequel Main Character: Both Gerojim and Yatsudenwani are monsters of the week that survived their apparent defeats and became servants to a white-colored Sixth Ranger, but while Gerojim willingly becomes Jeramie's servant, Yatsudenwani was forced into this role by Mikoto. Gerojim also joined the side of good much earlier than Yatsudenwani did, due to Mikoto being evil for most of Abaranger's run (Though Yatsudenwani wasn't very evil to begin with).
- Cover Identity Anomaly: Many of his disguises have visibly perfect appearances, yet stick out by how out of character they appear. Many others are too distracted or shocked to notice this.
- Energy Weapons: He can fire energy beams from his mouth and claws.
- Finishing Move: Yura Yu Rush: Gerojim unleashes a wave of immense heat at the target.
- Heel–Face Turn: Of sorts; he defects not to the monarchs' side but Jeramie's after the latter rescues him and helps fake his second death.
- Irony: Mayflies are known for having a very short lifespan of a single day after their larval state, yet Gerojim lives longer than the other Kaijim.
- Master of Illusion: His main ability is to use illusions to fool people, including disguising himself as other humans.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese word for the mayfly, kagero (蜉蝣).
- Minion with an F in Evil: His track record in villainy is... less than stellar, to put it generously.
- Mistreatment-Induced Betrayal: His mistreatment at the hands of Dethnaarok combined with Jeramie sparing him causes him to become the first Bug Naraku to defect to Jeramie's side.
- Never Hurt an Innocent: He has never hurt anybody on screen, even when he knocks Shiokara unconscious to replace him during Yanma's prank on Racules, Shiokara is still shown perfectly unharmed after waking up.
- Not Quite Dead: #13 reveals that he actually survived God Hopper's attack. He pulls this off again in the same episode with Jeramie's help.
- Pun-Based Creature: His Master of Disguise ability is based on the Japanese word for mayfly, which contains the phonetics for "shadow", kage (影).
- Put on a Bus: Hasn't been seen in-person during the middle part after Jeramie's Zero-Approval Gambit back in #29, only returning during the final arc.
- Shrinking Violet: He normally acts like this and speaks softly, due to being a Master of Disguise he claims no one would see him for who he is because he is a mere "shadow".
- The Unfought: He isn't given a full battle in his debut episode. Racules poisons him shortly after he makes his appearance to the monarchs and he gets one-shotted by God Hopper in his giant form... or so everyone thought.
- Wolverine Claws: Is armed with claws for melee combat.
Soldiers
Portrayed by: Unknown (voice), Various (suit)
The foot soldiers of the Bug Naraku Empire.- Abnormal Ammo: Rather than bullets, their rifles fire miniaturized Sanagim.
- Meaningful Name: Their name is derived from sanagi (蛹), the Japanese word for pupa.
- Mix-and-Match Weapon: Their primary weapon is the Gun Shovel, a polearm shaped like a spade that can be flipped around and used as a rifle.
- Mooks: They serve as the season's enemy grunts.
- Sizeshifter: They're able to grow to giant size, seemingly at will, in order to support their Kaijim counterparts. In addition, they can also be small enough for other Sanagim to use them as bullets for their guns.
- Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: The Hitotsu-ki were formed from ordinary humans corrupted by their own desires — which if strong enough could allow them to assume giant form, while the Kaijim are created by Kamejim, and assume giant form via ingesting Shugod Souls.
- Kaiju: Despite starting out as human-sized monsters, as seen with Funjim during his introduction, the Kajim functioned as this due to being enlarged first before fighting the monarchs. This is later subverted in #5.
- Meaningful Name: Their name is a Portmanteau of 怪人/ kaijin ("monster") and 虫/ mushi ("bug").
- Monster of the Week: As per Sentai tradition. This is averted in #10 by having every Kaijim fought up until that point revived at once as additionally-enhanced "Deth-Kaijims", and again in #17 and #19 with a Kaijim being brought back as an as-yet-unnamed higher tier.
Danjim/DethDanjim/DiamondDanjim
Portrayed by: Yasuhiko Imai [main], Hiroyuki Muraoka [understudy] (suit); Susumu Chiba [DiamondDanjim] (voice)
- Habitat: Shugodom (daytime)
Favorite: Black Smoke
King: Defense King
A type of Kaijim infused with the BNA of a pillbug.
- Chest Blaster: He can fire cannonballs from his chest and palms.
- Finishing Move:
- Dango Tackle: Danjim charges forward like a bullet while holding the Dangomu Shields in front.
- Luckily, My Shield Will Protect Me: His Dangomu Shields, one mounted on each arm.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese word for pillbug, dangomushi (団子虫).
- Starter Villain: Serves as this for the first episode, being the first Kaijim Gira fights and destroys via King-Ohger.
- Suddenly Voiced: Is given a speaking role in #19, after his predecessor was The Voiceless.
- Talk to the Fist: A Running Gag with DiamondDanjim is him trying to introduce himself only to get attacked before he finishes his name.
Bodarujim/DethBodarujim/GenjiBodarujim
Portrayed by: Naoyuki Shimoduru (voice); Hajime Kanzaki [episode 2], Hiroyuki Muraoka [episode 10], Kenya Saitō [episode 17] (suit)
- Habitat: N'Kosopa (nighttime)
Favorite: Night View
King: Illumination King
A type of Kaijim infused with the BNA of a firefly.
- Energy Weapon: His primary attack is firing energy beams or hurling energy blades at his foes.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese word for firefly, hotaru (蛍).
Funjim/DethFunjim
Portrayed by: Ryuzou Ishino (voice), Kenya Saitō (suit)
- Habitat: Ishabana
Favorite: Large Rolling Ball
King: Bowling King
A type of Kaijim infused with the BNA of a dung beetle.
- Dung Fu: As his motif implies, he can fling large amounts of dirt and dung around in a fight. Doing this in Ishabana, a land known for its cleanliness and health, reinforces it.
- In a Single Bound: He can leap to stratosphere-level heights.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese word for dung beetle, funkoro (糞転).
- Tough Beetles: He's themed on a dung beetle.
Tanijim/DethTanijim
Portrayed by: Naoya Iguchi (suit)
- Habitat: Toufu (daytime)
Favorite: Slash-and-burn farming
King: Shooting King
A type of Kaijim infused with the BNA of a pond snail.
- Meaningful Name: Its name is derived from the Japanese word for pond snail, taniji (田螺).
- Wave-Motion Gun: Has a massive laser cannon attached to its thorax.
Jigokujim/DethJigokujim
Portrayed by: Keikou Sakai (voice), Takahiro Yoneoka (suit)
- Habitat: Gokkan (midnight)
Favorite: Hole Digging
King: Tunnel King
A type of Kaijim infused with the BNA of an antlion.
- Antlion Monster: Themed on an antlion and boasts similar abilities, such as tunneling.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese word for the antlion's larva, arijigoku (蟻地獄).
- Tunnel King: His specialty is helping create tunnels to either avoid direct hits or to create openings for his allies, which allow the Bug Naraku to steal God Scorpion's Soul.
Gundajim
Portrayed by: Bin Shimada (voice), Hajime Kanzaki (suit)
- Habitat: Shugodom (daytime)
Favorite: Abuse
King: Leadership King
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of an army ant.
- Bad Boss: He prioritizes beating up and berating his Sanagim over accomplishing the mission to kidnap the Shugods, buying the heroes enough time to cure the Shugods and to gain God Scorpion on their side.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese word for the army ant, guntaiari (軍隊蟻).
- Pun-Based Creature: He's an army ant wearing a military uniform.
- Shovel Strike: Wields the same Gun Shovel as the Sanagim.
Nagabajim
Portrayed by: Rikako Aikawa (voice), Naoya Iguchi (suit)
- Habitat: Shugodom (daytime)
Favorite: Parasitic Rush
King: Parasitic King
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of an ichneumon wasp.
- Meaningful Name: Her name is derived from onagabachi (オナガバチ), the Japanese name for the Rhyssinae subfamily
of parasitoid wasps. - Royal Rapier: Wields a rapier fashioned after a wasp's stinger dubbed the Tube Sable.
- Wicked Wasps: Is themed on a parasitoid wasp.
Amenjim
Portrayed by: Nobuo Tobita (voice), Hiroyuki Muraoka (suit)
- Habitat: Ishabana (daytime and evening)
Favorite: Sparring
King: Kung Fu King
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of a water strider.
- Bare-Fisted Monk: A Kaijim who specializes in hand to hand martial arts.
- Brought to You by the Letter "S": His face looks similar to the kanji for water (水), evoking his ability to walk on water.
- Making a Splash: In addition to his martial arts, he can also manipulate water.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from amenbo (水黽), the Japanese name for the water strider.
- Mythology Gag: His face greatly resembles Shinken Blue's helmet.
- Old Master: He's apparently older than even Dethnaarok himself if his dialogue is any indication, as well as the fact that he's an accomplished martial artist.
- Walk on Water: He's able to walk on water, given his basis on a water strider. It also fits in well with his martial artist skill set.
Baejim/KinBaejim
Portrayed by: Atsushi Abe (voice), Hajime Kanzaki (suit)
- Habitat: Shugodom (daytime)
Favorite: Apologizing (Baejim), Gold and silver treasures (KinBaejim)
King: Flying King (Baejim), Money King (KinBaejim)
A type of Kaijim infused with the BNA of a fly, the first being tasked to acquire God Tarantula. The second is a merchant who aids the Galactasects when they bounty is placed on the Ohsama Sentai after the latter group returned from Earth.
- Affably Evil: These Kaijim are polite.
- Apologetic Attacker: Baejim's entire shtick is giving out apologies.
- Cool Sword: These Kaijim wield the Bae Sliders, two short-swords resembling fly wings that grant them flight when crossed together.
- Gold-Colored Superiority: KinBaejim's body has a gold paint job.
- Intrepid Merchant: KinBaejim's profession.
- Meaningful Name: Their name is derived from hae (蠅), the Japanese word for fly.
- Shout-Out: Animal Motif aside, Baejim's design is outright stated to be a homage for Kamen Rider BLACK, and he even does the sideways arm pose. His extra arms is positioned in a way that it looks like he's preparing for Kingstone Flash, an attack done by said Kamen Rider. And as mentioned above, Baejim always apologizes, which is a twist on Kamen Rider Black's "Unforgivable!" Verbal Tic.
Wogerajim
Portrayed by: Ken'ichirou Matsuda (voice), Kenya Saitō (suit)
- Habitat: Gokkan (midnight sun)
Favorite: Shoveling snow
King: Work King
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of a mole cricket.
- Shovel Strike: His main weapon is the Gun Gun Shovel, a bigger, double-bladed version of the Sanagim's Gun Shovel.
- Sizeshifter: He can enlarge his fist to deal heavy punches to his enemies.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from okera (螻蛄), the Japanese word for the mole cricket.
Iragajim
Portrayed by: Eiji Takemoto (voice), Takahiro Yoneoka (suit)
- Habitat: Shugodom (midnight sun)
Favorite: Hunting
King: Paralyze King
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of a slug moth larva.
- Bright Is Not Good: His armor is bright gold in color.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from iraga (刺蛾), the Japanese word for the Monema flavescens
species of slug moth. - Red Baron: He has the ominous title of "Shugod Hunter", living up to it by acquiring the Shugod Souls of God Tarantula and the three Guardian Deities for Daigorg. He even disables the other Shugods save God Kuwagata for a while before Yanma's Rousing Speech awakens them from their stupor.
- Shock and Awe: He can fire lightning bolts from his spinules that can paralyze his victims.
Zarigajim
Portrayed by: Daisuke Sakaguchi (voice), Naoya Iguchi (suit)
- Habitat: Shugodom (morning)
Favorite: Fishing bait
King: Heat King
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of a crayfish.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese word for crayfish (蝲蛄).
- Playing with Fire: Not only can he set his claws on fire, he's also immune to high temperatures given his ability to dig down to the core requires it.
- Tunnel King: He can dig all the way down to Tikyū's core as part of Dethnaarok's plan.
Galactinsects

The Galactinsectsnote are a group of mysterious extraterrestrial beings led by Dagded Dujardin, the self-proclaimed "King of the Universe". On the latest of their conquests throughout the universe, Dagded and his Five Jesters set their sights on Tikyū two years after the Bug Naraku were defeated.
- Aliens Are Bastards: They are intergalactic insectoids whose goals are destroying planets just for kicks.
- Ambiguous Situation: While Minongan was made to be Dagded's 'backup' and Grody was made like Gira, it's unclear exactly how the other three came to be. It's shown Dagded can make any 'mortal' a Jester if he so desires, but he's also not above creating new ones by other means. So whether Goma, Hillbill, and Kamejim convinced Dagded to make them Jesters or were somehow created by him is unknown.
- Apocalypse How: The Galactinsects have caused numerous off-screen Class Sixes, which Gira gets a cursory glance at during his first interaction with Dagded. They've also subjected Earth to a Class 1; having caused the Civil War that forced most of humanity to migrate to Tikyu while leaving the stragglers at the mercy of the Deboth. Thankfully, the King-Ohgers and Kyoryugers prevent that number from escalating.
- Atrocious Arthropods: They are insectoid aliens who serve as the villains of the second half of the series.
- The Bad Guy Wins: Deconstructed and Discussed. The Galactinsects had long-since scoured numerous un-named planets of life by the time they'd reached Tikyu; having also set up a Villain World on Earth with the Deboth in the hopes of invoking this there too. The Kingohgers put a stop to that plan and began combatting the creatures back at home, but as Yanma noted in #39, the heroes are playing things so close to their chest precisely because of how easily the Jesters can destroy them all if they get too serious. Ultimately, they manage to reverse their victories by gradually whittling their numbers and eventually stripping Dagded of his godhood and immortality, allowing them to finish him off once and for all.
- Bound and Gagged: Save for the last part, this is how the Jesters are punished for failure; they are restrained by being tied up before being forced to sit out of the next fight.
- Contrasting Replacement Character: The Bug Naraku under Dethnaarok were an underground race of mutated insectoid humans whose no-nonsense plans all worked towards the aim of exterminating humanity. The Galactinsects are a band of extraterrestrial beings whose motivation is to amuse themselves by destroying entire planets for sport.
- Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: The Juto were a race of artificial beastmen created and sealed away by the Noto with the ability to take on the likeness of humans; conflicts with them only occurring when The Masquerade slipped. The Galactinsects meanwhile are alien beings who deliberately engineer conflicts on planets for their own amusement. The Juto are barely-united and especially prone to in-fighting between their castes, whereas the Galactinsects are apathetic-yet-professional with one another in their extermination campaigns. While the Juto were mainly a third-party threat that lurked in the shadows and only served as antagonists from time to time, the Galactinsects are full-time villains constantly interfering in others' lives.
- Curb-Stomp Cushion: Once the monarchs get wind of their plans and foil them, they attack the Jesters relentlessly at full force and with no mercy. Hillbill got the worst of this after her plan failed.
- Creative Sterility: As villains, this is the Galactinsects' Fatal Flaw. Despite being a group of eldritch demigods that wipe planets out for kicks, they have highly-specific methods of actually going about this. Very rarely do they work together and when dealing with a challenging planet like Tikyu, they're unable to adapt; their methods giving the heroes ample time to forge counters and Villain Beating Artifacts to deal with them.
- Deconstructed Character Archetype:
- The Galactinsects spit on typical Super Sentai power-dynamics: most Super Sentai Evil Empires rely on the use of monsters to whittle populations down through zany schemes and gloat about their superiority; constantly foiled by the team's ability to unite and drive them back weekly until their "superiority" is exhausted and they're dealt with. The Galactinsects exploit the nature of dynamics like this to sow chaos amongst populations and get them destroyed: They rarely use monsters at all sans the occasional reanimated corpse, the Galactinsects' wacky schemes are Played for Horror and come with very tangible consequences that wreak havoc on Tikyu's political structures and populace, the power gap between them and the heroes makes every victory fragile and easily undone and even reckless Team Spirit is a liability, as the creatures are deliberately holding back to "have fun" and will nuke the planet if they're provoked too hard; making even the very act of rebelling against them a game played by their rules. The only reason why the team even stands a chance to beat them in the final arc comes from a third party who no one even expected: Racles, who spent 17 years earning Dagded's trust to give him Immortal Breaker powers to truly end their reign.
- They also deconstruct the lazy-but-powerful entity archetype, primarily in regards to Why Don't You Just Shoot Him? and Just Toying with Them. Due to them having destroyed countless other civilizations on countless other worlds, the Galactinsects have no reason to think that their usual method of operating would go any differently with Tikyu. This unwavering belief in their own invincibility and untouchability ends up compromising their capacity to fight against the heroes and slowly dooms them to failure once their intended victims start to not only fight back effectively but also manage to successfully destroy them one-by-one simply because they have neither the creativity nor the drive to diversify their schemes, which means that all their great power fails to make a difference once the gap between them and the Kingohgers begins to close and leads to them being wiped out by the final episode.
- Dwindling Party: Because of their arrogance and the King-Ohgers' growing power, by the time of the final episodes only Dagded and Kamejim are left standing the rest all dead or sealed away in Minongan's case; though even at such low numbers they prove to be the deadliest threats to be faced yet.
- Evil Only Has to Win Once: Yanma posits in #39 that if the Galactinsects ever stop treating the conquest of Tikyu as a game, they'll wipe the planet out in an instant.
- Gang of Hats: A group of them; owing to their specialties. Hillbill is exclusively the Mind Control specialist, Goma is the body-swapper, etc.
- Just Toying with Them: Deconstructed. The Jesters treat the destruction of planets like a game, hence why they don't just crush whatever they see mindlessly; toying with the inhabitants to turn their demises into self-fulfilling prophecies For the Evulz. It's also the trait the heroes are using against them: By humoring the Jesters' skirmishes and games, they can come up with ways to fight back; the aliens' capriciousness ensuring that they can only account for so much. This ends up biting the Jesters hard when Racules uses Dagded's spontaneity to get an Immortal Breaker power and turn it on him; Yanma managing to give everyone that power and even the odds. Even as their members dwindle one-by-one, they can't find themselves bothered to take the situation seriously. By the final episode, only Kamejim and Dagded are left and both meet their permanent ends.
- Knight of Cerebus: Let's put it into this perspective: before the Galactinsects' introduction to the story, King-Ohger was arguably the darkest entry in the Reiwa era of Super Sentai yet given the emphasis on the political drama between the nations the main characters rule over and an increasingly complicated race war that shaped the setting. Afterwards? It can be arguably considered the darkest entry in the entire franchise as an already-conspiracy-heavy season gets saddled with tragedy on a cosmic horror level.
- Laughably Evil: Even as they are sowing chaos and destruction for kicks, the way they go about it can be hysterical, especially when they're just goofing around off the clock.
- Let's You and Him Fight: Their M.O. outside of direct intervention is to goad two peoples of a planet into a conflict until one side wins or Mutually Assured Destruction is assured, upon which they'll either vassalize the surviving race or exterminate them if they remain defiant.
- Lovecraft Lite: The Galactinsects are an entire horde of Eldritch Abominations with power over almost all living things in some form that have decimated an untold amount of sentient beings and worlds in the years leading up to the show (Earth of all places was in the process of becoming another casualty!). They're also Laughably Evil with gimmicks, tics, and preferences that let each of them stand out.
- The Man Behind the Man: The Galactinsects sow chaos into the ranks of a planet by integrating themselves into the politics / dynamics of its denizens and turning them all on each other.
- Omnicidal Maniac: Their debut episode reveals that they've wiped out the entire population of multiple planets that go up to the thousands with Tikyu being their latest target.
- Psycho for Hire: Unlike the people they force into their games, the Jesters are all every bit as sadistic as their king is and enjoy mass murder.
- Punny Name: Their name in Japanese is 宇蟲/uchū, a play on 宇宙 ("universe/galaxy/cosmos"), and 虫 ("insect").
- The Psycho Rangers: Unlike most Sentai villains, they don't use the Monster of the Week formula, instead there being six of them in total, each serving as an Evil Counterpart to one of the monarchs. Enforced further when some of them take over the kingdoms with Shugo Mask.
- Serial Escalation: The Galactinsects are basically what happens when Super Sentai villains get blind DRUNK on this trope, as their goals of destruction vastly outclass the Tozitendo Dynasty, who only sought to imprison and conquer.
- Sigil Spam: As with the Bug Naraku, the Galactinsects have their emblem somewhere on their person or equipment.
- Vile Villain, Saccharine Show: While King-Ohger is in no way Lighter and Softer, the already Darker and Edgier tone the series has considerably deepens once the Galactinsects make their move. That being said, the Galactinsects have far more comical moments than the Bug Naraku due to their quirky personalities.
- Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?: The Jesters treat the extermination of planets as a game and thus integrate themselves into their target world's political structures to squeeze it dry rather than just demolish them. They're so dedicated to this that it gives Racules the time he needs to convince Dagded to turn the OhgerCalibur ZERO into an Immortal Breaker for a betrayal and the heroes the means to finally strike back and take them down.
Leadership
Portrayed by: Akira Ishida (voice), Riichi Seike (suit)

- You're a pretty smart guy! I am mocking you.
Habitat: Shugodom (daytime)
Favorite: Cleaning up
King: The Creator of the Insect World
The leader of the Galactinsects, who proclaims himself to be the king of the entire universe. He has his eyes set on Tikyū for his next conquest, planning to destroy everyone on it.
- Above the Gods: Is revealed to have created the Shugods and is more powerful than them combined.
- Abusive Parent: He's Grody's creator/father and not only forgot he existed during his imprisonment, but regularly abuses him for laughs.
- Alliterative Name: Dagded Dujardin.
- Ambiguous Situation: It's unclear if his ability to come back is actual resurrection or just a clone with the same memories, as it's theorized killing Minongan incorrectly might just result in a second Dagded.
- Animal Motifs: Dagded's design and name are derived from water bears, who are famous for being able to survive almost anything that would kill anything else. This is reflected in the series, as Dagded is so utterly resilient that the monarchs had to resort to extreme measures to even injure him. He also has a secondary motif; Cockroaches, as in addition to being frustratingly hard to kill Dagded is universally disliked by everyone but his subordinates.
- Archnemesis Dad: He created Gira by magically impregnating his mother, and thus, is his real father. But the two are nothing less than enemies before and after the reveal of this.
- Bad Boss: He punishes the Jesters whenever their plans end up failing, usually by tying them up and forcing them to sit on the sidelines. Kamejim even has to remind him who Grodie is due to his general apathy for those he deems as lesser beings, even including his own Jesters.
- Berserk Button: Get even one syllable of his name wrong and you're in for a world of trouble, as Shugodom learns first-hand.
- Beware the Silly Ones: He maybe a jokester who spends most of his time playing around, but he is the leader of the Galactinsects for a very good reason.
- Big Bad: Despite appearing in Part II of the story, various revelations make it clear that Dagded is the overall villain of King-Ohger due to being being the main instigator behind the war between humans and the Bug Naraku and is the true mastermind behind Fury of the Gods disaster.
- Body Backup Drive: Boonboomger Vs. King-Ohger reveals that in addition to making Minongan this to him, Dagded had also sent a clone of himself to grow inside Earth, so that he could revive once the Three Sacred Regalia are all collected. Manhole Grumer eventually does revive him, but in a petrified form, so he instead absorbs his body to power himself up.
- Bright Is Not Good: His outfit features white and bright blue colors, in contrast to Dethnaarok's dark red-and-black color scheme.
- The Caligula: It's made immediately clear that the only qualifying factor that gives Dagded his title and status is his pure, unadulterated raw power, as he has absolutely none of the other factors that denote kingship. For reference, he makes Ohma Zi-O look like he has his head on straight.
- Contrasting Replacement Character:
- While Dethnaarok was a no-nonsense Frontline General whose actions were driven by vengeance against humanity for their ill-treatment of the Bug Naraku, Dagded prefers to let his Jesters run the operation and rarely intervenes himself, with amusement serving as his primary motivation. Even their color schemes are contrasted with each other — Dagded wears white and blue as opposed to Dethnaarok's black and red. Additionally, Dethnaarok also had just enough sense to allow for some form of honor and reason, whereas Dagded is chronically unscrupulous and dishonest.
- Racules was someone who was obsessed with getting political power and controlling other countries while putting on a benevolent facade. Dagded is an incredibly powerful being who already has the ability to rule over the universe, instead choosing to play games in order to "clean up" various planets of their inhabitants, and couldn't care less about what others thought of him as long as they recognized him as powerful. In addition, while Racules was ultimately shown to have benevolent motivations for his actions, Dagded is solely motivated by self-amusement.
- Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: To the Creator of Worlds. Both are enigmatic, cosmic level entities with the power to destroy and create entire worlds, but have entirely different mindsets to their methodology, resulting in an Order Versus Chaos kind of dynamic between the two:
- Dagded is supposed to "clean up worlds" as his function as a Destroyer Deity in order to keep the universe in balance, but instead chooses to focus on his own desires, deriving his amusement from destruction, manipulation, and tormenting civilizations. In contrast, the Creator of Worlds acts more like The Maker who chose to contain and preserve the worlds he created to avoiding the need to destroy them after creating too many.
- Dagded actively interferes with the lives of others, orchestrating wars and events for personal entertainment, whereas the Creator of Worlds remained detached for the most part but was willing to intervene when necessary to ensure his own plans went undeterred.
- Dagded is chaotic, sadistic, arrogant, and lazy, making him come across as an unruly child, while the Creator of Worlds was always soft-spoken, calm, polite, and unempathetic when interacting with others, presenting himself as a truly aloof being. In addition, the Creator of Worlds’ true form was never seen, as he was always possessing the bodies of others, while Dagded always maintained a single appearance despite his ability to change sizes.
- Dagded’s end is marked by fear and humiliation as his own creations and powers are used against him, dying while cowering and defeated. The Creator of Worlds departed after losing a simple game of rock-paper-scissors, leaving the universe to continue without concern for his presence or absence.
- Control Freak: It's easy to miss at first, as he's fine with unforeseen variables in his 'game,' but that's only so long as everyone is still playing by his rules and he wants to keep playing. All it really takes is the people of the world all uniting against him and refusing to die when he wants to end the game, and thus breaking the 'rules' of the game he wants to play (that being inner conflict and infighting), to make him lose his cool.
- The Corrupter: He's revealed to be this to previous Shugodom kings, being the one to strongarm them into continuing the conflict with the Bug Naraku.
- Corrupted Character Copy:
- Of Star Trek's Q in being an all-powerful being that plays around with the main cast. The difference is Q cares about humanity on some level while Dagded acts out of sheer sadistic pleasure.
- Of the Gods of Destruction from the Dragon Ball series, they’re all destructive beings tasked with de-cluttering the universe. But whereas the Gods of Destruction have redeeming qualities while personally destroying planets that fail to meet their expectations, Dagded has none and makes a game out of using others to do his dirty work most of the time.
- Cosmic Entity: He provides a necessary function of the universe, destroying worlds when they begin to clutter the universe. Though he ultimately barely even does his job as intended and starts destroying worlds just because he finds it funny, not even using his own powers to do the deed quick and clean but rather sadistically setting every planet's inhabitants to turn on each other and destroy themselves.
- Create Your Own Hero: Twice over in fact!
- He created Gira in order to directly control the Shugods when the time came. Not only did Gira go on to befriend them and gave them the willpower to resist Dagded's control over them, Gira went on to defy and rebel against Dagded's rule.
- Him revealing his existence to Racules and his role in instigating the "Fury of the Gods" which resulted in the death of countless people including Racules' father had the then young king to swear to do whatever it took to bring down Dagded, formulating the seventeen year long plan in order to gain the power to kill Dagded.
- Create Your Own Villain: In the Alternate Timeline of Vs. Kyoryuger, Gira's inherent ability to grow stronger from eating Shugods ends up getting Dagded killed early thanks to Utchy's interference; paving the way for the Evil King's Villain World.
- Die Laughing: Dagded meets his apparent end with deranged maniacal cackling. Subverted with his true death, where he goes out screaming.
- The Dreaded: The Shugods' reaction to his arrival is to run and hide while completely terrified. He also incites a Mass "Oh, Crap!" reaction in the population of Shugodom by invoking the imagery of the Fury of the Gods as his introduction to them.
- Early-Bird Cameo: A retroactive example - He shows up in The Stinger of the Extended cut of The Movie to kill Reniol Husty in what is essentially Hell.Dagded: That wasn’t fun.
- Eldritch Abomination: Dagded is a being who uses the entire universe as his playground, which he emphasizes to Gira in order to drive how just how insignificant Tikyū is in the greater scope of things.
- Establishing Character Moment: After clearing up a swarm in an instance, he tries to converse with Shugodom in his native tongue, then apologizes about that and asks if they can understand what he's saying in their native tongue. Later on, he manhandles Kamejim when he finds out there were Bug Naraku survivors.
- Even Evil Has Standards: As much as Racules' attempt to join the Jesters impresses him, Dagded is far from amused that he made Goma a Sacrificial Lion for his power play. Not so much because he has a moral objection to using allies and discarding when convenient, but more because Goma's death was wholly unnecessary for his own goals and it leaves him with one less minion until Racules steps up in his place.
- Evil Counterpart: To Gira. Both are the leaders of their respective factions, but while Gira eventually dropped his fake "tyrant king" persona in favor of being a more benevolent ruler, Dagded is much more of a sadist who ruins other people's lives for fun.
- Evil Is Bigger: Dagded's true form is so gigantic he considers the entire universe his bedroom and Yanma refers to him as 'universe-sized.'
- Evil Is Hammy: In a World of Ham, this incomprehensibly powerful being that is cosmic horror incarnate stands at the top as the most hammy of them all.
- Expy:
- Is essentially the alien version of Long, being a bored godlike creature with Resurrective Immortality who was responsible for corrupting both The Rival and the Disc-One Final Boss to make his immortal life more enjoyable.
- Also cast in the same mold as Genis as both treat causing the destruction of various races as a game, sending their minions to do most of the work.
- The events of the series reveal him to be one to Evolt. Both are absurdly powered extraterrestrials primarily motivated by self-amusement whose M.O. includes pitting two or more sides together, and start off far ahead of the heroes power-wise until the latter eventually start to catch up. Like Evolt, he even shares a biologically familial bond with one of the heroes by virtue of impregnating their mother.
- Takes a lot of cues from the Celestial Toymaker from Doctor Who as a being of unknown origins beyond mortal comprehension who uses his unfathomable cosmic powers to play "games" of life and death with people while treating and viewing everything in the universe as toys to do as they please with.
- Of the Anti-Spiral from Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann. They are both extraordinarily powerful cosmic beings who face the heroes in the second half of their respective series. The sheer scope of their power presents an far more terrifying challenge compared to the first set of villains.
- Red and white as prominent colors, reality warper powers, ridiculously powerful abilities, sadistic with no form of empathy, and a number of the heroes have a personal beef with him. He's basically Suel in sentai flavor, though ironically, Dagded debuted after he died.
- Fatal Flaw:
- Dagded's ego is as immense as his power to the point where one can easily get on his good side by sucking up to him and making him think he has the upper hand. The monarchs exploit this in #31, feigning madness in order to let his guard down and out him as the Big Bad, and later in #41 Racules does likewise, appealing to Dagded's ego to the point where he gains the power needed to attack and actually injure the Galactinsect boss. It's notable that even after being flat out killed once and having another Jester killed off, Dagded still can't bring himself to actually take the heroes seriously and continues to treat it as a game despite giving his minions permission to go all out.
- Connected to the first, it becomes apparent Dagded's worst sin is Sloth, and simply can't be bothered to get his hands dirty unless absolutely necessary. Even when he does get involved in a fight, he never actually goes all out, putting his all into the fight, rather using the bare minimum effort he believes will be needed. This likewise blows up in his face, as his inability to just kill the heroes ultimately gives them the chance to get their Heroic Second Wind.
- Faux Affably Evil: His introductory scene is of him trying to make repartee with the people of Shugodom, then when Gira gets his name wrong he proceeds to drop a bunch of planets onto the kingdom.
- Final Boss: The last and most powerful enemy the monarchs face in the series.
- Greater-Scope Villain: He's revealed to have manipulated the previous kings of Shugodom into pursuing the war with the Bug Naraku for his own amusement in the first half of the series. He steps himself up as the Big Bad of the second half, which is centered around his forces' clashes with the monarchs. He's also revealed to have set the new Deboth Army against Earth in #32 and in #40 is outed as Gira's creator.
- Hate Sink: Dagded's generally fun screen-time belies his cruel and dismissive nature towards other beings and the nonchalant nature of his heartless actions means that neither the King-Ohgers nor the Kyoryugers are willing to tolerate his antics.
- Hidden Depths: #38 reveals that he's a big fan of dance group The Rampage from Exile Tribe and idol Marina Iko.
- Hoist by His Own Petard:
- Racules tricks him into empowering the OhgerCalibur ZERO to Immortal Breaker status, thus making the weapon used to finally defeat him. To further drive the point home, said weapon was used by Gira, the same man he planned to use to destroy Tikyu.
- He created the Shugods, but they rebelled against him. Ultimately, they're the ones who end up defeating him, allowing the King-Ohgers to finish him off.
- Dagded ordering Kamejim to interfere in the planned evacuation smashes the planet's collective Rage Breaking Point - He prevented the evacuation...by causing everyone to declare war on him instead.
- It Amused Me: His motivation for goading planets into self-destructive wars is to gain entertainment from the sight of "lesser" beings destroying each other.
- Killed Off for Real:
- After constantly terrorizing Tikyu and the universe in general, Dagded meets his permanent end at the hands of the rangers in the finale, though they had to sacrifice the Shugods in order to do so.
- The Alternate Timeline of Vs. Kyoryuger is the result of Gira being fed extra Shugod Souls by a time-travelling Utsusemimaru, killing Dagded way before he's intended to and becoming the new Galactinsect King.
- Laughably Evil: His childish, hyperactive attitude makes him quite the standout and outlandish figure in and out of doing horrific things that threaten the lives of entire civilizations.
- Lazy Bum: Dagded is a Reality Warper to the point of viewing destroying civilizations as "cleaning his room"...which makes the fact he relies almost entirely on his Jesters to actually do his job that much more laughable, and even when he does get involved directly, he only does the bare minimum effort he believes necessary.
- Let's Get Dangerous!: Defied. Instead of going all-out against The King-Ohgers, who have have formed a mech capable of attaining his own universe-sized height, Dagded continues to prioritize de-moralizing speeches and intimidation over really fighting back; giving the King-Ohgers the chance to punch him across the boundaries of reality and properly execute him back on the ground.
- The Man Behind the Man: Dagded instigated the war between Shugodom and Bug Naraku 2,000 years ago; blackmailing said nation's kings into playing ball with his extermination campaign in exchange for their nation's survival. Gira defying this takes him by surprise and starts the second-half of the show.
- Meaningful Name: His last name is derived from the Hypsibius dujardini
species of water bear. Water bears (also known as tardigrades) are highly resilient organisms, and are famously capable of withstanding the conditions of outer space without protection. "Dagded" (ダグデド) may be a modification of "tardigrade" (ターディグレイド), but this is less certain. - Mini-Mecha: Dagded isn't a human-sized alien wearing a suit of armor - he's a pint-sized alien piloting a human-sized mech, with the cockpit being the glass dome at the top of the suit's head. Though his ability to change size means he can turn it into a Humongous Mecha at will. The King-Ohgers finally kill him by attacking him directly once he's weakened too badly to resist.
- Mysterious Past: Despite basically being responsible for the entire history of Tikyū, Dagded himself remains a complete enigma as the show doesn't reveal exactly what he is nor why he is so absurdly powerful, with his introductory episode within the series itself only giving a couple of hints on his true nature.
- Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!:
- The monarchs exploit Dagded's showboating tendencies to lure him into outing the Galactinsects on live television.
- Zigzagged with Dagded sending the King-Ohgers to Earth. While this leads to the undoing of the Galactinsects' efforts to revive the Deboth Army, this also meant that they could take over Tikyū without much opposition, even with the reinforcement they got.
- Dagded interferes with Goma's scheme in #38 to create a criminal army; forcing him to help Minongan with his idol competition instead. This ensures that Minongan is too busy goofing off to take fighting Rita seriously, making the Jesters' efforts in Gokkan a complete waste.
- His biggest one was, however, creating Gira, who he used as means of manipulating the royals of Tikyuu in their war with the Bug Naraku and also control the Shugods, but Gira managed to rebel against him and his underlings such as Racles, leading to the child who should've secured another victory for him becoming his most hated and troublesome foe.
- By empowering the OhgerCalibur ZERO, Dagded gave the monarchs a weapon that will potentially kill Glodie, preventing any more of the deceased from returning, as well as threaten Dagded himself. Yanma then proceeded to copy that same upgrade onto the other Kings' weapons, meaning the entire team now has the capability of killing immortals.
- Nigh-Invulnerable: Dagded is immortal, and thus next to nothing is actually capable of meaningfully damaging him at all. It's only when tricked into creating an Immortal Breaker weapon that he's in any actual danger. He fully loses this in the finale after the Shugods' sacrifice strips him of his immortality and omnipotence, leaving him easy pickings for the King-Ohger to finish off.
- No-Sell: Dagded is immortal and Nigh-Invulnerable, so for much of his time as Big Bad he doesn't even react to any attacks launched his ways. It's not until he's tricked into making an Immortal Breaker weapon that Yanma promptly copies onto the other Kings' weapons that he's actually able to be harmed. It's even noted prior to this, he'd never even felt pain before.
- Not-So-Well-Intentioned Extremist: He's constantly referred to his invasions as "tidying up" planets, and this was indeed the job he was supposed to do, but his true motivation is clearly sadistic amusement.
- Orcus on His Throne: Downplayed. Dagded certainly isn't opposed to arriving on Tikyu to taunt the heroes sometimes, but he generally prefers to watch the actions of his Jesters from space. His actions when he does get involves shows this is as much him wanting entertained as it is him just being extremely lazy.
- Outside-Context Problem: To the Kyoryugers. From how they tell it, Dagded just appeared out of nowhere two years ago with a never before seen Deboss commander and granted him the power to take away Earth's bravery, making them powerless to stop the Deboss army from taking over.
- Outside-Genre Foe: A High Fantasy political Conspiracy Thriller setting finds itself being attacked by a being who comes across as something straight out of the Cthulhu Mythos.
- Out of Continues: The Jesters all being killed off and Minongan sealed away renders Dagded mortal, so he won't be coming back after the King-Ohgers finally do him in.
- Person of Mass Destruction: It comes with the territory when your duty requires planetary destruction;, the Ohsama Sentai lampshading that he could invoke this any time if he's provoked too much.
- Pet the Dog: Almost literally with Minongan in #38, although Minongan being a Body Backup Drive has more to do with it than anything.
- Pint-Sized Powerhouse: Careful examination of his head shows that Dagded is actually a diminutive alien piloting a human-sized mech suit.
- Psychopathic Manchild: He has the mannerisms of a petulant, hyperactive child... who thinks nothing about committing multiple mass genocides on a whim. It's also shown that Dagded is a spoiled brat who can't stand things not going his way.
- Physical God: Is power is so vast and so overwhelming that it is unknown if he truly has any limits to what he can do.
- Rape Is a Special Kind of Evil: While done via magic, Dagded impregnated Gira's mother with him against her will on a whim.
- Reduced to Dust: In contrast to the explosion his first death caused, his final death sees his diced up true form disintegrate into golden particles before his Mini-Mecha rapidly turns to dust.
- Resurrective Immortality: If he’s ever killed, he can respawn via Minongan. However, the heroes waste no time sealing Minongan away, making him mortal..
- Shadow Archetype: To the Ohsama Sentai overall, with Dagded's status as The Caligula serving as an dark mirror to the King-Ohgers' own positions as The Wonka.
- Like Gira, Dagded is a being with various powers that allow him to rule as a king and defeat any potential opposition. However, while Gira uses his abilities to defend Tikyu and its people, Dagded uses his to play games with the lives of people and entire worlds. He essentially embodies what Gira would become if he ever let his "King of Evil" persona become genuine. The fact that Dagded created Gira in the first place solidifies this parallel.
- Like Yanma, Dagded is defined by immense pride, driven by his feats and capabilities. Yanma, in fact, becomes Drunk On Power in episode #44, allowing his portion of the King's Proof to consume his sensibilities—until he is pulled back. Dagded serves as an example of what Yanma would become if he let arrogance overtake his morality.
- Like Hymeno, Dagded is primarily characterized by selfishness, seeking to get whatever he desires at any cost. However, Hymeno’s selfishness is something she channels to secure the best for her people and her kingdom, while Dagded’s selfishness leads him to view others as toys to manipulate and break. He represents what Hymeno would be if she stopped caring about those around her and focused solely on her own desires.
- Like Rita, Dagded can be considered the ultimate authority thanks to his self-proclaimed status as "king of the universe." Similarly, Rita’s position as Chief Justice makes them the ultimate authority of Tikyu, even above the other monarchs. Dagded illustrates what Rita could become if they disregarded neutrality and abused their power to obtain anything they wanted.
- Like Kaguragi, Dagded’s hammy and over-the-top personality conceals his darker traits as a manipulator who uses others for his own ends. However, Kaguragi’s actions are always in service to his nation and his people, while Dagded’s actions are motivated by a desire for entertainment and to stave off boredom. Dagded embodies what Kaguragi would be if he cared only for his own interests, disregarding everyone else.
- Like Jeramie in Part I, Dagded is an eccentric man who often imposes his will on others, as he possesses the power to enforce his viewpoint. However, through Character Development, Jeramie came to recognize the flaws in his approach and made efforts to cooperate with others to achieve his goals—something Dagded never considers throughout the series. Dagded shows what Jeramie might have become if he had never learned from his mistakes and had stuck rigidly to his original way of thinking.
- Space Master: As the self-proclaimed king of the entire universe, his power set demonstrates mastery over it which manifests as the ability to teleport anywhere within it, freely change his size from gargantuan to minuscule and vice versa, use planets and other cosmic bodies as projectiles, or to use portals to transport people from one end of the universe to the other.
- Soul Jar: Has one in the form of Minongan. As long as he's alive, Dagded can't truly be destroyed. Turns out sealing Minongan away works just as well.
- The Sociopath: He views everyone else (Jesters and "son" included) as inferior to the greatness that is Dagded Dujardin, orchestrates wars on a galactic scale with great effectiveness, never showed kindness to anyone unless it suits his purposes, and is a horrible alien who only does what he does to indulge in his own sadism. His Laughably Evil traits give him some kind of superficial charm, but he can drop it quickly and go into a rage over reasons as petty as others getting his name wrong.
- The Thing That Would Not Leave: A villainous application of this trope, as the monarchs treat Dagded with as much contempt as a homeowner would a stubbornly resistant cockroach.
- Truly Single Parent: He created Gira and even states he is Gira's "father and mother at the same time". Downplayed in that Gira's creation involved impregnating the queen of Shugodom with his magic.
- Undignified Death: After an epic battle, he's ultimately killed not by exploding or anything particularly flashy, but the Kings all stabbing him at once when they finally have him cornered while he's whimpering and screaming in fear and panic.
- Unskilled, but Strong: While nigh-omnipotent, Dagded has no clue how to actually fight since he's used to just steamrolling everything with his reality bending powers and being nigh impossible to actually damage. Once he's tricked into giving Racules a weapon that can actually hurt him, his 'fighting style' consists of 'spam big power attacks over and over again' when forced into a real fight and having difficulty meaningfully defending himself. Racules and Dagded himself even note Dagded has never actually felt pain before. This continues in the final battle, where he mainly relies on pure power and has difficulty actually defending himself against an equal opponent.
- Villainous Breakdown: After the King's subjects, alive and dead show up to aid them, Dagded's gleeful sadism begins slipping as he becomes more and more frustated his enemies just won't die when he wants them to, as he begins sounding genuinely angry. The final episode shows him furiously engaging an enlarged Ultimate King-Ohger and crazily laughing when he thinks he's got them on the ropes. After getting his immortality and omnipotence completely punched out of him, he's reduced to pathetically whimpering, before angrily and insanely shrieking at the monarchs to not mess with him as they finish him off.
- Villainous Legacy: Minongan and Manhole Grumer attempt to revive a clone of him that was hidden in Earth in Boonboomger Vs. King-Ohger, successfully doing so and having him merge with the latter to empower him into Black Hole Grumer.
- Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?: It's noted Dagded is more than powerful enough he could've won the moment he arrived, but doesn't. This is due to a combination of his sadistic desire to draw out destroying civilizations for his own amusement, and him being too lazy to actually put full effort into anything.
- Why Won't You Die?: During the Final Battle, as more allies show up to help and his forces continue to prove incapable of killing them, Dagded becomes more and more frustrated that the heroes just won't die.Dagded: What's with you people!?
- World's Strongest Man: His very first episode marks him as the most powerful being in King-Ohger right off the bat thanks to his casual Reality Warping and otherworldly powers that go as far as letting him fling planets like projectiles. In fact, the only one who can considered stronger than him in the entirety of Super Sentai is the Creator of Worlds, a being who all signs point to being God himself.
The Five Jesters
Portrayed by: Kazuhiro Yamaji (voice), Takahiro Yoneoka (suit)

- Habitat: N'Kosopa (night)
Favorite: Ninja introduction
King: The Shuffle King of the Insect World
- Big Bad Wannabe: Downplayed. He's a Galactinsect and a notch above the heroes certainly, but his incursions are smaller in-scope compared to the other Jesters and both are de-railed; the first time by his own arrogance letting the heroes collaborate and adjust and the second through Dagded's spontaneity forcing him to capitulate to Minongan. Perhaps fittingly, he's the first Jester to meet his permanent end.
- Confusion Fu: As the Ninja of the Jesters, his abilities involve sowing chaos and confusion among his enemies.
- Demoted to Extra: Goma gets a Body Swap episode to himself, then bench-warms until #38. The scheme he wants to kick off is promptly de-railed in favor of Minongan's shenanigans. Then in the following episode, he dies.
- Evil Counterpart:
- To Yanma, someone who also primarily dresses in blue. While Yanma primarily uses ranged weaponry and specializes in using technology to solve his problems, Goma prefers to use his katanas when fighting, and specializes in using ninjutsu when dealing with his enemies.
- To Rita as both rule over Gokkan, Rita using the law to dispatch their enemies while Goma deals with his by sowing chaos among them.
- Flat Character: Goma is a non-nonsense stoic defined by his ninjutsu and nothing else.
- "Freaky Friday" Flip: His whole schtick. He can move peoples' souls into others' bodies or even morally invert them outright.
- "Freaky Friday" Sabotage: Goma's modus-operandi. Every plan he's instigated has involved the swapping of bodies or souls in some shape or form; usually to sow chaos within the ranks of the swapped or goad them into doing his bidding.
- Katanas Are Just Better: Wields two of them in combat.
- Meaningful Name: His first name is derived from the Japanese name for the citrus longhorn beetle
(胡麻斑天牛/ gomatarakamikiri), while his last name is derived from the scientific name for the banded alder borer
, Rosalia funebris. - Mirror Morality Machine: His helmet is one; being the gadget he uses to invert peoples' moralities. It's also not very sturdy and a good smash to it undoes his hold over Gokkan instantly.
- Only Sane Man: He's not one for theatrics amongst his fellow Jesters, often playing the straight man as a result.
- Out of Focus: Downplayed. Goma is the first Jester the heroes face in a real battle. He's Demoted to Extra after that point in favor of more narrative-oriented Jesters like Hillbill. While he makes sporadic background appearances, he only gets one more episode to do much of anything; the very next one ending in his destruction.
- Rasputinian Death: It takes facing off against a powered-up King Kuwagata Ohger and Papillon Ohger, then tanking a finisher from all six powered-up King-Ohgers to finally bring him down once and for all.
- Red Baron: He's known as "the Dubious".
- Sacrificial Lion: He is the first of the Galactinsects' casualties to be demonstrated the step-up of King-Ohgers' powers.
- Starter Villain: As far as the Jesters go. He's the least expressive of the group and has a relatively-simple, easy-to-counter gimmick. He's the first Post-Time Skip enemy the heroes have to truly collaborate against and establishes the pacing for a non-MOTW-oriented second act.
- Taking the Bullet: He's compelled to help out Hilbil no matter what as part of Racles's machinations, causing him to replace her at the last minute and be defeated by the King-Ohgers for good.
- The Stoic: Goma isn't very talkative compared to the other Jesters (Even fellow Stoic Grodie has his quirks); remaining straight-laced the whole time.
Portrayed by: Miyuki Sawashiro (voice), Mutsumi Igarashi (suit)

- Habitat: Shugodom (dark clouds)
Favorite: Requests
King: The Control Queen of the Insect World
- Compelling Voice: She can manipulate people by whispering in their ears what she wants them to do.
- Dark Action Girl: Is one of the primary villain generals of the second act of the show and can absolutely hold her own against the heroes.
- Evil Counterpart:
- To Hymeno, as both of them are The Smurfette of their respective factions. While Hymeno encourages people to be selfish in order to improve their lives, Hilbil is more manipulative and encourages the worst in people so they can do what she wants to do.
- To Yanma, as both of them rule over N'Kosopa but have a Pink Girl, Blue Boy dynmatic. While Yanma is a blunt, direct leader, Hilbil prefers to command through the use of her Compelling Voice.
- Karma Houdini: Of the primary roster of the Galactinsect Jesters, Hilbil's actions are so revolting she is only topped by Glodie and Dagded in terms of sadism, yet despite lacking their immortality she is able to escape the clutches of death.
- Karma Houdini Warranty: ...at least until #44.
- Laser-Guided Karma: Is ultimately taken out by Yanma, the king of the very kingdom she ruled and destroyed.
- Logical Weakness: For her powers to work Hilbil must directly whisper in someone's ears. This means that unless she gets the drop on her victim, all they have to do is either keep their distance or cover their ears, like Shiokara did with earplugs.
- "Magic A" Is "Magic A": Hilbil's Compelling Voice only works when she whispers in people's ears. While it does mean that she was able to take over N'Kosopa by broadcasting her voice into everyone's headsets and earphones, this also means that she can't compel the citizens of the other kingdoms through speaking regularly.
- Meaningful Name: Her name is derived from hiru/蛭, the Japanese word for leech.
- More than Mind Control: She can manipulate people into doing what she wants them to do, preying on their deep-seated desires and insecurities. Only two people are outright immune to this: Kaguragi's deceptive abilities will even work on himself while Gira is revealed to be immune because of his status as Dagded's progeny, thus Hilbil doesn't even bother with him.
- Pink Is Feminine: She's the sole female Jester, and her armor is predominantly pink.
- Red Baron: She's known as "the Enticing".
Portrayed by: Tomokazu Seki (voice); Takuma Komori [TV series], Shotaro Kawashima [Boonboomger VS KingOhger] (suit)

- Habitat: Gokkan (midnight sun)
Favorites: Cute Hilbil
King: The Time King of the Insect World
- Alliterative Name: Minongan Mouz.
- Big Bad Duumvirate: With Manhole Grumer in the Boonboomger / Kingohger crossover.
- Body Backup Drive: He turns out to be one for Dagded, allowing the latter to come back as the King-Ohgers defeat the former. He somehow survives the ordeal, but at the cost of his memories.
- Brief Accent Imitation: Each of Minongan's outings as an antagonist see him speaking (and acting) radically different every time. He starts off with a Simpleton Voice, adopts an American-sounding dialect for his time as an idol manager, uses an evil Mouth of Sauron voice in #43 and ends his run as a general by going full-circle back to his dumb-sounding voice.
- The Brute: Thus far, he's only served as muscle for the other Galactinsects and doing their work instead of masterminding his own plans. Subverted from #38 onward, in which he becomes more actively involved in the battle for Tikyu.
- Carry a Big Stick: Said Big Sticks being his own fists. He can even increase their size to deal extra damage.
- Deus ex Machina: Is one in Kingohger Vs. Kyoryuger, being a method for Gira and Daigo to travel to the Alternate Timeline to save the other kings.
-
Easily Forgiven: Dagded is much more forgiving of Minongan's failure to maintain the idol concert in #38 than he'd been of the other Jesters' failures up to that point. His tantrum at the start of the following episode shows that has limits, though. As Minongan is Dagded's Body Backup Drive, it makes sense he'd be a bit more careful with him. - Establishing Character Moment: After incapacitating Kuroda and the other kuroko, Minongan attempts to introduce himself, only to immediately screw up on his own epithet, establishing him as the Jesters' Dumb Muscle.
- Evil Counterpart:
- To Kaguragi. Both of them serve as The Big Guy for their respective factions, but while Kaguragi hides his true intelligence while manipulating people, Minongan is far less intelligent... at least on the surface.
- To Rita. Both of them are lepidopteran-based warriors who hide their true selves from the world. In Rita's case, it's more figurative, hiding their true personality. But it's more literal in Minongan's case, holding an inactive clone of Dagded within his armor.
- Expy: Serves as the Sanyo to Dagded’s Long, being an immortal creature who seems purely comedic at first, but is actually a Body Backup Drive for their master.
- Flip Personality: Does this twice when first facing the Ohsama Sentai on solo missions, acting different from the Dumb Muscle he usually is. Turns out to be O.O.C. Is Serious Business as he is influenced by the inactive clone of Dagded within his armor.
- Hidden Depths: Played With. Befitting his title, Minongan is more that what he appears. In #38, he outright admits to Rita that there's more to him than meets the eye. While their conversation is framed like a reference to personality - he was actually being literal. He's Dagded's Body Backup Drive.
- Human Popsicle: His ultimate fate is being sealed in a prison of ice by Rita with Kaguragi's help. Not only does this take him out of the fight, but it also prevents him from spawning Dagded after his defeat.
- Meaningful Name:
- His first name is derived from ミノガ科/ minogaka, the Japanese name for the Psychidae
family of moths. - His epithet of "The Hidden" isn't just for show, as it turns out he's hiding something within himself that is hinted at in #38.
- His first name is derived from ミノガ科/ minogaka, the Japanese name for the Psychidae
- Moth Menace: He's themed on a moth, and is one of the enemy generals.
- New Powers as the Plot Demands: In Vs. Kyoryuger, Minongan is shown to be a gateway to the Evil King's timeline, which Daigo jumps through to save the others during the climax.
- Power Stereotype Flip: Downplayed. Minongan is introduced as the Jesters' Dumb Muscle. And he is very much that. However, he's also both a Time Master capable of affecting people's age and a subtle Sizeshifter; the first of which isn't usually associated with brutes like Minongan.
- Professional Voice Dissonance: During his time as manager of Gokkan's idols, Minongan ditches his Simpleton Voice for an awkward-sounding American accent.
- Red Baron: He's known as "the Hidden", though he can't quite remember why. Turns out he's Dagded's Body Backup Drive.
- Sealed Evil in a Can: As of #45. Rita and Kaguragi use their King's Proofs in-tandem to seal Minongan away in a prison of ice instead of destroying his body; preventing Dagded from ever using him to come back. In Vs. Kyoryuger, this can is forced open so Daigo can use Minongan to travel to the Alternate Timeline and save Prince and the others. Manhole Grumer unseals him once again so he returns in ''Boonboomger Vs. King-Ohger, where the Boonboomgers and King-Ohgers finally kill him off for real.
- Sizeshifter: He can increase the size of his hands for stronger punches. #45 reveals that he can also make himself small to avoid enemy attacks.
- Smarter Than You Look: Normally acting as the Dumb Muscle for the Galactinsects, Minongan turns out to be surprisingly effective at hosting an idol competition, among other things.
- Time Master: He's able to make people age rapidly or become much younger, either physically or mentally. This foreshadows his status as Dagded's Body Backup Drive, given their similar power sets.
See his folder under the Underground Empire Bug Naraku section for more details.
Portrayed by: Kousei Amanonote (live), Hiroyuki Muraoka (suit)


- I love the dead so much, but they just seem to hate me instead. Sad, isn't it?
Habitat: Shugodom (night)
Favorite: Corpses
King: The Undead King of the Insect World
The true culprit behind the Fury of the Gods, having been sealed away by Gokkan's former king Karras. He has the power of necromancy, capable of reviving creatures as mindless puppets.
- Ambiguously Human: Before episode #37 revealed his true form, Grodie appeared mostly in human form with his Necromancer powers and allegiance to the Galactinsects put his status as a human into question. Episode #46 then reveals he was never alive to begin with, the following episode revealing he was originally a member of the Bug Naraku race.
- Arch-Enemy:
- To Hymeno, being the one who killed her parents.
- Also to Kaguragi, as he was the one who poisoned Toufu's food supply during the Fury of the Gods, which led Iroki to make herself out to be a tyrant in order to protect her people, forcing Kaguragi to rebel against her.
- Be Careful What You Wish For: After spending the entire series wanting to die, he gets his wish when the kings finally kill him. Unfortunately for Grodie, his numerous victims intend to make his afterlife miserable.
- Blessed with Suck: Grodie views his powers as this. He prefers the dead but is in some way immortal, thus he cannot die to join them.
- But for Me, It Was Tuesday: He doesn't recall assassinating Hymeno's parents during the Fury of the Gods, due to his massive kill count along with his severe apathy.
- Casting Gag: This is not the first time Kousei Amano has ever portrayed a Tokusatsu villain associated with alien-like monsters, much less in a series of insect-themed heroes where kings are an important motif. Amano's wife also happens to be Akiko Hinagata, the actress playing Iroki, adding irony to Grodie and Iroki's antagonistic relationship in the series (especially since Amano has an infamous reputation for constantly gushing about his wife in real life).
- Cold Ham: Downplayed. While he's prone to letting out a malicious smirk or laugh, Grodie is neither playful nor funny in contrast to his fellow Jesters, with his voice barely rising above a loud whisper.
- Dark Is Evil: His choice of attire in human form is that of a black hooded robe and and wide brimmed hat, invoking the imagery of The Grim Reaper, with his monster form featuring pitch-black armor. Compared to the rest of the Jesters, he's arguably the worst of the bunch.
- Dead All Along: He is revived to be a corpse continously revived by his own power. Ends up Zig-Zagged when he is given true life.
- Death Seeker: He hates the fact he's immortal, as he prefers the dead and wants to die. Played for Laughs in scenes where he's not the focus; his fascination with Dagded's temporary death used for Black Comedy one-liners. Then he learns he is already dead with his own power reanimating him, made worst when he receives true life.
- Dragged Off to Hell: After the kings finally kill him, Grodie doesn't find peace, but rather an afterlife where he will be tormented by his victims for eternity.
- Evil Counterpart:
- To Jeramie as their respective teams' Sixth Ranger who lived for ages. While Jeramie is prone to theatrics when interacting with others and only made immortal by his father's King's Proof, Grodie is more of a Soft-Spoken Sadist who is a corpse continuously animated by his power. In addition, while Jeramie was initially believed to be behind the Fury of the Gods, Grodie was the true perpetrator.
- To Kaguragi as both are hammy rulers of Toufu responsible for Iroki's death, Kaguragi being a Large Ham who removed Iroki from power for the sake of their country with pride in its produce while Grodie is a Cold Ham who forced Iroki to become a tyrant by poisoning Toufu's food supply and later restored her regime to grind the kingdom to the ground.
- To Gira as both are artificial weapons created by Dagded to sow chaos and further aid his plans. The difference is how they turned out: Gira was narrowly prevented from becoming a Tyke-Bomb by his brother and thus grew up relatively normal; becoming a good person that cares about the sanctity of life and holds a disdain for immortality. Grodie meanwhile has been steeped in death since his creation and has destroyed numerous worlds as a Jester. He's cold, uncaring and desperately wants to die - holding no sanctity for life whatsoever, not even his own. Grodie is essentially what Gira could've become if Corsus' plan to feed him the other Shugods' Souls was successful.
- Foil:
- To Hymeno, naturally. While Grodie is an immortal alien obsessed with dying and causes the death of those around him as a result of viewing life as "too noisy", Hymeno is an human being who is dedicated to making sure everyone around her lives for as long as they can due to seeing the beauty of living and focuses on "selfishly" enjoying what's most important to her. Every appearance Grodie has in the show has him seen wearing a long black coat and hat, bringing to mind the reaper, while Hymeno is a doctor who can be seen wearing different bright yellow dresses in various episodes throughout the series.
- To Gira, as both are world-ending, Shugod Soul-powered superweapons created by Dagded. Gira is a gentle man with a somewhat-normal upbringing that grew up in an orphanage. He's spent much of his time around kind, innocent people and grew up much the same; developing a fondness for life. He abhors tyranny, is people-savvy and his cosmic origins fill him with nothing but dread. Grodie by contrast has been steeped in death since conception. He's part of an omnicidal horde led by a Bad Boss and has been enabled to such an unhealthy degree that he's lost both his past and the ability to feel almost anything. Grodie is gloomy, apathetic, occasionally sadistic and has zero value for life, including his own. His own cosmic origins are irrelevant to him and he uses his regained memories as justification to indulge in murder once more instead of change.
- For the Evulz: He caused the Fury of the Gods simply because he found everyone on Tikyū to be much too lively for his taste.
- Four Eyes, Zero Soul: He's a bespectacled man who is arguably the cruelest and most sadistic of the Galactinsect Jesters.
- Hate Sink: He proves to be the most despicable and most violent of Galactinsect generals, even taunting the deaths of Hymeno's parents.
- Here We Go Again!: When Kamejim and Minongan release him from Karras' prison, Grodie reacts to Kamejim relaying Dugded's orders like he's heard it a thousand times; assuming they're going for the usual Let's You and Him Fight operation. It's only when he's told that Dugded wants nothing alive this time that he responds in any way.
- Hoist by His Own Petard: He seemingly gets killed anticlimactically as a result of one of his zombies randomly deciding to shoot him, but he turns to be impossible to kill so this doesn't bother him.
- I Cannot Self-Terminate: Revealed to be an reanimated corpse, it is clear that Death Seeker Grodie cannot cancel his own power.
- Inconsistent Spelling: His name has been rendered as "Grodie" or "Glodi".
- Ironic Hell: Grodie spent all his time wanting to die and be at peace. However, after he's finally killed, he finds the shades of his countless victims waiting for him, ensuring his afterlife will be anything but peaceful.
- Knight of Cerebus: The Galactinsects are established as Lovecraft Lite, yet each of them are at least playful in some capacity. Very little about Grodie is played for comedy. He quickly establishes himself as a dark, gloomy force of death and decay with clear involvement in two of the King-Ohgers' personal tragedies; his lackadaisical disregard for everything around him making him scary rather than weird. That is, when he's the focus. When he's simply lounging with the other Jesters as a background character, said death-fetish references are used for morbid comedy instead of horror.
- Laser-Guided Karma: He thought he could achieve peace by dying. When the King-Ohgers finally kill him, Grodie is sent to the afterlife... where he's tormented for all eternity by the vengeful spirits of his many, many victims, which ensures that his afterlife won't be peaceful or tranquil at all.
- Make My Monster Grow: The closest thing to the trope the Galactinsects have. Most of the corpses Grodie's reanimated have been fought at giant-size with King-Ohger. However, the other Jesters can enlarge themselves too.
- Meaningful Name: His last name is derived from Leucochloridium
, a genus of parasitic trematode worms. - Monstrosity Equals Weakness: Played for Horror. After Hymeno and Jeramie give him life by using the latter's chest-crystal to un-do his immortality, Grodie gets a massive power-boost and starts another Fury Of the Gods. He was weaker when he was undead.
- Necessary Drawback: While he can revive any creature back from the dead, he's unable to control their actions. It suits him just fine anyway, as letting the undead wreak havoc and create chaos is in line with his M.O and motive. Since he can't die and that he wants to die, getting attacked by his own zombies doesn't affect him and if one manages to? Win for him.
- Necromancer: He's capable of reviving creatures of any sort into nearly mindless zombies simply by commanding them to "wake up", though he has no real control over the. He's also been using this power on himself the whole time, albeit unaware of that.
- Nigh-Invulnerability: #37 reveals he is the Blob Monster kind, being able to melt himself into a liquid state before reforming himself into his monster form. This nature is the reason he can't die, as much as he wants to.
- Not in This for Your Revolution: Downplayed. Grodie is a sadist like the other Jesters, but he's more interested in the extermination aspect of what they do than the fun. When the King-Ohgers manage to temporarily kill Dagded, he outright proclaims his jealousy at an immortal like them being able to die and has to be actively stopped from seeking them out.
- Our Zombies Are Different: The zombies Grodie reanimates act on base instinct, usually attacking anything before them.
- Out of Continues: Hymeno and Jeramie resurrect him, which renders him mortal and allows them to kill him once and for all.
- Poisonous Person: Specializes in poison attacks and is oft-associated with pestilence and death.
- Power Limiter: Unbeknownst to Grodie, his Necromancer powers were not only keeping him immortal the whole time, but were keeping him in-check. Being brought back to full life removes this factor, making him considerably stronger than he already was.
- Red Baron: He's known as "the Tranquil".
- Revision: Was outed as the culprit behind the Fury Of The Gods. More specifically, Grodie carried it out. Dagded came up with it in retaliation for Corsus' rebellion.
- Robe and Wizard Hat: He wears a black hooded robe and wide-brimmed hat, as befitting a necromancer.
- Sealed Evil in a Can: He was sealed away by Karras using her Ice Seal technique but Kamejim and Minongan free him, killing Karras in the process.
- Sinister Scythe: Wields a large one in combat, adding to his Grim Reaper imagery. It can also be flipped around and used as a rifle.
- Skewed Priorities: Played for Laughs in #44. The other Jesters are sucking up to Dagded after his revival, whereas Grodie is so fascinated that Dagded was able to die that he has to be stopped from seeking his would-be killers out.
- The Stoic: Downplayed. Much like fellow Jester Goma, Grodie is often a taciturn man of few words. Unlike Goma however, he has more focus and the occasional bit of Black Comedy; vaguely tip-toeing into Cold Ham.
- Took a Level in Badass: He was already a dangerous opponent as an undead. But receiving true life greatly increased his power to nightmarish proportions.
- Tyke-Bomb: Like Gira, Grodie was an artificial world-wiping superweapon created by Dagded. Unlike Gira, he embraces it once he learns this.
- Villainous Breakdown: Upon learning his power keeps him from dying (and the monarchs giving him actual life), he decides to evoke another Fury of Gods in response.
- Walking Spoiler: It's difficult to say anything about him without mentioning his involvement in the Fury of the Gods.
- Who Wants to Live Forever?: He's functionally immortal but loves the idea of dying, being genuinely disappointed that nothing has managed to put him down while being jealous that someone like Dagded can be killed. Then he learns his own power is keeping him alive indefinitely and it drives him down the deep end after the monarchs give him true life.
Allies
See Rcules' section under here for more details.
The Kyoryugers and their associates
For tropes associated with the Kyoryugers and the individual members, see here.Daigoro "Prince" Kiryu/King Kyoryu Red
Portrayed by: Rintaro Kawana (live), Yuya Nawata (suit)
- I'm the man who's gonna be king of this planet!
A mysterious warrior hailing from the future known as the "Greatest Brave", Prince is well-meaning in his intentions, but is oftentimes reckless in how he does things.
Tropes applying to him in general

- Borrowed Catchphrase: Utters both of Daigo's catchphrases after transforming.
- The Cameo: He makes a brief appearance in #40 to help out Gira against re-animated Bug Naraku. He chooses the worst-conceivable time to leave, opening Gira up to Dagded's hijacking.
- Canon Foreigner: Despite being part of the Kyoryuger team, Prince only debuted in King-Ohger, well after his team's home series ended. Justified as he's from the future.
- Captain Ersatz: He almost resembles a younger Tyler Navarro, Daigo's Power Rangers counterpart.
- Casting Gag: Rintaro Kawana previously portrayed a child in Ryusoulger, which in addition to having the same ranger colors and dinosaur theme as Kyoryuger shares a medieval motif with King-Ohger.
- Dumb Muscle: It's subtly hinted that he's not too bright. In his introduction he recklessly takes down a giant Zorima and took a while to realize he broke his Gaburicalibur in the process, and subsequently his attempt to macgyver repairs to it involves just taping whole pieces of wood to the blade.
- Establishing Character Moment: He first appears taking down a giant Zorima in one shot untransformed, which Souji later berates him for breaking his weapon during the process.
- Fish out of Temporal Water: Souji reveals that Prince came from the future by unknown means, though he's taken well to current-day Earth.
- Heroic Build: King-Ohger in Space reveals him to have a rather ripped physique.
- Kid from the Future: It's revealed he's Daigo and Amy's future son.
- Kid Hero: In contrast to the King-Ohgers as well as the present-day Kyoryugers who are all adults, Prince is a teenage hero who's both callow and brimming with potential.
- Meaningful Name: His nickname Prince hints as to him being the son of King, that is, Daigo Kiryu.
- Retcon: At the center of two:
- He arrives on Tikyu in Plezuon, the mecha Daigo and Utchy left Earth with.
- He doesn't deal with the Time Dilation the monarchs did. It only takes him a few days to arrive on Tikyu compared to the other heroes' half-year. Though this is explained in the movie that he actually came from another time.
- Shared Family Quirks: Takes after his father Daigo as an Idiot Hero.
- Unskilled, but Strong: He's strong enough to beat a giant Zorima in one shot untransformed, but Souji calls him out for breaking his weapon in the process. Souji also discusses this with the Ohsama Sentai, pointing out how Prince has a lot of as of yet unrealized potential.
- Wrecked Weapon: Prince breaks his Gaburicalibur in half while taking down a giant Zorima. Fortunately for him, Yanma has enough tech knowledge to fix the blade and make it good as new.
Tropes exclusive to him as King Kyoryu Red
King GaburiCalibur voiced by: Shigeru Chiba, Kishow Taniyama

King Kyoryu Red!
- Ace Custom: While the equipment is still Kyoryuger-based, they're modified by the Ohsama Sentai with Yanma turning Prince's broken Gaburicalibur into the King Gaburicalibur and the related Zyudenchi being powered by God Kuwagata instead of a Zyudenryu.
- Finishing Move:
- King Vamola Mucho: King Kyoryu Red charges the King Gaburicalibur with energy and delivers a powerful slash.
- Palette Swap: King Kyoryu Red's Transformation Trinket is a red version of the Gaburicalibur. Ironically, very few color changes are done on the suit itself; the costume is the undersuit, helmet, gloves, and boots of Kyoryu Red Carnival, while the torso armor and shoulder cape are reused copies from Kuwagata Ohger's, but with the Shugodom royal crest replaced with Gabutyra's Zyudenchi graphic.
- Reforged Blade: The King Gaburicalibur is Prince's Gaburicalibur fixed up by Yanma, and with the help of God Kuwagata allows him to transform.
Portrayed by: Syuusuke Saito (live), Yasuhiro Takeuchi (suit)
- Reestablishing Character Moment: His first scene in #32 is telling off Hymeno, Rita and Jeramie for trespassing on an archaeological site, then promptly flirting with Hymeno right after he notices her.
Portrayed by: Yamato Kinjo (live); Masashi Takada [episode 32], Takahiro Yoneoka [episode 33] (suit)
- Interspecies Romance: Even after 10 years, his relationship with Candelilla still holds strong; in fact, they plan to get married soon.
- Reestablishing Character Moment: His first scene in #32 is holding off Debo Senking to allow Kaguragi and Gentle to escape all while cracking one of his punny jokes.
Portrayed by: Akihisa Shiono (live); Masato Tsutamune [TV series], Kōsuke Asai [King-Ohger VS Kyoryuger] (suit)
The scion of the Rippukan family of swordsmen, and Prince's teacher.
- The Mentor: To Prince, being the one that taught him to fight.
- Reestablishing Character Moment: His first scene in #32 is helping Gira and Yanma fight against a group of Zorimas armed with but a wooden sword.
Portrayed by: Ayuri Konno (live), Mizuho Nogawa (suit)
- Badass in Distress: #33 has her being overwhelmed and captured by Zorimas until Gira and Prince rescue her.
Portrayed by: Ryo Ryusei (live), Yoshifumi Oshikawa (suit)
The leader of the Kyoryugers.
- The Faceless: He is never seen out-of-suit in the main series, due to Ryo Ryusei unable to return in person at the time. He does return for the movie where Daigo is a main character.
- Fake Shemp: He is only portrayed by his suit actor in the main series, due to his live actor being unable to return, though Ryusei was able to provide voiceover work.
Portrayed by: Atsushi Maruyama (live), Masato Tsutamune (suit)
- The Faceless: Like with Daigo, Maruyama was unavailable at the time, and thus Utchy is never seen untransformed. Subverted in the movie where his actor returns as a main character.
- Fake Shemp: He is portrayed by his suit actor, with his live actor providing his voice.
- Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!: During one of his accidental time shenanigans he feeds Gira a tub full of Rainbow Juririra, thinking he was just a hungry child craving for a snack. This turns him massively powerful to the point that he easily defeats Dagded but makes him a true Tyrant king. He's so powerful that the only way to stop him is to go back in time and stop it from ever happening.
Portrayed by: Kentaro Shimazu
Amy's butler.
- Call to Agriculture: He works at a vineyard cultivating grapes when Kaguragi encounters him.
- Empty Shell: He ends up being the victim of Debo Senking's Brave-stealing beam, turning him into an apathetic shell of a man.
Portrayed by: Haruka Tomatsu (voice), Yuichi Hachisuka (suit)
- Interspecies Romance: Her relationship with Nobuharu still holds strong after ten years, the two of them planning to get married in the future.
Portrayed by: Ai Orikasa (voice), Naoko Kamio (suit)
- Cuteness Proximity: Rita does a noticeable doubletake the first time they see Luckyuro.
Sentient dinosaurs who were transformed into mecha through the power of Brave, they serve as both the source of the Kyoryugers powers and their lifelong partners.
- Ascended Extra: Originally looked to just be a small part of the crossover with the Kyoryugers, Gabutyra snuck aboard the Caucasus castle in his Minityra form and hitched a ride to the King-Ohger homeworld. He promptly steps up to fill in for an injured God Kuwagata and forms King Kyoryuzin, complete with a unique transformation sequence with a different CGI model than the one used during the crossover (using the CAD model for the then recently released DX Full Action figure).
- Badass in Distress: Any one of them should be able to take on Deboth's forces, with Gabutyra repeatedly shown to be capable of downing multiple Zorima (and that's not factoring in their combinations). But when Deboth and Dagded sucked the Brave energy from the world, the 3 main Zyudenryu were captured and held prisoner behind a forcefield.
- Commonality Connection: They are giant sentient semi-divine mecha beasts that pair with another being, granting them the ability to summon the Zyudenryu and transform into a sentai warrior. The Kingohgers are quick to recognize the similarity between them and the Shugods. Exploited later on by Gira, who's able to restore Prince's ability to transform thanks to God Kuwagata; proving the connection more than gimmick-deep.
- What Happened to the Mouse?: The main 3 Zyudenryu were captured by Deboth while Plezuon took Daigo and Utchy into space. What happened to the other Zyudenryu is a mystery although since Souji says they can't summon them because of losing their Brave, it's unlikely they've been destroyed.
Portrayed by: Hisao Egawa (voice), Hajime Kanzaki (suit)

The new leader of the Deboth Army, a reincarnation of Transcendenterfly God Deboth.
- The Bad Guy Wins: Though the Galactinsects' help, he conquered Earth and placed the Kyoryugers on the ropes. Then the King-Ohgers arrive and help the other Sentai un-do this.
- BFS: Wields a massive greatsword in battle.
- Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: To the previous Deboth that the Kyoryugers battled, having a rhinoceros beetle-themed body instead of his predecessor's butterfly motif.
- Reincarnation: To the original Deboth the Kyoyugers battled, his final words having him vow to return in another form.
- Too Spicy for Yog-Sothoth: His body has trouble harnessing Brave energy.
Portrayed by: Shunsuke Takeuchi (voice), Takahiro Yoneoka (suit)

A Debo Monster who serves as Deboth's enforcer.
- Devil's Pitchfork: Wields a trident dubbed the Freezing Staff in battle.
- Does This Remind You of Anything?: Being a hodgepodge of the original Deboth Army's leading members, each representing an emotion, his habit of changing his mannerisms is akin to Bipolar disorder.
- The Dragon: He serves as one to Kabuto War God Deboth.
- Emotion Eater: His M.O. is to sap away a person's Brave, the source of their bravery and spirit, turning them into Empty Shells in the process. He collects it for his master's needs.
- Fusion Dance: Appears to be a combination of Chaos (face), Dogold (chest), Aigaron (right arm), Candelilla (left arm), Endolf (right leg), Luckyuro (left leg), and D (back).
- Mood-Swinger: He channels all of the Deboth generals whenever he speaks, switching between their personalities at the drop of a hat.
Movie and Spinoff-exclusive Characters
Characters from The Secret of King Racules
Portrayed by: Ami Tomite

- Ambiguously Human: Seems able to transform into a Bug Naraku soldier. She's revealed to be a human turned into a puppet by Shidejim.
- Back from the Dead: She's among those Devonica brings back to life in #49, though she never makes a full appearance, nor does she speak.
- Bunny-Ears Lawyer: She's a sweets-obsessed woman who nevertheless is a talented enough researcher for Racules to give her a stay of execution until she finishes her job. And she happens to have some connection with the Bug Naraku.
- Chekhov's Gun:
- The round candy she ate back in Secrets #1 after wiping Racules' tear contained her research data. The candy is exhumed from her corpse in the finale.
- Vedalia herself becomes a big one thanks to her lollipop-habit inspiring Kofuki post-mortem to think of using a Shugod Soul as a container for King-Ohger's "eternal life" in the finale.
- Cynicism Catalyst: Downplayed. Racules already demonstrates a willingness to execute Vedalia after she completes her work, but his offense to Shidejim using her as leverage to save himself as well as the pained expression he makes as he knowingly downplays her sacrifice are implied to be Racules' final nudges into his "people are tools" mindset; which itself is part of The Con to trick Dagded into thinking he was trustworthy.
- Establishing Character Moment: She's first seen eating candy with her desk absolutely full of the stuff, and promptly ignores Racules entering her lab until Kofuki calls her out on it.
- Failure Is the Only Option: Shidejim possesses her body and uses her for The Infiltration, getting her cut down against OhKuwagataOhger. Not that it matters, since Racules would've executed her regardless.
- Impersonation-Exclusive Character: The Vedalia we've seen this whole time was Shidejim puppeteering her corpse.
- Meaningful Name: Her name is derived from the vedalia beetle
. - Morality Pet: Deconstructed. Vedalia is one of the few characters to invoke any emotion from Racules that isn't immediate disdain; the tyrant even showing offense at Shidejim's attempts to invoke her name for mercy in Secrets #3 and displaying pride at the girl's resourcefulness when he realizes how she protected her research data. These positive affirmations all occur post-mortem and Racules ultimately convinces himself that dying to protect the country is what she would've wanted anyway; downplaying both her sacrifice and its effect on him.
- The Promise: Before she dies, she asks Racules to do the bare minimum and give her a burial. This comes up again after Shidejim takes her over her body and uses it to fight OhKuwagataOhger. It's left ambiguous whether Racules followed through, though a jar of flowers ends up on her vacant work-desk.
- Red Herring: The first episode of the spin-off heavily hints at her being a Half-Human Hybrid. She was a human whose body was being possessed by the actual enemy.
- Small Role, Big Impact: This minor side-researcher not only allows Racules to finalize King-Ohger ZERO, but her habitual lollipop-eating later also serves as the inspiration Kofuki needs to propose the replacement Shugod Soul concept for God King-Ohger in the main show's finale.
- Sweet Tooth: Is constantly eating candy throughout her first scene. That candy was important: One of those sweets was actually a jewel containing her completed research data.
- What's Up, King Dude?: Vedalia's first interaction with Racules is to greet him casually. Douga tries to invoke decorum, but a non-apology is all he gets. Racules meanwhile is too focused on her research to care.
Portrayed by: Tsubasa Yonaga (voice), Masato Tsutamune (suit)
A Kaijim infused with the BNA of a carrion beetle.
- Back from the Dead: Is one of the many zombies in Dagded's army during #49.
- Big Bad: He's the primary antagonist of The Secret Of King Racules.
- The Bus Came Back: His corpse can be seen in Dagded's undead army during the penultimate episode.
- Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: According to #2, Shidejim's normally a shambling mess with spotty memory and zero motivation. He's much stronger when he's allowed to puppet a body.
- Curb-Stomp Battle: He's no match for OhKuwagataOhger, who strikes him down with a quick Finishing Move. The attack actually knocked him out of Vedalia's corpse, allowing him to flee.
- The Infiltration: Shidejim possesses the doomed researcher Vedalia and poses as her, intent on stealing the OhgerCalibur ZERO. They wipe away one of the Manly Tears shed by Racules upon seeing his Evil Knockoff King-Ohger completed, allowing the monster to bypass the blade's DNA Lock and briefly hold it. Racules and Douga intercept and stop him.
- Meaningful Name: His name is derived from the Japanese name for the carrion beetle, shidemushi (埋葬虫).
- People Puppets: Shidejim can take over someone's body and use it for his own. The process also grants him intelligence and strength beyond his fumbling self.
- Villain: Exit, Stage Left: He flees Vedalia's body and escapes the castle after his battle with Racules. He runs too far away and ends up in Toufu.
- Walking Spoiler: Talking about Shidejim means revealing Vedalia was his body-puppet and that he survived the first episode.
Characters from Together with Moffun
Voiced by: Nobuaki Kanemitsu
A cryptid hunter whom Moffun befriends.
Characters from Ohsama Sentai King-Ohger: Adventure Heaven
Portrayed by: Shidō Nakamura (live); Yasuhiko Imai [Adventure Heaven], Tetsuya Aoki (episode 49) (suit)

The king of Hākabāka and lord of the Dead. In life, he was the Founder King of Shugodom and one of King-Ohger's six chosen warriors.
- The Ace: He was mentioned by Jeramie in #21 to be the original founding king of Tikyū who earned his spot by means of beating the other chosen warriors in their own talents, before deciding to divide the planet into the five kingdoms for each warrior to have an equal rule over it.
- Anti-Villain: He isn't actually evil, but is just convinced that he's the only one strong enough to protect Tikyū from the threats that seek to destroy the people who inhabit it and is willing to go through with extreme lengths to do so.
- Badass Boast: He gives a couple standout examples.
- The first one comes as his introduction to the Ohsama Sentai while decimating the attacking undead Sanagims:Reiniol: He who has torn down the great wall that towers over us. He who has never fallen, none equal to him. Heralded as the sword of creation, the eternal savior. For He is I, the Founder King of Shugodom, Reiniol Husty.
- The second one comes right before his big Transformation Sequence:Reiniol: I am a hero of countless wars, know my power. The cycle of killing, the life of war. Standing over a mountain of corpses, let skeletons guard even my soul. The Founder King, Reiniol, stands before you.
- He pulls off a third in the series proper when called to the land of the living.Reiniol: The walls that once soared heavenward have fallen, so comes the undefeated, peerless warrior. The champion of yore, becomes the blade of the present. For I am... the first king of Shugodom, Reiniol Husty.
- The first one comes as his introduction to the Ohsama Sentai while decimating the attacking undead Sanagims:
- Big Bad: Of The Movie.
- Big Damn Heroes: In the Final Battle, he returns to the land of the living to destroy most of Dagded's army and give the Kings the hint to make the final King's Proof needed to destroy Dagded.
- Casting Gag: Shidō Nakamura's most well-known role is the Shinigami Ryuk from Death Note; here, he portrays the top God of Death, as opposed to a lesser deity like Ryuk.
- Cold Ham: As expected from the first king of Shugodom, his very presence and way of speaking is larger than life despite his cold demeanor.
- Dark Is Not Evil: When he shows up in the Final Battle, it's in his monstrous looking One-Winged Angel form, but he's decidedly on the heroes' side this time around and performing a Big Damn Heroes moment.
- Deader than Dead: The extended cut has Dagded kill him. In the Land of the Dead, no less. #49 shows it didn't quite stick, however, as Devonica is able to bring him back for the final battle.
- Establishing Character Moment: Reiniol is introduced by giving a Badass Boast as he defeats a group of undead Sanagims that attacked Gira, Yanma, and Rita.
- Foreshadowing: Reiniol sought to resurrect himself to prevent an upcoming crisis, the movie taking place before the events of #24 which depicts Dethnaarok plotting to destroy all of Tikyu as well as the arrival of Dagded and the Galactinsects in #27.
- God of the Dead: He is the ruler of Tikyū's version of The Underworld, which gives him sovereignty over the Dead themselves.
- Graceful Loser: He lets the King-Ohgers return to the land of the living after they defeat him in combat, but not before he reveals that Racles is still alive.
- The High King: As ruler of all of Hākabāka, he has seniority over the other monarchs like Iroki.
- It's All About Me: As the first hero of Tikyū and its founding king, he sincerely believes that he, and he alone, has what it takes to save the planet.
- Knightly Sword and Shield: He wields his own version of the OhgerCalibur ZERO alongside a buckler in his One-Winged Angel form.
- Meaningful Name: His first and last names are derived from the Japanese pronunciation of Rhyniognatha hirsti
(ライニオグナサ・ハースティ/ rainiogunasa hasuti). - Not Quite Dead: Turns out, Dagded's attempt to destroy him Deader than Dead didn't work, and he shows up in the Final Battle.
- An Offer You Can't Refuse: Revealed in #27 to have been manipulated by Dagded into declaring war with the Bug Naraku or face his people suffering a mass slaughter by the Galactinsects.
- One-Winged Angel: Absorbs the souls of everyone in Hākabāka, human and Bug Naraku alike, to transform into a monstrous version of Kuwagata Ohger. He apparently can become this form at will after this, even without the souls, as he assumes it to aid in the Final Battle.
- Superior Successor: Inverted. Unlike Gira, who flopped when it came to the other monarchs' specialties, Reinol exceeded them with the monarchs of his own generation. That being said, the reverse case is true for their rule; Reinol's methodology falls far too close to that of his other successor, Racles, and he believes that only he alone can protect the planet he called home. Gira, by contrast, is far more willing to rely on the support of the other monarchs and is open about teamwork and cooperation.
- Virtue Is Weakness: His main conflict with Gira, believing that kindness cannot save anyone in a world like theirs.
- Well-Intentioned Extremist: He wants to use Devonica's body as a vessel and return to the world of the living because he believes that he is the only one who can defeat the upcoming crisis.
- The Worf Effect: Gets taken out by a bored Dagded in the post-credit scene before his proper debut in the show itself.
Iroki/Hachi Ohger (I)
Portrayed by: Akiko Hinagata (live), Kazuma Sakai (suit)

The previous queen regnant of Toufu. Initially a benevolent ruler who deeply cared about her people, the Fury of the Gods turned her into a hoarding despot, leading Kaguragi to overthrow her. She currently rules over Toufu's territory in Hākabāka.
- Big Damn Heroes: Returns along with Karras in the penultimate episode as an ambassador of Hakabaka to help against Dagded's zombie horde; borrowing Kaguragi's Calibur to do so.
- Catchphrase Insult: She appears to be rather partial to "laggard".note
- Dark Is Not Evil: Her Evil Costume Switch from red robes and bright makeup to wearing dark clothing and makeup is supposed to show her fall into tyranny during the Fury of the Gods, where she hoarded all of the food supply to herself, leaving her citizens to starve. However, it turns out that Grodie used God Scorpion's venom to poison all of Toufu's crops; in order to protect the lives of her people and Toufu's reputation, Iroki took all of the food for herself and ate it, even if it meant dying as a despot.
- The Ghost: She is mentioned in passing by Kuroda in #15 of the main series, but does not appear in person until the movie.
- God Save Us from the Queen!: Kuroda recalls her as a tyrannical despot who hoarded all of Toufu's food supply for herself during the Fury of the Gods, leaving the smallfolk to starve. This led Kaguragi to stage a rebellion against her. As it turns out though, she was actually Good All Along: she only hoarded the food supply upon learning it was poisoned by Grodie, and was willing to be remembered in a negative light if her action protects Toufu's people and reputation.
- Go Out with a Smile: As Grodie's hold over her is broken, she gives a peaceful smile as her body crumbles away, proud that Kaguragi has become the ruler that he needed to be.
- Hero with Bad Publicity: During the Fury of the Gods, Grodie poisoned Toufu's rice crops using God Scorpion's venom. Due to the fact that their food supply is the country's lifeline, if word of this got out, the other countries would've lost their trust in Toufu, leading to its collapse. Knowing this, Iroki hid this by hoarding all of the crops to herself and eating them before setting Takitate Castle on fire, burning away the poisoned crops and herself and dying as a despot in the process.
- The High Queen: Was apparently this prior to the Fury of the Gods, having considered the people's prosperity only equaled by Toufu's prosperity itself. As it turns out, she never stopped being this.
- The Mentor: As it turns out, Iroki took Kaguragi under her wing and taught him everything he knows about governing.
- Posthumous Character: Adventure Heaven reveals that she died during the Fury of the Gods. She's brought Back from the Dead in #37, courtesy of Grodie, and once again in #49 by Devonica.
- A Pupil of Mine Until He Turned to Evil: Inverted. #37 reveals that she personally invited Kaguragi to live in Takitate Castle so he could learn all of about governance under her tutelage prior to the Fury of the Gods, when she became a despot and horded all of Toufu's food for herself. Except she never did turn evil.
- Significant Anagram: Her name is possibly one of kiiro, which is derived from the Japanese hornet
(黄色雀蜂/kiirosuzumebachi). - Taking the Bullet: She consumed the poisoned rice that was intended for the smallfolk.
- Zero-Approval Gambit: She is revealed to have pulled this during the Fury of the Gods; the food supplies she hoarded were poisoned by Grodie, and she willingly went for being labeled a tyrant if it meant the poisoned food would never harm her subjects and protect Toufu's reputation.
Portrayed by: Ayane Sakura

A denizen of Hākabāka who acts as guide to the Ohsama Sentai. She grew up in the same orphanage as Gira.
- Big Damn Heroes: Pulls perhaps the biggest one in the entire series in the penultimate episode. When the entire army fighting against Dagded's forces finds itself being pushed back, Devonica arrives to call in reinforcements from Hākabāka to their aid.
- Beautiful Singing Voice: Gira comments that Devonica's voice has remained quite lovely since he last saw her.
- Earn Your Happy Ending: The Complete Edition of Adventure Heaven shows that she was able to finally have some of the cake she had been craving, after she gets brought back to the land of the living.
- Heroic Lineage: Comes from a line that serves Reiniol by judging whether or not a descendent of his is worthy of being king. Gira is very much surprised by this.
- Leitmotif: The melody of "Welcome to Hākabāka" acts as her theme throughout the movie.
- Like Brother and Sister: Is basically Gira's older sister in all but blood, with their interactions showing such a dynamic, though she initially denies such a relationship.
- Psychopomp: As part of a lineage that serves Reiniol, she ferries people from the land of the living to Hākabāka, the underworld. She's also capable of doing the reverse as seen in #49, bringing back Dethnaarok, Reiniol, Boshimar, Diid, Metally, Karras, and Iroki to the land of the living to aid in the final battle, albeit temporarily.
- Remember the New Guy?: She grew up with Gira in the same orphanage, but she is never mentioned by Gira or the orphanage kids until the movie.
- The Slacker: Is described as such by Gira, with flashbacks showing him to be completely right, much to her annoyance.
- Targeted Human Sacrifice: She was chosen by Reiniol to be his vessel so that he can return to the living world. Luckily, Gira convinces her that she doesn't need to die for his sake, which leads to her proclaiming her desire to live.
Characters from Ohsama Sentai King-Ohger vs. Kyoryuger
Gira Husty (Alternate)/Evil King
Portrayed by: Taisei Sekai (live), Yasuhiko Imai (suit)

A version of Gira that's ascended into the new Galactinsect King due to history being changed.
- Alternate Self: To the main Gira, due to Utchy's interference causing a Bad Present.
- Be Careful What You Wish For: In the show, Dagded states that he knew of Corsus' plan to empower Gira with Shugod Souls and secretly encouraged it; intending to make it go south. In this timeline, Gira was fed a second Shugod Soul by an unaware Utchy. Gira not only defeats Dagded, but takes the monster's place as Galactinsect King!
- Big Bad: Of Kingohger vs. Kyoryuger.
- Borrowed Catchphrase: Downplayed. While he doesn't take any direct quotes from Dagded, he does inherit the former's tendency to call killing people "cleaning up."
- Cold Ham: In comparison to primary Gira's straight up over the top King of Evil persona, this version talks in a much slower and deliberate fashion without losing any of the bombast, coming across as all the more menacing.
- Dark Is Evil: Gira is consistently associated with darkness, be it during his initial transformation into the Galactinsect King or whenever he uses the OhgerCalibur ZERO to become the Evil King. Almost all of his attacks utilize it in some way visually to distinguish him from the pure people he's fighting.
- Demonic Possession: After the Kings have their memories returned to them, Gira remains inside his Good Counterpart until the other Kings Beat the Curse Out of Him with a Combination Attack.
- Evil Doppelgänger: To the primary Gira, thanks to timeline changes making him the new Galactinsect King. Also invokes this directly by transforming into the "Evil King" with the OhgerCalibur ZERO; becoming a distorted, monstrous variant of KuwagataOhger.
- Evil Overlord: Of his timeline's Tikyu. He and the Jesters control everything and he isn't above randomly executing people to get something.
- Evil Sounds Deep: When in his monster form, half of Gira's voice is reflective of a demonic entity.
- Extra Eyes: Numerous miniature eyes open up from the sides of the Evil King's cheekbones.
- Flat Character: Has no real traits to speak of beyond being an Evil Overlord in the most direct fashion possible.
- Generic Doomsday Villain: This Gira lacks Dagded's penchant for theatrics and lives to be an opponent from nanosecond one; defined entirely by his status as antagonist.
- Good Armor, Evil Armor: Compared to his Good Counterpart, this world's KuwagataOhger is a hulking insectoid monstrosity vaguely resembling the Kingohger it's supposed to be.
- Good Weapon, Evil Weapon: Invoked. Unlike his prime self, Gira wields the OhgerCalibur ZERO, which is usually associated with Rcules.
- Gone Horribly Right: A two fold example. Causus wanted to turn Gira into a weapon that would destroy Dagded, while Dagded allowed it in order to turn Gira into a being powerful enough to destroy the world. This version of Gira fulfills both of their wishes in the worst possible way as eating more than one Shugod soul made him powerful enough to not only kill Dagded, but to take his place as the Galactinsect King.
- High Collar of Doom: Gira's Galactinsect attire has a massive collar that raises all way to his hair and out past his shoulders.
- Irony:
- The primary Gira's "Evil King" routine is mostly an act in response to what he sees as corrupt justice. In this timeline, he really does become an evil king that rules Tikyu with an iron fist.
- In the show, Jeramie and Gira work together against Dagded when he first appears to demonstrate the species' newfound unity. In the Evil King's timeline, Jeramie is serving under Gira as his guide.
- Knight of Cerebus: Downplayed. The Downer Beginning establishes Gira as the Big Bad, but the movie becomes a relatively-upbeat comedy of Time Travel errors on Utchy's part until he reappears and meets Prince; adding tension to the heroes' journey now that he's aware of them. He's also the reason why Kingohger vs. Kyoryuger is Darker and Edgier than Kingohger vs. Donbrothers.
- Luckily, My Shield Will Protect Me: The Evil King has a buckler on his left arm that he uses to block the heroes' attacks.
- Mirror Match: This version of Gira battles both the Kyoryugers and the Kingohgers, including his Good Counterpart.
- Point of Divergence: This version of Gira came about due to Utchy accidentally changing history; the Kyoryuger feeding him another Shugod Soul as a kid unaware of the danger to follow.
- Protagonist Journey to Villain: Utchy's change to the timeline resulted in the heroic Gira usurping Dagded and becoming the new Galactinsect King.
- Public Execution: His defining moment in the film is threatening his timeline's Kingohgers with one. Daigo prevents it and restores the kings' memories in the process.
- Shadow Archetype: Similar to how Rcules' got Lost in Character in his tyrant king act, Galactinsect King!Gira is what the original Gira would be if his "King of Evil" routine stopped being an act.
- The Stoic: Compared to the Galactinsect he usurped, Gira is blunt, harsh and to-the-point. He doesn't even have an Evil Laugh like his Good Counterpart does; opting to be a Cold Ham instead.
- Voice of the Legion: As the Evil King, Gira speaks with a mixture of his native voice and a demonic one.
- World-Wrecking Wave: The film's Downer Beginning ends with the Evil King and Kyoryu Red firing these at each other; shattering Tikyu to pieces.
Characters from Ohsama Sentai King-Ohger in Space
Portrayed by: Shinta Takaiwa (live), Ryuma Hashido (suit)
Portrayed by: Arisa Sonohara
- Actor Allusion: Dorin at one point says “happy”, a reference to her previous role as Asahi Minato.
Portrayed by: Keisuke Minami
Portrayed by: Tsuyoshi Hayashi (voice), Ryōhei Itai (suit)
A Tylerian who runs an underground fighting ring.
- Ambiguously Related: He bears a resemblance to Durden from Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger, but the nature of their relationship, if any, isn't expounded upon by King-Ohger in Space.
- Fight Clubbing: He's hosting illicit fighting tournaments on Planet Tyler using the OhgerCrown as bait to bring in contestants.
- I Have Your Wife: Holds Dorin hostage in order to coerce Riki into fighting.
- Named After Somebody Famous: He's named after controversial boxing promoter Don King
. His species is named after Tyler Durden, the fight organizer from Fight Club - Non-Action Big Bad: Ironically, the person hosting the underground fights isn't much of a fighter himself. He panics when the heroes expose him and spends the last few minutes running around in a panic before being finished off.
Portrayed by: Yuki Masuda
- Ambiguously Related: She bears a resemblance to Shelinda from Seijuu Sentai Gingaman, but the nature of their relationship, if any, isn't expounded upon by King-Ohger in Space.
- The Remnant: She's stated to be one of the few Balban Pirates remaining.
- Space Pirate: She's one of the few members of the Balban remaining.
- The Unfought: She's the only one of the pirates that doesn't bother fighting back when Donking is exposed and surrenders to Rita without a fight.
Portrayed by: Rintarō Shimizu (suit)
The last survivor of the Baranoia Empire (after the death of Bara Mobile) who Donking employed in his schemes to be rid of the Sentai warriors.- The Bus Came Back: His return marks the first appearance of a Baranoia member (that isn't just one of the Baro soldiers) in over 20 years.
- Curb-Stomp Battle: The Bara Breaker is mincemeat against the combined force of Gira, Prince and Riki.
- Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!: Bara Breaker is so massive that he unknowingly impedes Donking's attempts to escape, allowing both of them to be destroyed by Doggie and Rita.

