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aka: Professor Layton And The Unwound Future

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The Professor Layton franchise has a huge and quirky cast. Surely it needs one of these pages, right? Currently under construction, but feel free to contribute. Beware of unmarked spoilers, as well as unmarked trope names that can give the plot away. You Have Been Warned!

This page only includes characters from the original series of games. For characters from spin-offs, see:

Note: This series has too many characters if you include every single NPC, so let's just stick to the main cast.


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Main Characters

    Professor Hershel Layton 

Professor Hershel Layton

Voiced by: Yo Oizumi (Japanese), Christopher Miller (English), Martial Le Minoux (French), Mario Hassert (German), Oliviero Corbetta (Italian)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/140px-HershelLayton_4108.png
"A true gentleman..."

The protagonist. A gentlemanly archaeologist famous for his puzzle-solving skills.


  • Absent-Minded Professor: Downplayed. While his competence and intelligence are much more prominent, he is not without his eccentricities. His obsession with puzzles and the like often lead to him getting distracted by them, his study is full of scattered books and outdated reminders to himself, and he's notorious for skipping out on his actual job whenever a fancy strikes him.
  • Action Dad: He becomes Flora's adoptive father (and then later Alfendi and Katrielle's) and he's no slouch at fencing.
  • Actual Pacifist: He eschews violence, considering it to be ungentlemanly, and will only get into a fight if it's absolutely necessary. And when he does fight, he fights to disarm, never to injure or kill.
  • Adventurer Archaeologist: Although he repeatedly gets mistaken for a detective in Professor Layton and the Curious Village.
  • Amateur Sleuth: Constantly gets roped into solving crimes thanks to his puzzle-solving skills.
  • Ambiguously Jewish: His first name, Hershel, is extremely uncommon outside the Jews. It would also explain his insistence on Never Bareheaded, but this does eventually get properly explained in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future with a different reason.
  • Arbitrary Skepticism: Layton generally does not believe in ghosts, vampires or anything that could be misconstrued as magical or supernatural. He is, however, completely fine with science fiction concepts like ancient robots, living prehistoric monsters and even time travel, which are arguably just as implausible.
  • Babies Ever After: Alfendi and Katrielle are his son and daughter (respectively), confirming that either he eventually married someone or he adopted more kids like he did with Flora. Kat eventually reveals that she is indeed adopted, while we still don't know about Alfendi.
  • Badass Bookworm: In addition to being a professor and master puzzler he is also pretty good at hand to hand combat and being a badass.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: There are some things that Layton simply will not tolerate. Threatening the innocent citizens of London, for example, will turn him into an Implacable Man who will not stop until he's stopped you. And don't even think about touching those kids.
  • Black Bead Eyes: A rare example for a human Round Character who manages to show a lot of emotion with them. Their expression becomes quite unsettling when he finally gets angry (see Tranquil Fury, below).
  • Bluff the Impostor: He prefers this method when accusing someone.
  • Broken Ace: Happens three times in the series: when Luke is captured by Targent, when his parents are threatened by its leader, and when he finds out Jean Descole's secret.
  • Cain and Abel: The Abel to Descole's Cain, though he and the audience don't learn this until the sixth game.
  • Catchphrase: "This reminds me of a puzzle..."
    • "Every puzzle has an answer."
    • "Critical thinking is the key to success!"
  • Cool Car: The Laytonmobile; in Professor Layton and the Curious Village he freely admits that "I adore the contraption." Its coolness gets cranked up thanks to Don Paolo's modifications in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future.
  • Cool Teacher: Even outside the world of his cases, he's well-respected by the Gressenheller faculty and students (some with even more than just respect). In Professor Layton and the Last Specter it's clarified that at the age of 27, he became the youngest professor ever to join the Gressenheller staff.
  • Cultured Badass: Loves his tea, loves his puzzles, loves being a gentleman. Then you hand him a sword and you quickly come to realize he's arguably the best fighter in the series as a whole. He just prefers not to, because a gentleman doesn't perpetuate violence, you see.
  • Declarative Finger: He likes using this pose when making a point or explaining something.
  • Disappeared Dad: He's currently missing as of Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaires' Conspiracy, having disappeared sometime during Katrielle's childhood. The end of Layton Brothers: Mystery Room indicates he's still alive, but his whereabouts are still unknown.
    • In episode 35 of Layton's Mystery Journey, it's revealed that he was cryogenically frozen together with Luke.
  • Doting Parent: To Flora. Most noticeably, he has a particular voice inflection that seems to be reserved solely for when he's speaking to her; it's softer and gentler than his regular voice (which is already quite placid and easy on the ears).
  • Dub Name Change: From Leopard Rainel to Theodore Bronev.
  • Everyone Went to School Together: Or in this case, university. It's revealed that he and Don Paolo went to the same university in the third game.
  • Expy: Akihiro Hino from Level-5 revealed that he's actually a Phoenix Wright expy.
    Hino: From the outset, Professor Layton owed a lot to Phoenix Wright in some ways. We researched the good and bad points of Phoenix Wright, developed the good points and overcame what I saw as the bad points - that's how we created Professor Layton.
  • Face Palm: Covers his eyes with his hat whenever he gets a puzzle wrong.
  • Famed In-Story: Even though he is no detective, he's famous in and around London for his intelligence and skill in puzzle-solving. It doesn't extend to America however, as he's only an anonymous gentleman there.
  • For Your Own Good: when he runs out on others to protect them.
  • Gentleman Adventurer: Several games worth of adventures at that.
  • Gentleman and a Scholar: Very well mannered and well read, as per job description.
  • Gentleman Detective
  • Gentleman Snarker: Downplayed, but occasionally in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future.
    • He also has a moment of this when accusing Doland and Jakes of being behind the attacks during Professor Layton and the Last Specter, which is mixed in with a bit of Tranquil Fury.
      Layton: However, even when Luke's predictions were wrong, residents were still evacuated from the the neighborhoods where the specter appeared. Isn't that odd? I find that odd. Doland, do you find that odd?
  • Geek Physiques: His coat and hat somewhat hide the fact that he's basically a pipe-cleaner man with a pumpkin for a head. Less severe in the official art, but some cutscenes give him really, really bony arms. Of course, those same cutscenes make it quite clear he is not exactly out of shape.
  • Giving Someone the Pointer Finger: He loves doing this while accusing people or when he gets a puzzle correct.
  • Happily Adopted: Like his own children (Flora, Katrielle, and presumably Alfendi), Layton was adopted as a young child. He had no memories of his biological parents and older brother, due to the traumatic circumstances he endured for much of his life, until the end of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy.
  • Leitmotif: His theme.
  • Like Father, Like Son: Although as revealed in the Professor Layton and the Miracle Mask why he became an archaeologist back then, it was hardly a coincidence that in the next game he took after his biological father, Leon Bronev, who also became an archaeologist after discovering an ancient artifact as a child, and his older brother, Descole, followed for revenge against Targent. It's also a case of Like Father, Unlike Son because Bronev is despicable and selfish rather than a loving father. Eventually, Targent abducted him and his wife, Rachael, leaving Layton (known by his real name, Theodore) and Descole (Hershel) as orphans.
  • Never Bareheaded: Never removes his hat. Though he does actually take it off briefly in the ending cutscene of Professor Layton and the Lost Future. Even in flashbacks before getting his famous top hat, he wears a cap. Averted in the Flashback sequences of Professor Layton and the Miracle Mask, where his younger self has a massive and unruly mop of hair. Which might be why he wears a hat all the time.
  • Nice Guy: Hershel is polite, gentlemanly, and willing to help people in need.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: He never leaves a puzzle unsolved, and for good reason as most of the games have points where you need a certain amount of puzzles to advance.
    • You know something is wrong when he loses his unflappable composure, as evidenced when Claire reveals she's going back in time to the moment where she was killed.
  • Out-of-Character Moment: He breaks his gentleman code several times throughout the events of Professor Layton and the Unwound Future, including breaking a promise to Flora that he would take her with them on the investigation and hitting a young Klaus/Clive after the explosion that killed his parents. And then he cries at the end.
  • Papa Wolf: Professor Layton and the Unwound Future in particular puts him in this light. Do not mess with Luke Triton or Flora Reinhold. He will defy the laws of physics if that's what it takes to make you pay for it.
  • Parental Abandonment: When he was a child, Targent kidnapped his birth parents, Leon and Rachael Bronev, leaving both him and his brother behind.
  • Parental Substitute: Acts this way to both Flora and Luke; in Luke's case it seems to be a matter of in loco parentis, as Luke's parents are both alive and well and have presumably given their permission for him to travel with their old friend Layton. Flora, on the other hand, is legally his ward.
  • Please, Don't Leave Me: At the end of Professor Layton and the Unwound Future Layton, so upset that Claire has to leave him so she can die, practically demands that she stay.
    Layton: You can't go! I don't want to say goodbye again! I can't! I WON'T!
    • A flashback in Azran Legacies shows he had this attitude towards his brother too.
  • The Professor: Literally, as this is his title.
  • Promotion to Parent: When he becomes Flora's guardian.
  • Quintessential British Gentleman: Don't get between Layton and his tea.
  • Real Men Hate Affection: Weirdly downplayed. While Layton doesn't verbally mention that he doesn't like physical affection, he usually seems caught off guard when someone hugs him and returns the gesture by putting his hands on their shoulders.
    • This is averted with the Layton Mystery Journey anime, where he gives Katrielle a full hug after finally reuniting with her.
  • Signature Headgear: Wears a tall top hat, and is the only character to do so. This becomes a plot point in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future, where several characters in Future London recognize the Professor by his hat alone, with one even hiding in fear from him.
  • Sink or Swim Fatherhood: With Flora. He may not understand how much he hurts her when he leaves her behind, but he tries his best and he clearly loves her.
  • Spell My Name With An S: Hershel Layton, not Herschel Leighton.
  • Stepford Smiler: While his politeness is genuine and his obsession with puzzles is never a hindrance, Professor Layton and the Unwound Future reveals that they're byproducts of his love life with Claire gone horribly wrong, and as such are coping mechanisms for his trauma.
  • Stiff Upper Lip: For all the weirdness and dangerous situations that get thrown his way, Layton never loses his composure. The ending of Professor Layton and the Unwound Future is one of the few times Layton's Stiff Upper Lip falters.
  • Strong Family Resemblance: Averted. Despite being his parents, Roland and Lucille don't resemble him much. That's because they're his adoptive parents. As soon as you see what his biological parents, Leon and Rachel Bronev, look like, the resemblance to his mother can't be mistaken.
  • Tall, Dark, and Handsome: Has a lean figure, tan skin and dark attire, and has a pleasant face at all times. He is specifically described as such in Professor Layton and the Diabolical Box.
  • Tranquil Fury: Seen only in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future, when circumstances put him in Papa Wolf mode; his expression darkens (look at his eyes) and his voice takes on a harsh edge, but he doesn't properly let loose with the anger he's obviously feeling.
  • Unfazed Everyman: While Layton has his quirks, when placed up against the Crapsaccharine Cloudcuckooland that is the franchise's interpretation of London, he serves to be the most down-to-earth and identifiable one of the bunch.
  • Unknown Rival: Has one in Don Paolo. It's revealed in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future how their feud began.
    Luke: Professor, what did you do to Don Paolo? Why does he want to get revenge on you?
    Layton: I haven't the slightest idea, Luke.
    • There are tiny hints dropped from game-to-game. Another hint is dropped in the second. From Don Paolo's point of view, Layton took a LOT from Don Paolo - his teacher, his praise, the girl he loved. And Layton is TOTALLY OBLIVIOUS.
  • White Sheep: Averted. He didn't know his real family had become evil; he was just lucky enough to have loving, adoptive parents. Discounting this, he's pretty much the only living person in his bloodline who does not resort to criminal acts to get his way or become a full-blooded sociopath, like his father, brother, and son.
  • You're Not My Mother: "You're Not My Mother and Father". At the end of Azran Legacy, he tells Leon Bronev that he considers the Laytons to be his real parents, but he remains open to the possibility of seeing Leon as a fellow archeologist.
    Luke Triton 

Luke Triton

Voiced by: Maki Horikita (Japanese - Games), Soma Saito (Japanese - Layton Mystery Detective Agency), Lani Minella (English - North America), Maria Darling (English - United Kingdom and Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney), Marie Zidi (French), Sophia Längert (German), Cinzia Massironi (Italian)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/120px-LukeTriton_5578.png
"Apprentice Number One!"

The professor's apprentice. Aspires to be a gentleman when he's older.


    Flora Reinhold 

Flora Reinhold

Voiced by: Mamiko Noto (Japanese), Lani Minella (English - Games), Claire Morgan (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva), Cinzia Massironi (Italian - Games), Francesca Tretto (Italian - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/FloraReinhold_2052.png

A mysterious girl from St. Mystere, who turns out to be not only the daughter of Baron Reinhold, but the Golden Apple the baron mentioned in his will.


    Dr. Andrew Schrader 

Dr. Andrew Schrader

Voiced by: Rokurō Naya (Japanese), Stuart Organ (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/andrew_schrader.png

The Professor's good friend and mentor.


  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: Brilliant, but somewhat eccentric to judge by the contents of his apartment.
  • Disney Death: The gas in the Elysian Box didn't kill him, it just sent him into a deep coma.
  • Distressed Dude: His in-game profiles state he's a tendency to get into trouble, forcing his students to bail him out. Apparently, the Elysian Box fiasco is just one of many times this has happened.
  • Dub Name Change: A subtle one; his surname's spelled "Schröder" on supplemental materials featuring him.
  • Dying Clue: The letter he sends to Layton, kickstarting the plot of Diabolical Box.
  • Spell My Name With An S: His surname; it's spelled "Schrader" in the English scripts, but spelled "Schröder" on certain things featuring him.
    Emmeline "Emmy" Altava 

Emmeline "Emmy" Altava

Voiced by: Saki Aibu (Japanese), Lani Minella (English - Games), Emma Tate (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/120_emmy.png
"First Assistant!"

Layton's first assistant, who accompanies him on the adventures of the prequel trilogy and knew the Professor even before Luke. After being saved from the police by the professor, Emmy hoped to return the favour somehow. Her wish is fulfilled some years later when, in Professor Layton and the Last Specter, she's assigned to be Layton's assistant by the dean of Gressenheller University. Layton doesn't really remember her, but apparently, she doesn't mind.


  • Action Girl: She is the most competent physical fighter of the second trilogy, able to chase after the Black Raven jumping from rooftop to rooftop. Because the series is a puzzle game, her fighting skills are most likely to be shown in cutscenes only.
  • The Apprentice: Though not to the same extent as Luke, Emmy does take lessons from the professor in observation and puzzle-solving.
  • Ascended Fangirl: Emmy seems to have something of an obsession with Layton, and even uses the word 'Laytonesque'. This was before he was famous. It's implied that she's done a lot to get the job as Layton's assistant. Given her role as The Mole, this is pretty justified.
  • Badass Adorable: She's a bright, curious young woman who's also probably the best hand-to-hand fighter in the series.
  • Because You Were Nice to Me: She decides to get a job as Layton's assistant sometime after he clears her name on a pickpocket case. However, at the end of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy, she's revealed to have been working for Targent all along to get close to him. She did so to help Layton convince Bronev to end his obsession with the Azran civilization for good, and her friendships with Layton and Luke are genuine.
  • Becoming the Mask: Despite working as Layton's assistant under Bronev's orders, she grew to genuinely like her adventures with Layton and Luke, and formed a true friendship with them. This is partially why she decides to quit after everything is concluded; she feels guilty and ashamed for betraying them.
  • But Now I Must Go: Unsurprisingly, since she doesn't appear in the original trilogy. She quits her job as Layton's assistant not only because her mission as a Targent agent is over, but also (and seemingly more) out of guilt and shame over her betrayal; though she is still on good terms with Layton and Luke.
  • Cool Big Sis: To Luke, and to Aurora in Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Very prone to snarking.
  • Declarative Finger: Is fond of doing some form of this. (Exhibit A: the picture above)
  • Dub Name Change: From Remi Altava.
  • Drives Like Crazy: And Luke has no trouble calling her out for it.
  • Eaglelander: Invoked. One character in Professor Layton and the Last Specter describes her as a British woman having an "American attitude".
  • Flat "What": Her facial expressions just scream this from time to time, especially when snarking about Inspector Grosky.
  • Groin Attack: Does this to one of Descole's mooks in Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Double subverted. She first appears to be, and is, on the good guys' side, but then it is revealed she was a spy for Targent all along. However, even then, she is not evil, and even though she betrayed Layton and Luke, you can tell she wasn't happy about it, and it's heavily implied, if not outright stated, that she worked under Bronev to snap him out of his obsession over the Azran Legacy. She also redeemed herself by helping to stop the Azran golems.
  • Hypercompetent Sidekick: Not that Layton is incompetent, unlike most other examples of the trope, but she's still extremely intelligent.
  • Kick Chick: She does kicks in any fight shown in cutscenes.
  • Leeroy Jenkins: Of a sort; her first answer to almost every hurdle is a good roundhouse kick.
  • The Mole: She's actually a spy for Targent, and describes Bronev as being like family to her after all he's done for her.
  • Supreme Chef: A scene in the credits of Professor Layton and the Last Specter shows her cooking a meal for Rosa and Layton, both enjoying the meal.
  • The Team Wannabe: To Team Layton. More Sidekick than Team, though.
  • Took a Level in Badass: An episode reveals her with her hair shorter and her trying to figure out how to prove she didn't steal a wallet. Flash forward a few years, and now we see her kicking ass, jumping onto rooftops and punching thugs in the gut.
  • Walking Spoiler: Azran Legacy reveals a twist about why she pursued to be Layton's assistant.
    Inspector Chelmey 

Inspector Chelmey

Voiced by: Shiro Saito (Japanese), Christopher Miller (English - Games), Jonathan Keeble (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/inspector_chemley_transparent_small.png
"What?! That's absurd! You'll need more than some daft charge to save your hide!"

An infamous (among criminals, that is), grumpy detective from Scotland Yard. He doesn't always live up to his reputation, though.


  • Bad Boss: It's implied by Constable Barton that he treats the other constables badly if one of them messes up an investigation.
  • The Cameo: In Professor Layton and the Last Specter, he and Barton appear briefly, and only Emmy encounters them.
  • Expy: Of Inspector Japp from Poirot, another large, bossy Scotland Yard inspector with an irritable cockney bark and a splendid moustache. It's downplayed, though, given that Chelmy acts like a pettier, more selfish caricature of Japp.
  • Hidden Depths: Professor Layton and the Last Specter reveals that when he was a constable years ago, he was assigned a case that would promote him to Inspector. In his rush to receive the promotion, he ended up forcing the then current Inspector to take the bullet for him. After this incident, he became extremely dedicated to his job but also learned to take things slow.
  • Iconic Sequel Character: While he is an important character in the Professor Layton franchise, Chelmey technically doesn't appear until the second game as his appearance in the first game was actually Don Paolo in disguise.
  • Informed Ability: He's implied to be one of the greatest policemen Scotland Yard has to offer, but every single conclusion he ever draws at any point in-game is consistently wrong.
  • Inspector Lestrade: To Layton's Sherlock.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: He loves his wife's homemade sweet potato fritters more than anything, and is supposedly a very devoted husband. He's also very fond of his bumbling sidekick and admits privately to Layton that he protects him from receiving formal reprimands that would otherwise cost him his job.
  • Overshadowed by Awesome: He's apparently a detective of considerable renown, but when up against someone like Layton on cases as bizarre as these, he comes off as hopelessly inadequate.
  • The Real Remington Steele: The Chelmey in Professor Layton and the Curious Village is Don Paolo in disguise; the real Chelmey doesn't appear until game 2.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: To be fair, he is going up against Professor Hershel Layton. If he was going up against any other detective, he'd fare better.
  • Sweet Tooth: His wife's homemade sweet potato fritters are what he eats after every arrest. This is very important in Professor Layton and the Curious Village.
  • Wrong Genre Savvy: Acts like he's the hero of the mystery stories, not the Arrogant Cop Who Jumps To Wrong Conclusions.
    Constable Barton 

Constable Barton

Voiced by: Hiromi Sugino (Japanese), Wayne Forester (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/barton.png

Chelmey's Sidekick from the second game onwards. Not much is learned about him until Professor Layton and the Unwound Future.


    Inspector Clamp Grosky 

Inspector Clamp Grosky

Voiced by: Hōchū Ōtsuka (Japanese), Walter Rego (English - Games), Stuart Organ (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/clampgrosky.png

An inspector from Scotland Yard who takes pride in his work and is very athletic.


    Don Paolo 

Don Paolo

Voiced by: Minoru Inaba (Japanese), Christopher Miller (English - Games), Jonathan Keeble (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/don_paolo.png
"Laytooooon!! You'll pay for this someday!!"
A Mad Scientist and Layton's self-proclaimed arch-nemesis, who spends most of the series getting in Layton's way and generally causing problems for the inhabitats of the villages he winds up in. Most of his plans involve disguising himself as someone. Also likes playing music.
    Jean Descole 

Jean Descole

Voiced by: Atsuro Watabe (Japanese), Walter Rego (English - Games), Jonathan Keeble (English - Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/descole_1.png
"As expected from you, Layton."

The antagonist in the second trilogy, as well as in Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva. He's a masked man who creates machines for his evil purposes and likes to "play games" with his victims. No one knows his real identity.


    Stachenscarfen 

Stachenscarfen

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stachenscarfen.png

This strange character appears in the first three games but has no relevance to the plot. He tells you about hint coins in the first two games and gets angry when he finds out someone beat him to the punch in the third. He later returns in Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaires' Conspiracy, no longer teaching about hint coins but instead challenging Katrielle with puzzles (like most other NPCs).


    Pavel 

Pavel

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pavel.png

An explorer that also shows up in every game of the original trilogy, but also has no relevance to the plot.


    Aldus 

Aldus

Essentially Stachenscarfen's replacement in the prequel games, filling his role as the non-plot-relevant character who helps explain game mechanics.
    Granny Riddleton 

Granny Riddleton

An old lady who picks up puzzles people forget about. In Professor Layton and the Last Specter and Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy, her cat Keats fills in for her. She returns in Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaires' Conspiracy, but with no more need to store lost puzzles, she's revised into just being a generic "old lady" NPC.

Characters in Professor Layton and the Curious Village

    Lady Dahlia Reinhold 

Lady Dahlia Reinhold

Voiced by: Atsuko Tanaka (Japanese)

A rich woman in St. Mystere, the widow of the recently deceased Baron Reinhold. She asks Layton to help her solve the mystery of the Golden Apple.
  • Artificial Human: Turns out she is one, along with everyone else in the village.
  • Dub Name Change: From Salome Reinford, in Japanese.
  • Ice Queen: She's very much the aloof Blue Blood in her dealings with very nearly everybody, including (occasionally) Layton.
  • Identical Stranger: To the baron's beloved late wife Violet. She's actually a robot double based on her.
    Claudia the Cat 

Claudia the Cat

Lady Dahlia's beloved pet.
    Augustus Reinhold 

Baron Augustus Reinhold

The late Baron of St. Mystere, father of Flora.
  • Doting Parent: To Flora; under his direction, an entire amusement park was built for her sole enjoyment.
  • Dub Name Change: From Allen Reinford, in Japanese.
  • Impossibly Cool Wealth: To the point of using it as a hidden treasure for puzzlers to find as part of a way to find out who is best suited to taking care of Flora and providing them with the means to do so after he died.
  • Posthumous Character: His death is the start of the entire plot.
  • Royal Blood: How he got so rich in the first place.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Most people have legal documentation which settles matters like who will be the guardian of their minor children. This guy thought it was more practical to build an entire village of Ridiculously Human Robots to take care of his.
    Matthew 

Matthew

The butler of the Reinhold mansion.
  • The Butler Did It: Averted. Matthew is probably the single most helpful resident of the entire village as far as Layton's investigation goes.
  • Artificial Human: Averted to some extent, it is unknown if he too is a robot like the rest of the village.
    Simon Reinhold 

Simon Reinhold

A somewhat snide individual, he identifies himself as Baron Reinhold's nephew. His murder is what prompts the arrival of Inspector Chelmey in St. Mystere.
  • Disney Death: It looked like he was murdered but he actually was just malfunctioning, which was an easy fix since he was an Artificial Human Like the rest of the village.
  • Dub Name Change: From Roy Reinford, in Japanese.
    Ramon 

Ramon

Known for his creepy purple lips, Ramon can almost always be found outside the mansion.
  • Verbal Tic: He has one of these, you know, ahoo hoo hoo!
    Gordon 

Gordon

An old friend of the baron who is desperate to find a girl.
  • Sweat Drop: Taken to extremes; he's constantly perspiring and mopping his face.
    Lady Violet Reinhold 

Lady Violet Reinhold

The Baron's late wife and the mother of Flora.
  • Doting Parent: To judge by the picture of her holding baby Flora.
  • Dub Name Change: From Maria in Japanese. She's also named Viola in the UK version.
  • Flower Motif: She and her robot copy were both named after flowers, and Violet named her daughter Flora.
  • Posthumous Character: Her death is what led to the baron's relationship with Dahlia.
    Bruno 

Bruno

Voiced by: Motomu Kiyokawa (Japanese)

A mysterious old man who kidnaps the villagers and lives in the tower.
  • Gadgeteer Genius: Except for Flora and Granny Riddleton, he built all the residents of St. Mystere.
  • Old Retainer: More or less; the pages from his journal, which are found here and there throughout the village, indicating that he sees himself as this. Being the only adult human in all of St. Mystere, he has to maintain the robotic residents and look after Flora until someone solves the puzzles and becomes her new guardian. Presumably, he continues maintaining the village after the events of the game.

Characters in Professor Layton and the Diabolical Box

    Babette 

Babette

Voiced by: Salyu (Japanese)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/babette.png
A passenger on the Molentary Express. Layton and Luke encounter her repeatedly, to their inconvenience.
    Mr. Beluga 

Mr. Beluga

Voiced by: Tetsuo Goto (Japanese), Christopher Miller (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/beluga.png
The owner of the Molentary Express.
  • Big Brother Worship: He idolized his elder brother Anton.
  • Blue Blood: He is the second son of Duke Herzen and the younger brother of Anton.
  • Dub Name Change: From Frederick Feruzen/Derumonen Papporacchi to Friedrich Herzen/Mr. Beluga.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: For all his bluster towards his employees, he shows at several points in the game to be capable of compassion. He seems mournful remembering that it had been a year since Sophia passed away, and Sam mentions that Beluga had a soft spot for his older brother, Anton, whom he left behind to escape his father's selfish ways. In the closing credits, he is shown to be very happy to see Anton again.
  • Long-Lost Relative: He is the younger brother of Anton.
  • The Napoleon: To some extent. He's tiny, but very hard on his employees.
    Sammy Thunder 

Sammy Thunder

Voiced by: Ken Yasuda (Japanese)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sam_thunder.png
The conductor on the Molentary Express, nephew to Mr. Beluga, and wannabe rock star. He accidentally breaks Beluga's camera and gives it to Layton to fix, thus kickstarting the Camera minigame.
  • Dreadful Musician: Layton and Mr. Beluga think so. Luke seems to enjoy it, on the other hand.
  • Dub Name Change: From Sam to Sammy.
  • Nephewism: In the English version, he's Mr. Beluga's nephew. He may or may not be Anton's nephew by extension; we don't know if Sammy is Beluga's biological nephew or a nephew by marriage.
  • The Power of Rock: Dreams of becoming a rock star.
    Anton Herzen 

Duke Anthony "Anton" Herzen

Voiced by: Takao Osawa (JP - Young), Fubito Yamano (JP - Old), Mark Carr (English), Stéphane Miquel (French), Jürgen Neumann (German), Paolo De Santis (Italian)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/anthony_2.png
"Sophia belongs to me! YOU CAN'T HAVE HER!"
The main antagonist in the second game. He lives in a castle near Folsense with his butler and has ties to the Elysian Box. He calls himself a vampire and kidnaps whoever dares to go to the Folsense Mines.
  • Abusive Parents: Duke Herzen chose his own greed instead of the happiness of his family. His obsession actually is the starting point of the events of the game.
  • Action Dad: He is a master swordsman and he happens to be a father.
  • Actually Not a Vampire: He is believed to be a vampire by everybody in Folsense. However, he only played the role to scare away thieves and apathetic citizens.
  • Affably Evil: He's a charming gentleman and kind enough to allow Layton a fighting chance when trying to kill the Professor.
  • Agent Peacock: He's a Long-Haired Pretty Boy in a ruffle shirt. He's quite nimble for an old man, easily putting Layton into the defensive and making impressive leaps. If he had been any younger, the professor would have had a much more difficult time.
  • Anti-Villain: Type II. Although he is the main antagonist, kidnaps Professor Layton and Luke, and pretends to be a vampire, he is not truly evil. He just misses the love of his life.
  • Aristocrats Are Evil: He is the Duke of Folsense and the second Big Bad. Or is he?
  • Badass Long Coat: He is a skilled swordsman for a seventy-year-old and has a High Collar of Doom on his black long coat with red on the inside.
  • Batman Gambit: The entire vampire story is made up by him, in order to keep the Herzen fortune safe. Anyone who comes too close to the mines or castle is kidnapped and tied up, and then set free once properly scared.
  • Beauty Equals Goodness: Grinko describes his personality as beautiful as his appearance.
  • Blue Blood: He succeeded his late father as the Duke of Folsense.
  • Cool Old Guy: He's quite nimble for an old man, easily putting Layton into the defensive and making impressive leaps. If he had been any younger, the professor would have had a much more difficult time.
  • Crazy Jealous Guy: He is paranoid that Sophia has left him for another man. He duels with Layton over his granddaughter Katia, thinking that she's Sophia and that Layton is trying to keep her from him for his own.
  • Dances and Balls: Anton and Sophia, as shown in flashbacks and the painting in the room where Layton and Luke stay at Herzen Mansion.
  • Disappeared Dad: He was absent throughout the entire life of his only child by Sophia. Justified in that Sophia kept him Locked Out of the Loop to protect their unborn child from the toxic, hallucinogenic gas that plagued Folsense.
  • The Dreaded: He is feared by the townspeople as a vampire. It turns out to be an Invoked Trope; he's Actually Not a Vampire, but he only played the role to scare away thieves and apathetic citizens.
  • Dub Name Change: Anton in the North American and UK versions, Vladimir in the French version, and Anthony in the Japanese and Spanish versions. This also causes a Dub-Induced Plot Hole in the NA version of Professor Layton and the Unwound Future, as his bonus puzzle cameo uses his Japanese name of Anthony, not Anton, although this is brushed off as his real name.
  • Face of an Angel, Mind of a Demon: He is a Shojo-esque Bishōnen with long blond hair. He's also a delusional Yandere.
  • Falling Chandelier of Doom: During his Villainous Breakdown, he accidentally causes his own chandelier to crash.
  • Friendless Background: He comments in his diary that his status as the elder son of Duke Herzen left him with no real friends.
    Anton: As the duke's son, the unfortunate reality is that most people are overly polite and fawning towards me.
  • A Glass of Chianti: Anton drinks red wine upon his meeting with Professor Layton and Luke. The fact that he is supposed to be a vampire does not help.
  • Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: He has blond hair and is described by Grinko as having a beautiful heart.
  • High Collar of Doom: His suit has a very high collar. Considering the origin of this trope note , it fits the vampire motif.
  • High-Pressure Emotion: Played with during his duel with Layton. He gets angry in the middle of it and steam eminates from him, but it's actually the gas from the mines below his castle.
  • I Just Want to Be Loved: Implied. He lamented the fact in his diary that his status as the elder son of Duke Herzen made most people "overly polite and fawning towards [him]". Because of this, he fell deeply in love with Sophia, who treated him like a genuine human being, and her disappearance left him in great despair.
  • Inconsistent Coloring: His eyes are turquoise outside of the cutscenes. However, in the cutscenes, his eyes appear green.
  • I Was Quite a Looker: He was a Bishōnen in his younger days, yet by the time of the present, he has become a hook-nosed old man.
  • Let's Fight Like Gentlemen: Anton challenges Layton to a duel, and being the good sport that he is, gives Layton a free choice of the swords on the wall.
  • Light Is Not Good: He is very handsome man with blond hair and blue eyes. He's also a delusional Yandere.
  • Long-Haired Pretty Boy: He has long, wavy blonde hair down to his shoulder.
  • Love Makes You Crazy: He went mad because his beloved told him she was leaving him for the sake of someone she loved more than him. (She was talking about their unborn daughter.)
  • Man of Wealth and Taste: He wears a high ruffled collar shirt and has a High Collar of Doom on his badass black long coat with red on the inside.
  • Master Swordsman: Can hold his own against Professor Layton.
  • Murder the Hypotenuse: He actively tries to kill Layton after misunderstanding the situation and thinking the Professor stole "his Sophia".
  • Occult Blue Eyes: He has turquoise eyes and is a vampire. It's ultimately subverted when it turns out that he is Actually Not a Vampire.
  • Older Than They Look: He only looks like a young man due to the hallucinogenic gas permeating Folsense. In truth, he's an old man.
  • Outliving One's Offspring: His daughter died after Katia was born.
  • Parental Incest: He mistakes Katia for his lost fiancée, Sophia, and asks her to come to him, not knowing Katia is his own granddaughter.
  • The Reveal: Is he really a vampire? Turns out he wasn't one in the end. Due to him believing he never aged due to the hallucinogenic gas escaping from the tunnels under his castle, and the fact everyone who enters the town takes it in, it spread rumours about him being as such.
  • Single Woman Seeks Good Man: Gender Inverted. He comments in his diary that his status as the elder son of Duke Herzen left him with no real friends. He eventually fell in love with Sophia because she treated him as a genuine human being.
  • Surprise Incest: Narrowly averted. He mistakes Katia for his lost fiancée, Sophia, and asks her to come to him, not knowing Katia is his own granddaughter.
  • Time-Shifted Actor: In the Japanese version, he is voiced by Takao Osawa as a young man and by Fubito Yamano as an old man.
  • Tsurime Eyes: He has upwards arching eyes, signifying his noble upbringing and dignity.
  • The Ugly Guy's Hot Daughter: Gender Inverted. He is a pale Bishōnen with blonde hair and blue eyes. His father, Duke Herzen, looked nothing like him, being a grumpy-looking old man with an aquiline nose.
  • Unnamed Parent: His father is only known as Duke Herzen.
  • Vampires Are Rich: He owns an impressive manor since his family owns an incredible amount of gold, to the point where there is a whole museum dedicated to the Herzens. He is also rumored to be a vampire, at least until it's revealed that he only pretends to be one as a Batman Gambit to keep his family's fortune safe.
  • Villainous Breakdown: When Katia tells him that Sophia has passed away, Anton loses his cool and swings his sword around.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Despite having the Bishōnen look, Anton has a deep, seductive voice courtesy of Takao Osawa. It may be a Foreshadowing towards his true age.
  • Yandere: He seems to be a charming gentleman at first, but as it turns out, he waited years in the Herzen Mansion for his fiancée, Sophia, to come back. When their Identical Granddaughter, Katia, rejects his advances out of fear, he goes mad and tries to kill Layton because he misunderstands that the Professor stole "his Sophia". Justified in that the last fifty years left him lonely and in great despair, plus the hallucinogenic gas is probably enhancing his Sanity Slippage. He gets better once he reads Sophia's letter, thankfully.

    Katia Anderson 

Katia Anderson

Voiced by: Suzuka Ohgo (Japanese), Cynthia Geary (English), Raphaëlle Valenti (French)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/katia_5.png

Daughter of the mayor of Dropstone. She's on a secret mission in Folsense.


  • Blue Blood: She is stated to be the daughter of Earl Anderson in the Japanese version. She also turns out to be related to two noble families of Folsense, being the granddaughter of Anton Herzen and Sophia.
  • Curtains Match the Window: Outside cutscenes, her eyes are purple to match her purple hair.
  • Family Eye Resemblance: She looks almost identical to her grandmother, Sophia, except that she has eyes similar to those of her grandfather, Anton. It's significant since getting a good look at her eyes helps Anton realize she's not actually Sophia.
  • Identical Granddaughter: The resemblance between her and her grandmother, Sophia, is so strong that even Anton confuses the two. Considering that he's mistaking Katia for his estranged fiancée and he's really her grandfather, it's no wonder the poor girl gets a little distressed before she finally gets a chance to explain.
  • Inconsistent Coloring: Her eyes are a green shade of blue in the cutscenes. However, outside of the cutscenes, they appear purple to match her purple hair.
  • Long-Lost Relative: She is the granddaughter of Anton.
  • Luke, You Are My Father: After the duel between Anton and Layton ended, she reveals herself to be the granddaughter of Anton and Sophia.
  • Missing Mom: Her mother died shortly after giving birth to her, as revealed in Sophia's letter to Anton at the end.
  • Raised by Grandparents: After Katia's mother died, her grandmother helped bring her up.
  • Unnamed Parent: Her parents have unknown first names, only referred to as Mr. Anderson and Katia's mother.

    Sophia 

Sophia

Voiced by: Suzuka Ohgo (Japanese - Young), Yuri Tabata (Japanese - Old), Lani Minella (English), Raphaëlle Valenti (French)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sophia_2_1.png
"The thought of seeing you warms my heart"

The founder of Dropstone, grandmother of Katia, and Anton's missing betrothed.


  • Blue Blood: She was the youngest daughter of a noble family of Folsense.
  • Cool Old Lady: While raising Katia.
  • Curtains Match the Window: Has purple hair and purple eyes.
  • Dance of Romance: With Anton, as seen in a painting and a Dream Sequence.
  • Hand on Womb: In the flashback to when she left Anton, Sophia is briefly seen putting her hands over her stomach. Their granddaughter, Katia, reveals to him that she left him to protect their unborn child from a deadly disease that plagued Folsense.
  • Mama Bear: She left Folsense to protect her unborn child from a horrible disease in the town.
  • Outliving One's Offspring: She lived longer than her daughter, who died shortly after giving birth to her granddaughter, Katia.
  • Poor Communication Kills: Near the end of the game, it turns out that Anton is upset because he thought Sophia had left him for another man. Understandable, as she told him she's leaving him for someone she loved more than him instead of simply saying "You're going to be a father, but I can't raise a child here. Since you can't leave, I've got to leave you."
  • Posthumous Character: She died a year before the events of the game.
  • Significant Double Casting: Sophia and Katia are both voiced by Suzuka Ohgo and Raphaëlle Valenti in the Japanese and French versions, which becomes significant when Katia's resemblance to her grandmother, Sophia, becomes a plot point.
  • Time-Shifted Actor: In the Japanese version, she is voiced by Suzuka Ohgo as a young woman and by Yuri Tabata as an old woman.

Characters in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future

    Future Luke Triton (Spoiler Character) 

Clive Dove/Future Luke Triton

Voiced by: Shun Oguri (Japanese), Yuri Lowenthal (English), Megumi Kubota (Japanese - Child), Lani Minella (English - Child)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/140px-FutureLuke_5548.png
"IT WON'T END THIS WAY!"

Luke 10 years in the future. He sends a letter to his past self and needs help. He's a Walking Spoiler, so all entries for this character are unmarked.


  • The Atoner: After being defeated, he resolves to atone for his crimes.
  • Big Bad: Of Unwound Future, being the true mastermind behind the game's events.
  • The Chessmaster: He's such a clever and manipulative young man that he's the Big Bad.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: He went off the rails after his parents were killed by an unfortunate lab accident, going so far to create a gigantic underground futuristic version of London, build a giant mobile fortress, put up a great farce, and try to blow up the real London with the machine. He attempts to justify it by saying that it's teaching the government not to disregard ordinary people since Bill Hawks managed to not only avoid responsibility for his failed time travel, but reached high office.
  • Dub Name Change: From Klaus in the Japanese version.
  • Feet-First Introduction: The animated cutscene that introduces him uses this trope.
  • From Nobody to Nightmare: Just a young kid from London living with his folks. After they died, his own rage takes hold of him and goes on to create a machine capable of mass destruction.
  • Giving Someone the Pointer Finger: Just like Layton and the others, he does this when he gets a puzzle correct.
  • Happily Adopted: During the Summation Gathering, Layton outlines Clive's biography, noting that after the deaths of his parents he was adopted by a wealthy old woman, Constance Dove, who doted on him and was much loved by him in return until her death five years later. The fortune she bequeathed to him is how he financed the whole operation.
  • Hypocrite: While the accident that killed his parents was tragic, he decides to go out of his way to make even worse destruction by attacking London with his machine.
  • I Cannot Self-Terminate: Clive tells Layton that deep down, he was hoping that the professor might be able to talk him out of his insane plan, as he was too consumed with hate to stop himself.
  • Inexplicably Identical Individuals: He is able to convincingly pull off being Luke's future self, even though the two have no real explained relation.
  • Ship Tease: A little bit with Flora; some of his lines for her have a flirty vibe, such as when he invites her to take his arm while walking so she can feel more secure. This could also possibly factor into why he kidnapped her, although it's not stated.
  • Time-Shifted Actor: He is voiced by Shun Oguri and Yuri Lowenthal as a young man and by Megumi Kubota and Lani Minella as a child.
  • Walking Spoiler: It's difficult to talk about his real personality without spoiling the time travel disaster from 10 years ago, or the fact that one of your traveling companions is the Big Bad.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Clive denies what he's doing is for revenge, insisting that it's really for justice against single-minded scientists and corrupt politicians. However, after seeing how the incident that killed his parents was swept under the rug despite the severity of it, Clive believes that only a massive act of destruction could possibly change anything; cue enough military hardware to turn London into a crater.
  • Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: After having his parents killed as an indirect result of greed and blind ambition, he makes it his mission to level London in retaliation. Even if his plot was ultimately foiled, he still managed to wipe out a few blocks' worth of the city regardless.

    Claire Folly 

Claire Folly

Voiced by: Yoshino Kimura (Japanese), Lani Minella (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Claire_Foley_2_684.png

Layton's college sweetheart who died in an accident with a Time Machine.


  • Bespectacled Cutie: A cute young woman with glasses, who was nothing but kind and supportive.
  • Brainy Brunette: Very smart and a brunette.
  • But Now I Must Go: At the end of the game, she goes back to her own time and her own death, in order to avoid disrupting the flow of time.
  • Character Catchphrase: Alongside giving Layton his iconic hat, it's through her that he began saying, "That's what a gentleman does."
  • Dude Magnet: Caught the attention of three men - Layton, Don Paolo, and Dimitri. The plot partially revolves around this fact!
  • I Want My Beloved to Be Fashionable: When Layton got the job of professor, Claire bought him a top hat as a present, saying that as a member of the academic community, he needed to look the part as a gentleman.
  • Oblivious to Love: Possibly in the case of Don Paolo. She was in a relationship with Layton, and it's stated she was aware of Dimitri's feelings for her even though she didn't return them; however, it's never made clear if she even knew who Don Paolo was, let alone that he was in love with her.
  • Undeath Always Ends: Zigzagged. First, everyone thought she was dead. The truth is that she was sent into the future, 10 years after her death, but that doesn't last, as she has to go back to the time when she died.

    Celeste Folly 

Celeste Folly

Voiced by: Yoshino Kimura (Japanese), Lani Minella (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20110219182726Claire_Foley_7448.png

Claire's younger sister who aids the heroes in Professor Layton and the Unwound Future.


  • Big Damn Heroes: She pulls the Layton team out from a tight spot while in Dimitri's research facility.
  • Doomed Protagonist: It isn't until the very end that she reveals her time is short because of The Reveal.
  • Never Got to Say Goodbye: She explains that she and Claire had been estranged when the accident occurred and that her biggest regret is how she didn't try to make amends with her sister before it was too late. This is presumably so that Layton won't question why Claire never mentioned her.
  • Save the Villain: Saves Clive, largely out of feeling responsible for the tragedy that cost him his parents.
  • Time Travel: Celeste is really a time-displaced Claire, but the effect is temporary, and she knows she will be sent back to the experiment where she was/will be killed.
  • Uncanny Family Resemblance: Everyone who knew Claire is taken aback by how much her sister looks like her. Of course, that's because they're really the same person.

    Dr. Alain Stahngun (Spoiler Character) 

Dimitri Allen/Dr. Alain Stahngun

Voiced by: Takaya Kamikawa (Japanese), Liam O'Brien (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stahngun.png

A mysterious scientist who invents the time machine and appears to be responsible for the disappearance of Bill Hawks. He's a Walking Spoiler, so all entries for this character are unmarked.


  • Affably Evil: Despite being Layton's enemy, he is relatively cordial toward him.
  • All Love Is Unrequited: He loved Claire, but she didn't return his feelings.
  • The Atoner: Layton describes his schemes out of "a twisted form of atonement" for feeling responsible for Claire's death.
  • Disc-One Final Boss: Is usurped by Clive before the finale.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Was completely shocked when Clive revealed his ulterior motives to destroy London with a superweapon, which Dimitri had no clue about.
  • Love Makes You Evil: He doesn't take Claire's death well, and everything he does in the game - kidnapping and tricking other scientists, impersonating Layton - is done out of love for her.
  • Mad Scientist: He's not insane, but he's pretty amoral and knows it.
  • Punny Name: Stahngun is a pun on "stun-gun", which makes sense as it's a cover for his real name, Dimitri.
  • Thou Shalt Not Kill: Layton realizes that he's bluffing when he claims that the room they're in is rigged with explosives, noting that while he has used many immoral tactics in the pursuit of the plan, he would never actually kill anyone.
  • Unfinished, Untested, Used Anyway: Tried to stop Bill from going through with the time machine test for his corporate sponsors, but doesn't get there in time.
  • Unwitting Pawn: Is played like a fiddle by Clive.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: All he wants is to save Claire, but later he does admit some of his actions may have been done out of pride as well.

    Bill Hawks 

Bill Hawks

Voiced by: Akihiko Ishizumi (Japanese), Christopher Miller (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/billhawks.png

The Prime Minister of Great Britain.


  • Asshole Victim: After realizing all of the atrocities he knowingly caused, is it really hard to feel sympathy for him when he's taken hostage?
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: He appears as a fairly normal prime minister in the prologue (Rich Bitch wife notwithstanding), but his role in the game's backstory reveals how much of an asshole he really is.
  • Corrupt Politician: A prime example of what happens when corruption and money are the prime motivations for political chaos.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: His actions inadvertently turn Dimitri and Clive into what they are in the story proper.
  • Hate Sink: He's by far the most despicable character in the story, especially when you consider that he's the primary cause of the tragedy that set the story in motion.
  • Karma Houdini: Causes the incident that kills Claire, Clive's parents, and several others out of greed; uses the money to climb the political ladder and become Prime Minister; uses his influence to cover up the details of the initial incident which indirectly leads to Layton getting assaulted while investigating; and in the end all he gets is an indirect remark from Chelmey. No doubt there are many players that wish they could have stuffed him back in that reactor. However, Chelmey, the most respected police officer in London (who is also keen on justice) knows about the secret and doesn't seem afraid to bring it up. At the minimum, Bill won't be re-elected.
  • The Sociopath: Let's see... Causing the time traveling experiment explosion which caused ten innocent people's deaths including his colleague and Layton's girlfriend, Clare and Clive's parents just to maintain his greed, showing no remorse and having Clive arrested despite all the things he caused! such a contemptful monster to think of.

Characters in Professor Layton and the Last Specter

    Rosa Grimes 

Rosa Grimes

Voiced by: Ako Mayama (Japanese), Lani Minella (English)

Layton's maid.


  • Kindly Housekeeper: She's not seen too often, but when she is, it's clear that she and Layton like and respect each other.

    Clark Triton 

Clark Triton

Voiced by: Keisuke Fuji (Japanese), Liam O'Brien (English)

Luke's father and Misthallery's Mayor. He was a fellow archaeologist along with Layton in the past, also having been mentioned as a previous assistant to Dr Schrader.


    Brenda Triton 

Brenda Triton

Luke's mother.


  • Happily Married: To Clark.
  • Missing Mom: Clark states that she's left the city for quite some time. Except she hasn't; she's been trapped under the wine cellar.

    Arianna Barde 

Arianna Barde

Voiced by: Nao Minamisawa (Japanese), Lani Minella (English)

Luke's Love Interest.


    Tony Barde 

Tony Barde

Voiced by: Yumiko Kobayashi (Japanese), Lani Minella (English)

Arianna's younger brother.


  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: His profile on the official website for this game states that he's very disrespectful of others when Arianna isn't around.
  • Big Brother Instinct: Inverted. Even though he's the younger sibling he won't stand for anyone talking smack about his sister and even takes it upon himself to feed them after their servants were let go following their father's death.
  • Master of Disguise: Perhaps not on the same scale as Don Paolo or Descole, but he's good enough to fool most people. He dresses up as Seamus, an elderly gardener.

    Levin Jakes 

Levin Jakes

Chief of Police of Misthallery.


    Black Raven 

Black Raven

The mysterious leader of the Black Market.


  • Collective Identity: Black Raven is actually children playing dress-up.
  • Sweet Tooth: How Layton was able to deduce the identity of Black Raven; it's proof that the members who comprise him are children, since only they can buy the candy he saw.

     Loosha (Spoiler Character) 

A prehistoric Aquatic dinosoaur who hails from the Golden Garden, she is summoned by the flute and defends against Descole's Machines who seek to destroy the town. Mistaken to be the specter by Jakes and his men, which she isn't.—-

  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: Implied whenever her and the machine fight together, forming the illusion of a specter destroying the town
  • Cute Monster: Obviously.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Uses the last of her strength to drain the lake, thus revealing the golden garden to Layton and co. This kills her in the process, leaving her body to sink in the deep abyssal lake of the Garden itself.

  • Sea Monster: Of the adorable kind. After all, she's a giant sea lion...

Characters in Professor Layton and the Miracle Mask

    Randall Ascot (Spoiler Character) 

Randall Ascot

Voiced by: Yūsuke Yamamoto (Japanese), Yuri Lowenthal (English), Kanako Toujou (Japanese - Child)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/randallascot.png
"Every puzzle has an answer."

An optimistic, adventurer rich kid who befriended Layton during his teen years and is the one who got Layton into archaeology. He's also the childhood friend of Angela and Henry. In Professor Layton and the Miracle Mask, it is shown that he fell into a hole when teen!Layton went with him into a temple to investigate the Mask of Chaos. He's a Walking Spoiler, so all entries for this character are unmarked.


  • Adventurer Archaeologist: Well, he was aspiring to be one. However, in the Professor Layton and the Miracle Mask credits, it seems like he's into archaeology again.
  • Arranged Marriage: Was meant to marry Angela (whom he truly loved despite his over-fascination with Akbadain) before he fell in the last trap.
  • Big Brother Mentor: To Layton.
  • Character Catchphrase: "Every puzzle has an answer." It became a Borrowed Catchphrase that Layton used himself.
  • Crazy Jealous Guy: His motive for all the trouble he causes was partially because of his jealousy over Henry marrying Angela, and partially because he felt Henry betrayed every aspect of his life.
  • Dub Name Change: From Lando Ascad to Randall Ascot.
  • Evil Laugh: As the Masked Gentleman, he's prone to doing this.
  • Evil Redhead: Became one after time skip.
  • Expy: Of Hipsters in general as far as appearance goes (Or on a similar note Eridan: Big glasses, thigh pants, purple all over, a scarf...) Well, he did go underground.
  • Fiery Redhead: He's outgoing, enthusiastic and talkative in comparison with the more quiet and calm Layton.
  • Face–Heel Turn: Eighteen years ago, he was Layton, Angela, and Henry's best friend - but all of that changed after he washed away and lost his memories, only for Jean Descole to find him and manipulate his emotions for his own ends.
    • Heel–Face Turn: Once Henry and Angela reveal that they stayed true friends to him, he's able to snap back to his old self.
  • Love Makes You Evil: Thinking Henry stole Angela from him did not help his sanity.
  • Mask of Power: He found the Mask of Chaos, which led him to the Akbadain ruins.
  • Meaningful Name: Well, he certainly wears an ascot (English only obviously).
  • My God, What Have I Done?: When he realizes that Henry never betrayed him, to the point at which he becomes suicidal.
  • No Sense of Personal Space: Maybe not in-game, but for the viewers...
  • Purely Aesthetic Glasses: His in-game profile reveals that he has excellent eyesight and only wears them to imitate a famous archaeologist.
  • Retirony: He was planning to propose to Angela after the expedition.
  • Revenge Before Reason: If he'd talked to Angela or Henry before starting all of this, things would have turned out very differently. Unfortunately, he was manipulated by Jean Descole to cloud his mind.
  • Rich People: He was the richest man of the village, which was also a requirement to marry Angela, whom he truly loved despite being an Arranged Marriage.
  • Unwitting Pawn: To Descole, who took advantage of his amnesia to trick him into becoming the Masked Gentleman.
  • Walking Spoiler: Referring to him by name reveals that Randall actually didn't die in the backstory, being the true identity of the Masked Gentleman. Though, the amount of buildup they give the character in his backstory, it's almost impossible not to see that twist coming.
  • We Used to Be Friends: One-side to all his friends: partially with Layton, and more so to Angela, but most of all to Henry, whom he feels betrayed him. The feeling is not mutual at all.

    Angela Ledore 

Angela Ledore

Voiced by: Michiko Kichise (Japanese), Laura Bailey (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/SharonLeidle_228.jpg
Hello again, Hershel

Randall and Layton's old friend (though her relationship with the last one is not clear). She is described as a beautiful young girl, enthusiastic and sophisticated. In the present, she is Henry's wife.


  • Arranged Marriage: Was meant to marry the richest guy in Stansbury by her parents. Randall was the one whom she truly loved, but when he disappeared, Dalston was the second option. She ends up marrying Henry who became the richest person. However, it was a convenience marriage just so that her parents would stop bothering her, and she never stopped believing that Randall was still alive somewhere.
  • Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: She being the blonde, Randall being the redhead and Layton being the brunette.
  • Break the Cutie: Randall's disappearance really got her depressed.
  • Childhood Friend Romance: In the credits, it's made clear that Randall was quite fond of her even when they were children.
  • Dub Name Change: From Sharoa to Angela.
  • Dull Eyes of Unhappiness: She isn't the happiest looking woman around.
  • Everyone Loves Blondes: Even her brief character bio describes her as being incredibly beautiful.
  • Foreshadowing: Midway through the story, talking to her at her home shows that she's not wearing her pearl necklace, despite the fact it's a very important Tragic Keepsake she never puts away. This is a clue that you're not talking to the real Angela.
  • Girl in the Tower: The Masked Gentleman steals her away at one point in the game, and the others have to rescue her.
  • Guest-Star Party Member: She stars in the final puzzle, though this becomes averted when it turns out Descole was disguising as herself long before the puzzle is found.
  • Memento MacGuffin: Her pearl necklace turns out to be this... or, rather, the pendant she has attached to it on the reverse side to what she wears. It's a charm Randall gave to her to promise her he would be careful when he embarked on his archaeological quest with Layton. He never came back, and Angela kept it with her as a reminder of him always.
  • Undying Loyalty: To Randall (although he doesn't realize it until it's almost too late).

    Henry Ledore 

Henry Ledore

Voiced by: Seki Tomokazu (Japanese), Matthew Mercer (English), Fujiko Takimoto (Japanese - Child)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Henryleidle_2635.png

One of Randall's servants and his childhood friend. After Randall's disappearance he got rich and now he is one of the most influential people of Monte d'Or, a popular Las-Vegas-like casino city, with Angela as his wife.


  • Death Glare: He is fond of this.
  • Dull Eyes of Unhappiness: A few times; once when he follows teenage Angela and Layton, and again when he discovers Randall has "died".
  • Orphan's Plot Trinket: He is an orphan, and the robot that was given to him by Randall certainly counts as this. It is a memento of the day when he first became friends with Randall; a friendship which Henry has cherished for his entire life, as he felt Randall was one of the only people who treated him like a person and not a nuisance.
  • Rags to Riches: From Randall's servant to getting the Ascot estate.
  • Rich People: In order to marry Angela he had to be rich.
  • Sugar-and-Ice Personality: Can be much sweeter and loyal than he appears.
  • Undying Loyalty: To Randall (although he doesn't realise it until it's almost too late).
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: Not as extreme as some of the more spoileriffic examples, but he has changed a great deal from the polite and subservient boy he used to be, and initially seems cold to Hershel.

    The Masked Gentleman 

The Masked Gentleman

Voiced by: Yūsuke Yamamoto (Japanese), Yuri Lowenthal (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/The_Super_Fabulous_Masked_Gentleman_730.png
Welcome, Ladies and Gentlemen...

The antagonist of Professor Layton and the Miracle Mask, this mysterious masked gentleman has been terrorizing the city of Monte d'Or and is the reason why Layton and Luke are called to the city. He appears to possess magical powers bestowed to him by his mask, which he apparently plans to use to destroy Monte d'Or.


    Alphonse Dalston 

Alphonse Dalston

Voiced by: Binbin Takaoka (Japanese), Troy Baker (English)


  • Dub Name Change: From Alford Dalston, in Japanese.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Dalston has a reputation for being standoffish and rude, but he genuinely cares about the people of Monte D'Or. Layton also reveals that Dalston has a particularly large soft spot for animals. Once Layton clears Dalston's name, Dalston genuinely thanks him and offers to help him in the investigation in any way. The player can also choose to have Layton and Dalston sit down and catch up, which ends with Dalston giving Layton a scale model of his mansion. Brusque though he may be, Dalston is a good man deep down.
  • Pet the Dog: Close to the circus tiger.
  • Red Herring: The first suspect for being the Masked Gentleman, and the most easily ruled out, especially because he couldn't fit into the costume.

    Detective Bloom 

Detective Inspector Leonard Bloom

Voiced by: Yuki Kaji (Japanese)

A detective who is sent over from London to help with the Masked Gentleman Case, and later, deals with the robbery of the museum.


Characters in Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy

    Aurora 

Aurora

Voiced by: Shiori Katsuna (Japanese), Jo Wyatt (English)

A mysterious girl found sealed within a giant block of ice beneath the town of Froenburg. Though largely amnesiac, she claims to be the final survivor of the Azran and joins Layton on a trip around the world to recover her memories and uncover the Azran's legacy.


  • Because You Were Nice to Me: Layton, Luke, Emmy and Sycamore treat Aurora kindly throughout their adventures to find the Eggs. This kindness is repaid when Layton, Emmy, Descole, Luke and Bronev sacrifice their lives to deactivate the Azran Sanctuary. Aurora convinces the Azran Light that humans aren't all bad and that they could work together for a brighter future, allowing Layton and co. to be brought back to life.
  • Disappears into Light: Fades away into motes of light as the Azran Sanctuary crumbles.
  • Driven to Suicide: After remembering what the Azran Legacy is, she almost jumps off the roof of the Obsidian Tower with the key. Thankfully, Layton stops her.
  • Dub Name Change: From Aria, in Japanese.
  • Fish out of Temporal Water: She has a lot of catching up to be done regarding most things in the world, like animals, fashion sense and everyday items.
  • Human Popsicle: She's been trapped in ice for millions of years...
  • Human Sacrifice: She must be sacrificed by being stabbed through the heart to reveal the Azran legacy but it turned out it was to see if humanity is worth saving.
  • Last of Her Kind: The last Azran... Golem actually.
  • MacGuffin Super-Person: Targent and Professor Layton's group spend a few hours of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy chasing after her. Given that she's the last of the Azran and the key to finding the eponymous Azran Legacy, it makes sense that everyone is trying to find her. The fact that she's actually a golem required to activate the Azran Sanctuary and the killer golems within isn't revealed until the climax.
  • The Makeover: Emmy helps her buy more casual clothes in London to help her get around easier.
  • Pink Means Feminine: Her Azran robes are mostly pink and she has a bracelet with a pink gemstone. She also gets a pink sweater later as part of her disguise.
  • Replacement Goldfish: She is a prequel to Flora in the last game which takes place before Professor Layton and the Curious Village. Although technically Flora is a This chronologically for the professor and Luke.
  • Robot Girl: More like a human-like golem.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Flora and Aurora are MacGuffin Girl mysterious young girls, complete with very similar heights, facial features and even hairstyles and colour schemes.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: The Girly Girl to Emmy's Tomboy.

    Desmond Sycamore 

Desmond Sycamore

Voiced by: Atsuro Watabe (JA)

A well-known archaeologist who calls upon Layton to investigate Aurora's case. Once she's revived, he provides Layton with access to his personal airship for use to travel around the world and joins them on their journey.


  • Beware the Nice Ones: If you mention Targent around him, he will quickly get angry which is understandable because in his childhood, Targent abducted his parents and may be implied to be responsible for his wife and daughter's deaths, which made him create his alter ego denoting his vengeful personality as Jean Descole.
  • Cannot Tell a Joke: As demonstrated in the group's travels to Phong Gi.
  • Doting Parent: Occasionally has shades of this towards Aurora, even becoming...
  • Dub Name Change: From Foster Sahaiman in Japanese.
  • Living a Double Life: Desmond Sycamore is actually an alter ego and the more public identity of Jean Descole. It is also implied that he lived under this alias for some time in his attempts to have a normal life with hope and not revenge.
  • Nice Guy: Like Layton, Sycamore is your all-around gentleman who's quite pleasant to be around with which make his alter ego as Jean Descole, Layton's arch-rival all the more unbelievable.
  • Older Than He Looks: He looks like he could a recent graduate but is actually older than Layton, making him somewhere from his late thirties to early forties.
  • Outliving One's Offspring: He mentions in passing that his daughter would be about the same age as one villager if she were still alive.
  • Purely Aesthetic Glasses: The guidebook mentions that his glasses are for show.
  • Significant Double Casting: He and Jean Descole are both voiced by Atsuro Watabe, which becomes significant when it turns out that they're one and the same.
  • Team Dad: Alongside Layton, dispensing helpful advice to Aurora and Luke — and even teaming up with Layton to warn a young lad in Froenborg against foolishly trying to jump onto some ice.
  • Two Aliases, One Character: He and Jean Descole are the same person.

    Leon Bronev (Spoiler Character) 

Leon Bronev

Voiced by: Masachika Ichimura (JA), Timothy Watson (English)

A mysterious man who knows both Layton and Descole; little is known about him. He is the commander of Targent, a shadowy organization trying to obtain the Azran Legacies. He's a Walking Spoiler, so all entries for this character are unmarked.


  • Authority Equals Asskicking: Not only is Bronev the leader of Targent, he is also a very capable fighter, as seen at the end of Miracle Mask when Descole tries to take him down, only for Bronev to dodge Descole's punch and knee him in the ribs for his trouble.
  • Badass Army: The Targent is this, feilding a wide variety of Tanks, Armored Vehicles, and even Helicopters.
  • Bad Boss: More than willing to sacrifice his own men if it means reaching his goal. In fact, it's precisely what he did as he went through the Azran Sanctuary, to the point that he, Emmy, Robin, and Macaw are among the very few surviving members by the end of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy.
  • Beard of Evil: Notably clean-shaven in flashbacks to before he became boss of Targent.
  • Big Bad: Of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy, and a bit of Arc Welding makes him this for the entire prequel trilogy.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: He makes a pair of appearances late in Professor Layton and the Miracle Mask, but doesn't directly interact with Layton until Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy.
  • Even Evil Can Be Loved: Although Bronev himself doesn't comment on their relationship, Emmy- or rather, Emmeline- does seem to care a lot about him. So much so that all she wants is for him to finish everything so he can return to being the kind person she remembers him as, and hopes the professor can also help finally bring him to his senses. She believes that despite his all-consuming obsession with the Azran, he's truly a good person.
  • Dub Name Change: From Broneph Rainel.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Bronev isn't above speaking like a polite gentleman like Layton depending on the situation but we've already been introduced to him as a ruthless and despicable megalomaniac with fewer regards for his subordinate's wellbeing, and willing to use pragmatic methods to get what he wants.
  • Love Makes You Evil: He's obsessed with the Azran Legacies because he and his wife truly believed they could be used to help the world, and her dying wish was that he find them no matter what.
  • Luke, I Am Your Father: He's Layton and Descole's father, though Layton doesn't find it out from him.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: At the end of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy, when he unwittingly unleashes a doomsday device in his thirst for the Azrans' power. He ends up becoming shell-shocked for much of the climax.
  • Parental Substitute: He took Emmy in and taught her all she knows, so she calls him "Uncle Leon" out of endearment and works for Targent. It's never outright stated if they are actually family.
  • Parents as People: In Layton and Descole's childhood flashback, he was a loving father and husband but as a archaeologist, it's implied that he put priority with studying the Azran civilization over his family which came to bite him horrifically when Targent appeared and abducted him and his wife, Rachel leaving the two boys orphaned.
  • Redemption Equals Death: Sort of. He sacrifices himself in Aurora's stead to stop the Azran doomsday device, and is brought back to life along with Descole and Layton's crew by Aurora's final plea to the Azran.
  • Sinister Shades: His sunglasses only make him appear more suspicious. After taking them off, he looks less sinister and more like a broken man.
  • Tragic Villain: Bronev, for all of his less than moral actions, is actually an idealistic person who wants to solve the Azran Legacy for the good of mankind and was the good husband and father of Descole and Layton before Targent abducted him and his wife, Rachel. Seeing her passed away from an illness while in captivity along with his unstoppable obsession with the Azran civilization made him lose his humanity which lasts until the end of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy when he finally comes to his senses and expresses remorse for the events he caused.
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: Near the end of Professor Layton and the Azran Legacy, after realizing his cruel actions activates the Weapon of Mass Destruction and revealing to be the long-lost father of Descole and Layton, we are treated to a flashback of him as a child who found an ancient artifact one day by himself and became an archaeologist like his son and Layton. After he's kidnapped by Targent and his wife dies while they're in captivity, his obsession with finding the Azran legacy turns him into a twisted and selfish man.
  • Walking Spoiler: He is not only the Big Bad, but Layton and Descole's father, Emmy's Honorary Uncle and boss, and a somewhat more sympathetic character than he initially seems.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Despite going from captured archaeologist to the leader of Targent, and fully embracing ruthlessness along the way, he truly believed that the Azran Legacy was a great gift that would benefit all of mankind. When he finally realizes the truth, in the end, he is devastated.
  • Would Hit a Girl: Even after finding out that Aurora needed to be sacrificed to activate the Azran Sanctuary, he's still willing to go through with it. He only pauses briefly before stabbing Aurora through the heart. She doesn't die from the wound, being a golem, but at the time, nobody knew that. To Layton and co., it looked like Bronev had just casually murdered a young girl.

    Robin and Macaw 

Robin and Macaw

A pair of Targent agents who cross paths with the professor many times over the course of the game. Macaw is the more serious and competent of the two, while Robin is enthusiastic but prone to running off on wild goose chases.


Characters in Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva

    Janice Quatlane 

Janice Quatlane

Voiced by: Nana Mizuki (Japanese), Emma Tate (English)

A former student of Professor Layton's who now works as an opera singer. She sends the Professor a letter and some tickets, asking him to come to see her perform in The Eternal Kingdom so he can help her solve a perplexing mystery.


  • Grand Theft Me: Is in the middle of one for her friend, Melina, but she consents to it.
  • Idol Singer: Opera singer actually, which is why she has the lead part.
  • Red Is Heroic: She is heroic and has red hair.
  • Spell My Name With An S: "Jenis" in the Japanese version. Her last name is often speculated by fans to be a misromanization of "quatrain".
  • Undying Loyalty: She willingly lets her best friend Melina use her body to go on living after Melina dies.

    Oswald Whistler 

Oswald Whistler

Voiced by: Iemasa Kayumi (Japanese), Robbie Stevens (English)

The composer of the opera The Eternal Kingdom.


  • Anti-Villain: Whistler isn't an evil guy. All he really wants is to bring Melina Back from the Dead.
  • Doting Parent: To the point where he's a...
  • Knight Templar Parent: For his daughter Melina.
  • Parental Neglect: Strangely enough, he isn't too concerned with the seven-year-old Melina whenever she runs off. Whenever anyone asks about her, he brushes off their inquiries. Though that may have to do with the fact that the little girl isn't really his daughter.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He's willing to go to any lengths to bring back his daughter.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Or rather, would allow a child to be kidnapped and used as a potential body for his dead daughter.

    Melina Whistler 

Melina Whistler

Voiced by: Fumiko Orikasa (Japanese)

Oswald's daughter, and Janice's best friend.


  • Daddy's Girl: The two were very close while Melina was growing up.
  • Dead to Begin With: Oswald's opera is dedicated in her memory. But then there's her being able to possess Janice for the whole movie.

    Child Melina (Spoiler Character) 

Child Melina

Voiced by: Sumire Morohoshi (Japanese), Claire Morgan (English)

Oswald's adopted daughter, whom he calls "Melina" out of affection. It's Janice's encounter with her that kicks off the plot of the movie. She's a Walking Spoiler, so all entries for this character are unmarked.


  • Back from the Dead: Openly claims that she is Melina brought back to life. But that's a result of the girl being Brainwashed and Crazy.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: As a result of part of the real Melina's memories inside her mind, she was made to believe that she was Melina brought back to life. When Layton finally confronts her about it, the girl's real personality, Nina, starts Fighting from the Inside.
  • Creepy Child: Many of her interactions with other characters paint her as shy at best, and hostile at worst. She's also very cryptic. Though this doesn't seem to be her true personality and rather a result of two identities fighting each other for control.
  • I Know Your True Name: Emily reveals that her name is actually "Nina", a girl who went missing prior to the events of the story.
  • Walking Spoiler: Her involvement in the plot answers a lot of the questions this movie has.

    Amelia Ruth 

Amelia Ruth

Voiced by: Megumi Toyoguchi (Japanese), Claire Morgan (English)

One of the contestants in the game for eternal life. An excellent chess player, though only in her teens; she is chosen by Whistler to receive a free ticket to the opera.


  • Smart People Play Chess: See Teen Genius below.
  • Sugar-and-Ice Personality: She doesn't show much emotion, but she's in the game to win the Elixir of Life for her dying grandfather and thus is among the few game contestants who came for unselfish reasons.
  • Teen Genius: She's a British chess champion and is shown to be almost as intelligent as Layton.

    Celia Raidley 

Celia Raidley

Voiced by: Kikuko Inoue (Japanese), Sarah Hadland (English)

A wealthy socialite who wants eternal life to be young and beautiful forever.
  • Gold Digger: Strongly implied as one character mentions her having been married to a powerful businessman who passed away shortly before the start of the story.
  • Smug Snake: Decides to follow Layton's alternate solution to Puzzle 004 thinking she can get ahead by stealing answers And winds up at the bottom of a pit.
  • Vain Sorceress: She only wants eternal life for the sake of being beautiful forever.

    Pierre Starbuck 

Pierre Starbuck

Voiced by: Kouichi Yamadera (Japanese), Robbie Stevens (English)

A famous footballer called "The Man with the Golden Left Leg" whose career is cut short after he injured his knee. He wants eternal life so that he would have enough time to heal and resume his stardom.


  • Jerkass: Shoves Layton out of the way of an alternate door the latter decides to take to answer Puzzle 004 and falls down a trapdoor for his trouble.
  • Jerk Jock: He was a famous soccer player before his accident.


A gentleman would always make sure to return to the main Professor Layton page before perusing the rest of the wiki.

Alternative Title(s): Professor Layton And The Diabolical Box, Professor Layton And The Curious Village, Professor Layton And The Unwound Future, Professor Layton And The Last Specter, Professor Layton And The Eternal Diva, Professor Layton And The Miracle Mask, Professor Layton And The Azran Legacy

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