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Main Cast

    Ai Ohto 

Ai Ohto

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ai_fullbody.png
Voiced by: Kanata Aikawa (Japanese), Mikaela Krantz (English)

The main protagonist of the story. A self-described shut-in who doesn't go to school due to bullying for her heterochromia and past trauma.


  • All of the Other Reindeer: She had no friends at her school due to her classmates bullying her for her heterochromia.
  • Alternate Self: Encounters a version of herself that never met Koito, and did end up committing suicide by drowning herself in Episode 12. She ends up sacrificing her eye to protect the real Ai from having her eye gouged out by Kirara.
  • Ambiguously Bi: She openly compliments the girls she interacts with and gushes about their good looks. But in episode 4 she and Momoe gush about how attractive Adam's Apples are.
  • Astonishingly Appropriate Appearance: When she wears her hoodie up, her head resembles an egg, not to mention that the golden color brings to mind an egg yolk.
  • Badass Adorable: She’s (usually) a cute and cheerful girl, who can and will fight Dream Killers with the other girls.
  • Bystander Syndrome: Ai used to turn a blind eye towards bullying, as she backed out of filming Koito's bullies because she was afraid, and as she laments, in general she didn't do anything to stop Koito's mistreatment. She grows out of this, and by episode 2 she declares that she's through with "pretending not to see".
  • Carry a Big Stick: Her primary weapon is an enlarged 4-color ballpoint pen that can be used as a battle club.
  • Character Catchphrase: "NOW, I'M REALLY ANGRY!"
  • Cheerful Child: When not being tormented by bullies or her own past trauma, Ai is an upbeat, sunny, and friendly person.
  • Disappeared Dad: It's revealed in Episode 6 that her father divorced from her mother. However, in Episode 7 she reveals that she meets with him once a month, downplaying this trope.
  • Driven to Suicide: In episode 12, Ai meets her Alternate Self who did commit suicide by drowning herself in the school's pool, as this version never met Koito, with the same episode possibly implying that Koito pulled the main!Ai out of the pool when she tried it.
  • Easily Forgiven: In spite of Ai failing to record Koito being bullied out of fear for her own safety, her friend doesn't hold it against her and assures her that it's okay.
  • Eye Scream: Ai's Alternate Self pulls a Heroic Sacrifice to save her, getting her blue eye gouged out by Kirara in the process.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Sanguine. Although she's become quite an introvert due to her trauma, she's otherwise pretty cheerful and is very kind, forgiving and friendly, seeing the best in people.
  • I Let Gwen Stacy Die:
    • Ai's heroism is motivated by her guilt over Koito committing suicide, which Ai feels she could have prevented if she hadn't turned a blind eye to her troubles.
    • In the finale, Neiru is trapped in the Dream Land after falling for the temptation of death. The night after Ai learns about this, she receives a phone call from Neiru, but she decides not to pick up and even throws her phone over the balcony. The next day she is overridden with guilt over not going back to the Dream Land to rescue her.
  • I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: Episode 12 explicitly reveals that Ai had a crush on Mr. Sawaki but decides to get over it by wishing her mother well in her relationship with him.
  • Idiot Hair: She has a long ahoge that swoops down on the left. And, while she's not an idiot, she's innocent and rather naive.
  • The Ingenue: Ai appears to be more "innocent" than the other characters regarding certain matters; in episode 3, while Ai and Neiru are having a texting conversation over their cell phones, Neiru suggests that "junior idol" could mean "bedroom stuff". Ai muses, "Like... pillow fights?" Neiru decides to answer yes.
  • In the Hood: She always wears her golden yellow hoodie.
  • It's All My Fault: Ai holds herself responsible for Koito's suicide, because Ai chose to "pretend not to see" Koito being bullied out of fear for her own safety. This is why Ai works so hard to save other "egg girls" now to possibly bring Koito back to life.
  • Heroic BSoD: After finding out the origins of Frill and her motives, she breaks down into tears and curses herself.
  • Leg Focus: Her main outfit consists of a pair of short shorts which, combined with her large yellow hoodie, draws attention to her legs. Rika Lampshades this when Ai gets indignant over her asking Neiru if she'd like to form an Idol duo yet not Ai, causing Rika to feel and compliment her legs and ask if she'd want to be a back-up dancer.
  • Let's Get Dangerous!: When pushed to her limit, she unlocks her inner rage and sets her wrath on any enemies.
    Ai: Now I'm mad!
  • Multi-Melee Master: When Ai is given another object from the "egg girls", it is converted into a weapon she can use. So far, she's used a ribbon wand as a whip and two glowsticks as twin shortswords.
  • Must Make Amends: Ai's primary motivation for helping the girls from the eggs she buys is to make it up to Koito for not helping her when she was in trouble.
  • Nice Girl: Aside from having turned a blind eye to Koito's troubles in the past (and she grows out of that), Ai is very friendly and kind to everyone, and she's forgiving to the point that in episode 4, Neiru comments that she's "hopeless", but also "lovely" that way, as the group needs someone like Ai.
  • Punny Name: Her Japanese name "Ohto Ai" sounds similar to odd eye.
  • Precocious Crush: Though Ai denies this at first, episode 12 confirms that she had a crush on Mr. Sawaki at some point, which explains her awkwardness around him and subsequent frustration when he starts dating her mother. However, she doesn't act on those feelings and even lets go of them when she wishes her mother well.
  • Sexy Flaw: Her friend Koito tells her that her heterochromia is pretty, despite her having been ostracized throughout high school for it. This helps Ai open up to her after her initially cold introduction.
  • Sucky School: Ai's Dream Land is a school as she and Koito experienced nonstop bullying and the latter committed suicide afterwards.
  • Suicide Pact: Discussed Trope: She realizes in episode 3 that, if Koito had asked Ai to die with her due to bullies, she would have. In episode 12, she almost goes through with it in the Egg World while Mr. Sawaki's Wonder Killer form urges her on with the temptation of death.
  • Tareme Eyes: Her eyes represent her kind, introverted personality, along with her heterochromia.
  • This Is for Emphasis, Bitch!: When fighting the Coach Wonder Killer.
    Ai: All right bitch, TIME FOR YOU TO DIE!

    Neiru Aonuma 

Neiru Aonuma

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/neiru_fullbody.png
Voiced by: Tomori Kusunoki (Japanese), Dawn M. Bennett (English)

A serious and quiet girl who travels to the Dream World to rescue her little sister.


  • Achey Scars: According to Neiru, the scar on her back given to her by her sister aches whenever she isn't thinking about her.
  • Ambiguously Brown: Neiru stands out as the only main character with brown skin.
  • Artificial Human: Neiru is actually an AI built by Kotobuki in Airu's image, and Airu attempted to kill her out of jealousy. Whether or not her artificial insemination story is true or if her physical form was made through other methods is not made clear.
  • Become a Real Boy: Neiru is actually an AI built by Kotobuki, and she decides to join Frill at the end when Frill promises to grant her deepest wish: to become human.
  • Bolivian Army Ending: The last Ai and Rika see of Neiru is her facing off against all three of Frill's agents, and Frill herself offer her a deal to become Human due to both being A.I.s.
  • Brutal Honesty: She's very direct and blunt when speaking to others. Especially when it comes to Rika's shenanigans.
  • BFS Her stationary compass, in addition to being a gun, can also transform into a massive sword over twice as large as she is.
  • Character Catchphrase: "I'm going to blow your mind."
  • Conveniently an Orphan: In Episode 7, she confesses to Momoe that she never knew her parents. She considers it a good thing as it saved her the trouble of dealing with potential Family Drama. In episode 9, she explains that she was born from artificial insemination through members from the Japan Plati. The special reveals she has no parents, being an Artificial Human created by Kotobuki.
  • Cold Sniper: Very Stoic, and her weapon is a stationary compass that can turn into either a short-ranged rifle or a long-distance Sniper Rifle.
  • Deal with the Devil: Neiru stays with Frill in the Dream Land when Frill promises to help find a way for them to be human, but she also partially does it to keep Ai and the others safe. She fades out of existence after doing so, so whether or not Frill kept up her end of the bargin is not shown.
  • Defrosting Ice Queen: She starts to become more expressive and cheerful after befriending Ai and the other girls. Episode 5 has Momoe mention that sometimes people end up enjoying things they didn't mean to, which has Neiru pause and, after hearing Ai cheer in the background, to admit that it may be so.
  • Delicate and Sickly: At the start of the series, she's hospitalized with weakened muscles and undergoing physical therapy. Her battle experiences in the dream world help her body grow stronger, and eventually, she demonstrates flawless athleticism to her skeptical therapist and receives an early discharge from the hospital.
  • Devil's Advocate: Acts as this in regards to the other girls' discussion on whether Shuichiro is actually a Nice Guy who genuinely wants to help Ai or a Bitch in Sheep's Clothing who drove Koito to suicide and wants to get at Ai. She pitches in on Rika's arguments for the latter interpretation, but will also mention alternative solutions when there's no argument for them, such as when she suggests, citing Occam's Razor, that instead of Ai being upset at the prospect of him and her mom dating because she suspects him of being involved in Koito's death, Ai's actually upset because she likes him herself. This turns out to be correct.
  • Emotionless Girl: She maintains a serious and expressionless personality in almost all of her screentime.
  • Fearless Fool: She's considered to be this on account of how many Wonder Eggs she buys and how frequently she's hospitalized after ongoing missions. She is notably the only one in the end still actively saving Maidens despite the threat Frill and her friends pose to her.
  • For Your Own Good: She goes through with pulling the plug on Kotobuki's life support hoping to spare her friend from being experimented on by scientists.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Melancholic. She's quite The Stoic and is rather aloof and skeptical, yet she's genuinely kind actually.
  • Good Scars, Evil Scars: Episode 5 reveals that Neiru has a massive scar on her back as a result of her sister stabbing her.
  • Goth: Her gray dress brings to mind Gothic Puritan fashion.
  • Grade-School C.E.O.: Episode 4 reveals that not only is she wealthy, but she's the President of her own company in its own massive office building. It's suggested, but not outright stated that she has some awareness of the company's connections with the Accas.
  • Heroic BSoD: When her fellow Teen Genius and best friend Kotobuki Awano asks her to pull her plug and end her life, though Neiru is usually The Stoic and is serious most of the time, this is too much for her to take and she breaks down crying.
  • I Let Gwen Stacy Die: Neiru briefly mentions that the person she wants to save is her little sister, and she remarks, "I let her die." Episode 5, however, reveals that Neiru doesn't really want to bring her sister back to life on account of her sister trying to kill her, but thinking about her sister is the only way to keep her scar from hurting.
  • Informed Attractiveness: Ai's first reaction when seeing her is to gasp in amazement, before loudly proclaiming that she had an amazing figure while blushing. Her figure however doesn't appear that much different from Ai and the other girls.
  • Innocently Insensitive: Neiru and Rika both mistake Momoe for a boy when they first meet her, completely unaware that it would upset her as badly as it did.
    • She considers this to be a flaw in Episode 7 as her stating what is correct and blunt often causes emotional pain in others.
  • Letting Her Hair Down: She doesn't braid her hair and lets it loose in the last episodes, showing how she's become more spirited after befriending the girls.
  • Locked Out of the Loop: Averted. Unlike her friends, Neiru is already informed about the dynamics of the Dream World system and frequently communicates with Acca and Ura-Acca about their motivations.
  • Not Afraid to Die: The administrators deduce that Neiru is so fearless because she doesn't care if she were to die in the Dream World as long as she can be reunited with her sister.
  • Not So Stoic: Despite her serious demeanor, she's just as capable of losing her cool. From tickle sessions to being reunited with her fellow Teen Genius friend.
  • Phone Call from the Dead: In the final episode, shortly before Neiru dies in the Dream Land, she calls Ai. However, Ai not only decides not to pick up, but she throws her phone out of her apartment balcony.
  • Teen Genius: Neiru is a member of the Japanese branch of Plati.
  • Tomato Surprise: Kotobuki reveals to Ai and Rika that Neiru is actually an AI built in Airu's likeness, explaining that Ai had met Airu earlier as well as why Airu dislikes Neiru.
  • Urban Ruins: Neiru's Dream Land is a city bridge that's often on fire or highly damaged. It's also the place where her sister ran off to commit suicide.
  • When She Smiles: She gives a small smile after Ai befriends her in Episode 2.

    Rika Kawai 

Rika Kawai

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rika_fullbody.png
Voiced by: Shuka Saito (Japanese), Anairis Quiñones (English)

A former junior idol with a carefree and puzzling personality.


  • Badass in Distress:
    • At the end of Episode 3, she's turned to stone by the fangirls' Wonder Killer.
    • A more severe case occurs in Episode 7, where she's almost killed by the Wonder Killer she's fighting after being talked into it by the Maiden she's trying to protect.
  • Bring My Brown Pants: When Rika is attacked by Dot, she's so scared that Dot points out that she peed herself.
  • Byronic Heroine: Despite her cheerful, mischievous and carefree attitude, Rika carries a past error on her shoulders and inflicted Self-Harm on herself. She also comes across as callous, self-absorbed and rude, but deep down she's a good person and is more selfless than she looks.
  • Casting Gag: Rika used to be part of a junior idol group whose popularity dwindled over time. Her voice actress Shuka Saito's first major role was You Watanabe from Love Live! Sunshine!!, which focuses on an idol group who's trying to make it big despite having a lot of setbacks. She's also a member of Sunshine!!'s real life idol group Aqours, making her casting as Rika a no brainer.
  • Character Development: By episode 5, Rika has bonded enough with Ai and the other girls that she doesn't feel responsible for Chiemi's death anymore and wants all the girls to stop risking their lives every night so they can just treasure their current friendship.
  • Cruel to Be Kind:
    • After she found out that her Number 1 Fan Chiemi was shoplifting just to see her, Rika flat out tells her that she will never be friends with a "fat" loser like her; she hoped that doing so would get Chiemi to stop shoplifting. It's deconstructed because Chiemi takes these words to heart and develops an eating disorder which ultimately results in her death.
    • In episode 5, Rika speaks disparagingly of the Captured Maidens, accusing them of being "selfish" for committing suicide. This is an ugly thing to say, but Rika hopes that saying it will convince her new friends that they aren't responsible for the deaths of the Maidens, so they don't have to keep putting themselves in danger just to bring their loved ones back to life.
  • Devil's Advocate: While talking with her friends about Mr. Sawaki's involvement with Koito's suicide, she brings up some dark but possible theories regarding their relationship and why he always visits the Ohto residence.
  • Disappeared Dad: Rika's father left at some point while Rika was very young, young enough that she doesn't remember what he looks like. Her mother had promised to take her to meet him when she got into middle school, only to give her photos of five men who might be her father.
  • Dual Wielding: She uses large box cutters as her primary weapons.
  • Expository Hairstyle Change: During flashbacks to when she was an Idol Singer, her hair was pink and she wore it in Girlish Pigtails that went past her waist. In the present day, it's shoulder-length and blonde with a pink streak, making her look like more of a delinquent and showing how she's distanced herself from her former idol career.
  • Female Misogynist: Despite being a girl, she tends to make some rather misogynistic comments. However, it's made clear from her introductory episode onwards that she doesn't mean everything she says.
  • Former Child Star: She was a junior idol for a group called All-Out Kiss. They weren't as big or glamourous as common examples as their popularity dwindled over time. It's all but stated that Rika quit the idol business after hearing of the news of her former fan Chiemi killing herself.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Choleric. She's extroverted, brash, confident and sarcastic.
  • The Gadfly: She's very carefree and playful, leading to her teasing Ai and Neiru to get reactions out of them.
  • Gone Horribly Right: Rika insulted Chiemi and told her to never come see her again, hoping this would prevent Chiemi from shoplifting. It technically worked, as Chiemi never came to see Rika again, but it also leads to Chiemi dying of an eating disorder.
  • Heroic BSoD:
    • After all the emotional abuse she suffers from her mother in Episode 7, she gets convinced by the Captured Maiden she's supposed to protect to just give in to despair and is quickly Driven to Suicide. Allowing the Wonder Killer she was initially fighting to do her in instead. It takes her Loyal Animal Companion protecting her from the Wonder Killer and the words of her friends to snap her out of it.
    • Happens again in episode 11 after Dot kills Mannen and destroys her blades, becoming angry and distant as opposed to Momoe's scared, borderline suicidal Madness Mantra state. Anticipating this, the Acca block her from actually going back for revenge.
    • And once again during Episode 12 after finding out that Neiru was never real to begin with. Even contemplating suicide again. As Ai ends up drifting away from both her and Momoe due to her own BSOD, we never do find out if she actually went through with it.
  • Idol Singer: She used to be one as part of All-Out Kiss, a junior idol group.
  • I Let Gwen Stacy Die: Rika cruelly insulted Chiemi's weight because she thought this would get Chiemi to stop shoplifting to afford her gifts, but instead this led to Chiemi developing an eating disorder and dying. Out of guilt over this event, Rika wants to get Chiemi back more than anything.
  • Innocently Insensitive:
    • Upon meeting Ai, she's quick to take note of her mismatched eyes and ask if she's wearing contacts as part of a trend, not knowing they're real or that she was bullied because of them.
    • She also, along with Neiru, mistakes Momoe for a boy when they first meet her, completely unaware that it would upset her as badly as it did.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: In episode 5, Rika is very blunt about how she and the other girls don't need to feel responsible for their maidens' suicides since it was ultimately their decision; while she could have been nicer about it, Rika isn't wrong to say that they aren't responsible for their deaths.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: She generally comes off as rather callous and selfish, saying the only reason she wants to save Chiemi is that she wants someone to buy stuff for her and often pokes fun at her for reasons such as her weight. In reality, it's because she feels guilty that her attempt to Be Cruel To Be Kind led to Chiemi starving herself to death, and the reason she did this in the first place was because she didn't want her buying stuff for her if it meant stealing.
  • Loyal Animal Companion: Hers is a giant turtle named Mannen.
  • Must Make Amends: Rika's primary motivation for wanting to save Chiemi is Rika wants to make it up to Chiemi for having insulted Chiemi's weight in a misguided way of getting her to stop shoplifting, leading to Chiemi's death.
  • Nonconformist Dyed Hair: Her hair is mostly blonde with a pink streak, which shows how she's now distancing herself from her former squeaky-clean Idol Singer past.
  • Poor Communication Kills: Rika found out that her biggest fan Chiemi was shoplifting and then re-selling the stolen goods to afford the money she gave Rika. So Rika tried to get Chiemi to stop shoplifting, but unfortunately she did so by saying she would never be friends with a fat person, and as a result, Chiemi died of an eating disorder.
  • Proud Beauty: How do you remember her name? She's super cute, of course. Considering the industry she was part of as well as her past trauma, it's not hard to see why beauty is a big part of Rika's personality.
  • Revenge Before Reason: She wants to get revenge on Dot for killing Mannen, despite their previous encounter not ending well for her. Fortunately, Ura-Acca denies her access back into the dream world.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Rika was very insistent on going back to the Egg World after being locked out due to her motivations solely being based on revenge and finally gets an opportunity after Neiru disappears. However, upon learning that Neiru is an Artificial Human, she decides she is not worth risking her life to save.
  • Self-Harm: She has a history of cutting herself.
  • Skinship Grope: Rika playfully gropes Ai's thigh when complimenting her looks.
  • This Means War!: After Dot kills Mannen, Rika vows to get revenge. However, Acca and Ura-Acca no longer allow her into their garden out of concern that her blind rage will get her killed for real.
  • Throwing Your Sword Always Works: Mixed with Precision-Guided Boomerang, Rika can throw her large box cutters for long range and they can return to her hand instantly.
  • Tsurime Eyes: Her eyes represent her outgoing, carefree personality.
  • Vengeance Denied: Wants revenge for the death of Mannen at the hands of Dot, but is unable to get it due to her mission being over and the Accas denying her access to the Dream Land to carry it out.
  • We Want Our Jerk Back!: Inverted, as in this case, the jerk wants the person she insulted back. Rika insulted Chiemi's weight as a misguided means of trying to get her to stop shoplifting to spend money on her, but Chiemi developed an eating disorder as a result and died as "skin and bones". While Rika had previously insulted Chiemi's weight, she insists that the skin-and-bones girl at the funeral is "not Chiemi" at all, and even Chiemi's statue in Rika's dream world is still heavyset.

    Momoe Sawaki 

Momoe Sawaki

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/momoe_fullbody.png
Voiced by: Hinaki Yano (Japanese), Michelle Rojas (English)

A charming, androgynous-looking Nice Girl who is exceptionally popular with the girls.


  • 10-Minute Retirement: In episode 12, Momoe decides to stop going to the Egg World after Hyphen threatens to kill her and makes attempts to distance herself from the girls. Despite this, she's later shown doing Karaoke with Ai and Rika and discussing how their respective Maiden's came back with no memory of them, though she's reluctant to go back to the egg machine when Neiru starts distancing herself from them and nearly has a falling out with Rika over it.
  • Afterlife Express: Momoe's Dream Land takes place in a train station, where her friend Haruka committed suicide.
  • Ambiguously Bi: While Momoe did reject Haruka's advances, when she talks about it in episode 5, all Momoe says was that she was scared, never anything about whether or not she's actually attracted to girls. In addition, when Ai asks if Momoe hates being a Chick Magnet, she doesn't give a straight answer in response. In episode 10, on the other hand, Momoe has no problems going on a date with a boy, and she has flirtatious dialogue with Kaoru, a Maiden who's a Transgender boy, all leading up to a Big Damn Kiss that leaves her flustered. Afterwards, she simply says she wants to be with 'someone she likes' rather than specifying one gender over the other.
  • Bifauxnen: Her short hair and masculine appearance gets her frequently mistaken for a boy, and she has a lot of female admirers. This is deconstructed, since she's insecure about how masculine she looks and feels that other girls only see her as a substitute for a boy rather than a girl.
  • Because You Were Nice to Me: The reason she got along with Haruka, her maiden, is because she seemed to be the only girl to treat her as another girl instead of a substitute for a boy. This leads to her feeling somewhat betrayed when she tries to seduce her, which leads to Haruka being Driven to Suicide after Momoe leaves in a panic.
  • Break the Cutie: In episode 10, after clearing her Dream Land, Hyphen shows up and kills Panic, Momoe's Loyal Animal Companion, and force-feeds her Panic's flesh. Momoe spends the remainder of the episode traumatized and afraid to enter the Dream Land again in the case Hyphen kills her next, as she was the intended target.
  • Chick Magnet: Momoe's friend Haruka made a pass at her before she killed herself, and pretty much every maiden Momoe protects throughout the series ends up falling in love with her.
  • Even the Girls Want Her: Her kind personality and androgynous charm make her a real Chick Magnet.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Phlegmatic. She's very kind, quiet, gentle, polite and somewhat shy.
  • Heroic BSoD: After Panic is killed, Momoe is traumatized to the point where she throws up while eating dinner and mutters "I can't sleep" again and again and again out of fear of getting killed next.
  • I Let Gwen Stacy Die: Momoe's friend Haruka committed suicide, apparently by jumping in front of a train, and Momoe's heroism is motivated by guilt over this event.
  • Innocently Insensitive: Momoe gets excited when Ai relays that Mr. Sawaki and her mom plan to date, because this could possibly mean that they would be related one day. However, she completely misses Ai being in a foul mood because of it, and that she is against their relationship.
  • Japanese Politeness: She's very gentle and polite towards people she meets.
  • Murder by Inaction: Rika accuses her of this for not warning the others about Hyphen and Dot, believing that it at least could have made the others aware of what would happen to their pets. Momoe tries to justify it by claiming that they could have died trying to protect their respective pets, but her words to Ai heavily imply that she just wanted to distance herself from the Egg World as much as possible, which includes the other girls.
  • Nice Girl: Although a little shy, she's a very kind, selfless and gentle person.
  • One-Gender School: Momoe attends an all-girls school.
  • Parasol of Pain: Her weapon is an orange umbrella that can double as a javelin.
  • Significant Green-Eyed Redhead: Momoe has auburn hair, dark green eyes, and is one of the four heroines of the story.
  • Statuesque Stunner: Momoe is just fourteen, yet she's 168cm tall, and is considered to be very attractive, both as being a girl and being believed to be a boy. Ai tells her she looks like a model.
  • Stress Vomit: After clearing her Dream Land in episode 10, Hyphen, in an attempt to kill her, slaughters Panic in front of Momoe's eyes and force-feeds her his remains, all while stating that crocodile meat resembles chicken. The next evening, chicken is served for dinner and this causes Momoe to immediately throw up upon recalling her words.
  • Sweet Polly Oliver: In her Dream Land, Momoe intentionally tells her Victim of the Week that she's male, and they all end up falling in love with her. When she finally gets asked out by a boy in her masculine appearance, he turns out to be disappointed upon seeing her dressed up because he's gay.
  • Tomboy Angst: Momoe has a complex about how masculine she is, since other girls tend to view her as a substitute for a boy rather than an actual girl. She breaks out into tears when Neiru and Rika mistake her for a boy and Acca and Ura-Acca do nothing to correct them.

Pomanders

    Leon 
  • Hollywood Chameleons: Averted. Despite being based on a chameleon, Leon never demonstrates any color-changing abilities, realistic or otherwise.
  • Lovable Lizard: Specifically, a chameleon.
  • Multipurpose Tongue: He can use it to grab enemies and swallow them whole, or he can extend it out for Ai to swing off of.
  • Swallowed Whole: Leon's preferred method of fighting is to simply grab Seeno Evils or Haters with his prehensile tongue and swallow them whole. According to Acca, they're his favourite food.

    Pinky 
  • Snakes Are Sinister: Inverted. Like the other Pomanders, he's perfectly heroic, and looks downright adorable in his Fun Size real-world form.

    Mannen 
  • Character Death: He is crushed to death by Dot at the start of Episode 11.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Mannen throws Rika out of the way of Dot's attack and is mortally wounded.
  • Mighty Glacier: Compared to the other Pomanders, Mannen seems to focus more on defense than offense.
  • Off with His Head!: Mannen is mortally wounded by Dot in episode 11 and she decapitates him to feed him to Rika.
  • Taking the Bullet: Twice.
    • In Episode 7, after Rika is driven past the Despair Event Horizon and decides to allow a Wonder Killer to kill her, Mannen takes (and shrugs off) the killing blow. Seeing Mannen protect her is enough to jolt Rika out of her funk, and she swiftly finishes the Wonder Killer off.
    • In Episode 11, Mannen pushes Rika out of the way of Dot's mace and again takes the blow for her. He doesn't shrug it off this time.

    Panic 
  • Character Death: He is sliced up by Hyphen in Episode 10.
  • Never Smile at a Crocodile: Subverted. While Momoe does seem to be nervous around him, and he has a tendency to playfully nibble her when not in the Dream Land, he's just as benevolent as the other Pomanders.

Dream World Administrators

    Acca 

Acca

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/accafullbody.png
Click here to see SPOILERS
Voiced by: Yūya Uchida (Japanese), Brendan Blaber (English)

The main administrator of the Dream World who guides the four girls throughout their missions.


  • Abusive Parents: He drags his artificial daughter Frill into a cellar and locks her there despite her pleas. This was done after she was revealed to have killed his wife out of jealousy and he justifies himself claiming that she isn't human.
  • Ambiguously Bi: In Episode 11, Ura-Acca reveals via flashback that they used to live together and were practically inseparable when it came to their work and their family life. However, he ended up marrying Azusa, a woman scientist.
  • Brain Uploading: He used to be a human scientist, but uploaded his mind into a mannequin-like android body in order to live long enough to stop Frill's threat.
  • Death of a Child: His daughter Himari was manipulated into killing herself by Frill.
  • Informed Attractiveness: When Rika sees a photo of the real Acca, she immediately gushes about how hot he is, even though all the characters are drawn attractively.
  • Jerkass: Unlike Ura-Acca, who's bound to show sympathy every now and then, Acca does not care about the girls. In episode 5, he chides Ura-Acca for letting the girls play in the arcade when they should be working, and in episode 12, he forces Ai's Loyal Pet Companion to appear despite Ai trying to protect him. He also disagrees with Ura-Acca about stopping an enraged Rika from going to the Egg World again, to which the latter points out that he cares very little about anything else other than getting Himari back.
  • Misery Builds Character: He flat out states that surviving a mission isn't enough. Ai and friends are obligated to fight the Wonder Killers to gain experience and make their victories meaningful.
  • Mr. Exposition: He explains the rules and concepts of the Dream World to Ai.
  • Perpetual Smiler: As a human, Acca tended to smile more often. His mannequin also has an upside-down triangle as a mouth that gives the illusion he is always smiling.
  • Roaring Rampage of Revenge: After Frill kills Azusa, Acca pushes her down the stairs and shuts her in a cellar.
  • Smart People Wear Glasses: Acca wears glasses both as a human and a mannequin, and he is a top scientist.
  • Trickster Mentor: Can be seen as this to the main girls. While instructing the girls on how to complete their missions, he isn't 100% reliable and his methods are highly questionable.
  • Voluntary Shapeshifting: He can take on various forms in the Dream World.
  • Was Once a Man: Episode 11 shows what he was like as a human.

    Ura-Acca 

Ura-Acca

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/uraaccafullbody.png
Click here to see SPOILERS
Voiced by: Hiroki Takahashi (Japanese), Ian Sinclair (English)

The second administrator of the Dream World and Acca's partner.


  • Ambiguously Bi: Episode 11 reveals him and Acca used to live and work together when they were human and seemed rather close-knit. They even create a daughter together. But both Frill and Acca point out Ura-Acca's romantic feelings for Azusa and in the end he was willing to step back and let Acca and Azusa be happy together.
  • Brain Uploading: He used to be a human scientist, but uploaded his mind into a mannequin-like android body in order to live long enough to stop Frill's threat.
  • Classy Cane: Ura-Acca has a cane. Even as a human, Ura-Acca had a cane, as he walks with a limp.
  • Everyone Has Standards: He may be a manipulative jerk with outdated beliefs about girls, but even he's against his niece's proposal of marrying him when she becomes of age.
  • I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: Both Frill and Acca point out that Ura-Acca was also attracted to Azusa. However, Acca wins the Love Triangle, and Ura-Acca lets them marry. Frill, on the other hand...
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Unlike Acca's single-minded focus on ensuring that the girls keep purchasing eggs, Ura-Acca seems to be a a lot more easy-going and willing to indulge them - allowing the group to play in the Administrator's arcade in Episode 5 despite Acca's protests, stating that "soldiers need to be rested" to continue fighting. With that said, he's more than willing to use reverse psychology in the same episode to ensure that the girls continue purchasing eggs.
  • Perpetual Frowner: As a human, Ura-Acca wears a frown as default on his face. His mannequin also has a triangle as a mouth that gives the illusion he is always pouting.
  • Smart People Wear Glasses: Ura-Acca wears glasses as a mannequin, and he is a top scientist.
  • Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Ura-Acca loses all rational thinking after Frill convinces Himari to die, so much that he drags her out of her cellar and sets her on fire.
  • Voluntary Shapeshifting: Just like Acca, he can change forms in the Dream World.
  • Was Once a Man: Episode 11 shows what he was like prior to his transformation.

Captured Maidens

    General 

Fallen girls who are trapped in the Dream World waiting to be rescued. The chance of reuniting with the girl they lost so long ago is the prime motivation for each main girl to venture into the Dream World.


  • Back for the Finale: Koito, Chiemi, Haruka, Airu, and even Kotobuki appear in the final episode, albeit under different circumstances.
  • Back from the Dead: In the final episode, the girls that the main characters saved return to their lives, except not in ways they imagined: the "revived" girls no longer share the same relationship with the main characters, and have no memories of them and develop relationships with other people.
  • Came Back Wrong: After the girls that the main characters rescued return, they no longer hold the same relationships they did back then, and possess no memories or feelings for the main characters, even being somewhat hostile for their assumed familiarity.
  • Damsel in Distress: They often appear trying to escape from their greatest fears and it's up to the main girls to save them.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: Other than a few rare exceptions, most of the girls have had a troubled life which ultimately became the catalyst for taking their own lives. Most have a history of ostracization or sexual abuse.
  • Driven to Suicide: Each maiden took their own life due to a given trauma.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: The Special Episode reveals that the Captured Maidens that the main characters fought to bring back don't actually remember who they are; in fact, they seemingly go out of their way to avoid their respective' main character, hanging out with different friends, idolising different people, falling in love with someone else. What's more is that not only does no one but the main characters and helpers noticed that these people were dead, but all other evidence of their relationship with them has been erased, such in the case of Ai's phone no longer having any photos of Koito. According to Ai's account from Acca, when a dead person comes back to life it creates a "noise" and changes their normal lives a little.
  • The Lost Lenore: Their main roles in the story.
  • Love Martyr: Some of the maidens still feel devotion or respect for the people who caused them trauma which can lead to them defending or becoming compliant with their Wonder Killer.
  • Taken for Granite: They appear in the Dream World as statues. The more missions each girl successfully completes, the more the stone begins to thaw which brings them closer to the reunion.
  • Tomato in the Mirror: As shown in Episode 5, it's possible for Captured Maidens to become the Wonder Killers the main girls are assigned to fight. Once Neiru figures this out, she completes her mission by shooting her designated CM which also erases the monsters she was fighting.
  • You Are Worth Hell: The four girls fight vicious monsters every night just to save their maidens.

    Koito Nagase 

Koito Nagase

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/koitofullbody.png
Voiced by: Azusa Tadokoro (Japanese), Suzie Yeung (English)

A transfer student who became Ai's best, and only, friend.


  • All of the Other Reindeer: Just like Ai, she was constantly teased and tormented by the girls at their school. The reason for it is because the girls were jealous that their homeroom teacher was "giving her more attention" on account of being a transfer student.
  • Ambiguous Situation: In episode 9, there's a flashback of Ai and Koito playing a fortune-telling game, and they ask a coin whether Koito's crush likes her back. The coin apparently answers "yes". It's not clear who moved the coin; Ai is convinced she didn't move it, but Koito wouldn't have looked so happy at the result if Koito had moved it, so Ai wonders whether she did it unconsciously.
  • Barefoot Suicide: When we see the scene of her suicide in the first episode, her feet are bare and filthy. In Episode 12, we see Koito with bare feet greeting Ai: an indication of her death. She insists that Ai take off her soggy pool water-soaked footwear and the two barefooted girls ascend to the ledge of the school, ready to drop.
  • Beneath the Mask: She never revealed to Ai just how deeply the bullying was affecting her until she jumped off of the school roof. Instead she almost constantly portrayed a Seen It All attitude in response to it in front of Ai, only showing her true feelings when Ai wasn't there, and any time Ai did see Koito's feelings, Ai's own social anxiety and fear caused her to ignore it. Two parts of Ai resent this: one resents herself for being too scared to help her friend, the other resents Koito for trying to hide her feelings and never talking to her about them, or that she was feeling suicidal, despite them being best friends.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: The finale reveals that Koito might not have been as kind as Ai remembered her to be. When Koito appears at school with no memory of Ai, she treats her coldly. Later, Ai recalls that Mr. Sawaki told her that Koito threatened to jump from the roof for not responding to her advances, all the while claiming that he raped her.
    • Mr. Sawaki also mentioned that she had caused problems with a teacher at a previous school she was at, causing him to commit suicide.
  • Dead Person Conversation: Played with, when Ai and Koito have a chat in the Dream World about how their lives became horrible and lonely and how to fix it. However, Ai has just witnessed her own alternate self committed suicide via drowning herself in the school pool, and also knows Koito took the plunge off the school rooftop once before.
  • Dissonant Serenity: In Episode 12, Koito is eerily composed and eager about heading to the school rooftop.
  • Driven to Suicide: She committed suicide by jumping off of the school roof. Or so we're meant to believe: Mr. Sawaki reveals in the final episode that she had threatened to jump off the roof after he rejected her, and when no one was looking, she lost her balance and fell herself.
  • Engineered Public Confession: Koito tried to invoke this by allowing herself to be bullied by her classmates while Ai recorded the event to use as potential evidence. To her dismay, Ai ends up chickening out and fails to record them.
  • Gory Discretion Shot: Averted. Briefly, we see Koito's corpse from Ai's perspective.
  • Hoist by Her Own Petard: Mr. Sawaki reveals that Koito had threatened to jump off the school roof when he didn't give into her advances, and she fell off after accidentally losing her balance.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: After being revived, Koito remembers nothing about Ai and treats her as a stranger.
  • New Transfer Student: The new girl at Ai's school.
  • Nice Girl: From the flashbacks we've seen so far, Koito was kind, as she immediately spoke to a lonely Ai, reassured her that she isn't ugly despite her heterochromia, wanted to be best friends with her, and even forgave Ai for not videotaping Koito's bullying as planned. However, Ai learns that Koito may not be as kind as she remembered to be after learning the truth about her death.
  • Only Friend: To Ai.
  • Woman Scorned: Mr. Sawaki reveals that after rejecting Koito, she threatened to jump off the roof and yelled whatever she could think of, such as claiming he raped her.

    Airu 

Airu

Voiced by: Tomori Kusunoki (Japanese)

Airu is Neiru's little sister, or so she claims, as they are not related at all.


  • Ambiguously Brown: Like her sister, she has darker skin than the other girls seen in the series.
  • Brutal Honesty: Airu bluntly turns Ai away when they first meet. In addition, when the original Airu is finally saved, she does not hide her hatred for Neiru and tells her that she will never be accepted in society.
  • Emotionless Girl: She is quiet and rarely shows any emotion.
  • Green-Eyed Monster: Airu tried to kill Neiru out of jealousy when the latter outperformed her.
  • Identical Stranger: Ai first meets Airu when she tries to look for Neiru after the latter stops answering her phone calls. The narrative leads the audience to believe she is Neiru, until the timely appearance of Kotobuki and Tanabe reveal that Ai had spoken to Airu instead. Eventually, Kotobuki reveals that her original self in their world had created Neiru in Airu's likeness.
  • Teen Genius: She is a member of Plati and is the true owner of Neiru's company.
  • Unwanted Rescue: She never wanted to be saved by Neiru, and she is really unhappy when she sees her after Neiru clears the game.
  • Walking Spoiler: Airu's presence and reveal spoils a strong Tomato Surprise about Neiru's backstory.

    Chiemi 

Chiemi

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chiemi_5.png
Voiced by: Manaka Iwami (Japanese), Madeline Dorroh (English)

A devoted fan girl who spent hundreds of yen to meet Rika during her idol years.


  • Fangirl: A huge fan of Rika when she was an idol, spending all of her money to see her during events.
  • Five-Finger Discount: When she ran out of money to see Rika, she resorted to shoplifting goods and selling them.
  • I'm Your Biggest Fan: To Rika when she was a junior idol and used all her money to visit her during handshake events.
  • Weight Woe: Deconstructed. After Rika breaks off their idol-fan relationship while insulting her weight, Chiemi develops an eating disorder and dies as a result. Rika even states that she was "skin and bones" on her deathbed.

    Haruka 

Haruka

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/haruka_1.png
Voiced by: Kaede Hondo (Japanese), Apphia Yu (English)

Momoe's friend who fell in love with her.


  • Driven to Suicide: Like all of the other Maidens. Given that Momoe's dream world is a train station and her statue appears on a train platform, it's implied that she threw herself in front of a train.
  • Girlish Pigtails: Haruka's brown hair is styled into twintails, and the ends are dyed pink.

    Kurumi Saijo 

Kurumi Saijo

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kurumi_saijo_5.png
Voiced by: Chika Anzai (Japanese), Amber Lee Connors (English)

A composed girl who has bad experiences with love and friendship. She is the first Captured Maiden Ai meets.


  • Easily Forgiven: She doesn't hold any contempt towards Ai when the blue-haired girl is too afraid to protect her from the Dream World antagonists.
  • Seen It All: She informs Ai about the Seeno Evils along with how the Dream World functions, meaning that she's been hatched several times before to know this information.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: She only appears in one episode, but her presence helps Ai solidify her commitment to changing herself and saving any Captured Maidens from their trauma. Kurumi also gives Ai her 4-color ballpoint pen which would become her weapon.
  • With Friends Like These...: Her conversation with Ai implies that her past friendships were hollow as the girls made no meaningful attempts to understand each other.

    Minami Suzuhara 

Minami Suzuhara

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/episode_preview_2_3.png
Voiced by: Satomi Sato (Japanese), Jill Harris (English)

A timid gymnast and the second Maiden that Ai helps.


  • Apologises a Lot: She constantly asks for forgiveness in the hopes of ceasing tensions.
  • Passionate Sports Girl: Subverted. Despite having the talent for it, Minami doesn't enjoy the sport very much and was abused and pressured by her coach to stay committed.

    Miko & Mako 

Miko & Mako

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/108879523445c93146a715c155ead957_3.jpg
Mako (left) and Miko (right)
Miko voiced by: Marina Inoue (Japanese), Amanda Lee (English)
Mako voiced by: Rui Tanabe (Japanese), Megan Shipman (English)

Two best friends who devoted their young lives to fangirl culture.


  • Cool Mask: Mako wears a teal mask while Miko wears an orange mask.
  • Expy: Their story appears to be based on that of Japanese musician hide, whose apparent suicide in 1998 was followed by the copycat suicides of at least three fans.
  • Fangirl: Of their favorite idol Yu-Yu. They later proclaim their fangirl allegiance to Ai and Rika after their valiant performances.
  • Heroic Bystander: They both help Ai battle their Wonder Killer by playing Yu-Yu's music; doing so stopped the witch from attacking as it is forbidden for Yu-Yu fans to kill while listening to his music. They even lend Ai their pen lights which she uses to strike the WK.
  • Proud to Be a Geek: Loyal idol fans who are unashamed of their hobby.
  • Otaku: Of the idol (wota) variation.
  • Theme Twin Naming: Subverted. They're not biological twins (even though they could totally pull it off) but their names follow a similar structure.
  • Together in Death: They both committed suicide at the same time and are ecstatic to find each other again after being hatched.

    Miwa 

Miwa

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/256684.jpg
Voiced by: Yumiri Hanamori (Japanese), Dani Chambers (English)

A girl who was a victim of sexual abuse from her father's boss.


    Mizuki 

Mizuki

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mizuki_1.png
Voiced by: Aoi Koga (Japanese), Sarah Roach (English)

Another maiden who falls in love with Momoe.


  • Flat Character: She has the least amount of screentime or characterization out of all the Captured Maidens.
  • Riddle for the Ages: Due to her short appearance, we may never know what her trauma was or who her Wonder Killer was based on.
  • Sweet on Polly Oliver: Mizuki develops a crush on Momoe during their time spent together in the Dream World. Even after Momoe reveals her true identity, Mizuki doesn't take back any feelings she had for her.

    Ayaka 

Ayaka

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ayaka_0.png
Voiced by: Sayaka Senbongi (Japanese), Ciarán Strange (English)

A headstrong girl who wants to take control of her own life.


  • Abusive Parents: The exact nature of the abuse is unclear, but her parents were clearly not the loving type considering how Ayaka would always run away from home.
  • Heroic Bystander: She actually tries to attack her Wonder Killer head-on with rocks, much to Neiru's frustration.
  • I Just Want to Be Loved: Her relationship with her Wonder Killer implies that her home life was devoid of love and she sought out someone who could fill the emptiness of her heart. She even tells Neiru that it makes her happy when someone protects her.
  • The Runaway: Her Wonder Killer's statements suggest that Ayaka had a troubled home life which led to her running away.

    Aoi 

Aoi

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/aoi_wonder_egg_priority_210577.jpg
Voiced by: Lynn (Japanese), Lindsay Seidel (English)

A haughty young girl who thinks highly of her physical beauty.


  • Ambiguously Brown: Has the same skintone as Neiru but her ethnicity isn't really touched upon. It could possibly be just a tan though.
  • Beauty Is Best: Believes that a woman's worth is tied to her youth and attractiveness, a belief that led her to kill herself so that she could become "eternally beautiful" rather than grow old and thus become "ugly". Though Aoi seemed to regret her decision after Neiru pointed out that, since she's already dead, no one will call her pretty anymore.
  • Cool Shades: Is shown to wear a pair which matches her model image.
  • Fairy Tale Motifs: She's based on the Evil Queen from Snow White given her self-absorbed personality and valuing youth and beauty above all else. Her Wonder Killers even recite the queen's iconic catchphrase while battling Neiru.
  • Single Tear: After Neiru points out that nobody will ever see or compliment her beauty ever again, Aoi silently sheds a single tear before disappearing.

    Yae Yoshida 

Yae Yoshida

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/yae_yoshida_1.png
Voiced by: Saki Miyashita (Japanese), Emi Lo (English)

A fragile girl who claimed to see ghosts and spirits but was shunned by everyone around her.


    Shino 

Shino

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/shino_wonder_egg_priority_210579.jpg
Voiced by: Miyuri Shimabukuro (Japanese), Alexis Tipton (English)

A self-harming mental hospital patient turned cult victim.


  • Complaining About Rescues They Don't Like: She is strongly against Rika trying to kill her beloved teacher. Considering that her teacher was a cult leader, she clearly wasn't in the right mindset.
  • "Not So Different" Remark: She reveals to Rika that she too suffers from self-hate and even self-harmed via cutting.
  • Scars Are Forever: She has a purple scar on her eye which seems to have stuck with her even in the afterlife.

    Kotobuki Awano 

Kotobuki Awano

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kotobuki_awano.png
Voiced by: Yume Miyamoto (Japanese), Trina Nishimura (English)

A brilliant Child Prodigy who is well versed in academic sciences. She was also Neiru's best friend.


  • Back for the Finale: Kotobuki's Alternate Self appears in the finale, having successfully leaped dimensions from her own world. Her presence was only to explain that she was the one who created Neiru.
  • Conveniently an Orphan: She was created via artificial reproduction, courtesy of Japan Plati's agenda of creating only top notch geniuses.
  • The Gadfly: Her interactions with Neiru show that she has a playful and teasing nature.
  • Not Quite Dead: She's actually in a vegetative state in the real world. But after defeating her Wonder Killer, Neiru pulls the plug on her machine which ultimately kills her.
  • Teen Genius: Like Neiru, she's part of Japan Plati, an organization that nurtures other young geniuses via artificial reproduction.

    Kaoru Kurita 

Kaoru Kurita

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/episode_preview_10_4.png
Voiced by: Sachika Misawa (Japanese), Ryan Reynolds (English)

A troubled young boy who develops a special bond with Momoe.


  • Alliterative Name: Kaoru Kurita.
  • Distressed Dude: Kaoru ends up being held prisoner inside his Wonder Killer's head.
  • I Will Wait for You: Invoked. Before disintegrating, he asks Momoe not to fall in love with anyone so they can be together when they reunite.
  • The One Guy: The only captured target so far that doesn't identify as female.
  • Rape as Backstory: Was raped by his teacher when Kaoru confided to said teacher about his gender identity. Kaoru even got pregnant because of it.
  • Trans Tribulations: Tells Momoe that he's a man in heart, he even wears a coat with the trans flag colors on it. This led to him getting raped and impregnated by a teacher after coming out about his gender identity.

Dream World Antagonists

    Seeno Evils 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/no_36.png

A race of demented goblins who often appear to antagonize the heroes and the girls they're assigned to protect.


  • Evil Laugh: The only type of noise that these little monsters make.
  • Literal Metaphor: The tiny imps wielding knives are partially representative of little cuts and jabs people verbally make towards others that contribute to self-harm.
  • Malevolent Masked Men: They all wear red masks with black holes for eyes and have exceptionally long teeth.
  • Meaningful Name: Their name is referencing the saying "See no Evil", harkening to the idea of bystanders preferring to ignore people who they see are the victim of bullying and abuse instead of intervening and helping them. This is also one of Ai's insecurities as she's been both the Bullied due to her heterochromia, and then later the Bystander when, out of fear and panic of becoming more of a target for bullies, and slight resentment for her friend not talking to her about it, she kept freezing up or running away when her best friend was being bullied, leading to her friend's suicide.
    Dream Announcer: All of you at school today, a question: What should you do if someone in your class is being bullied? You got it! The right answer is: Pretend not to see! (Evil Laughter)
  • Mooks: They serve as these to any Wonder Killer.
  • Selective Obliviousness: Although they can harm and physically interact with the Heroes, they totally ignore them; their only target is the Captured Maiden, and any harm that the heroes suffer from them is completely unintentional and accidental.
  • Zerg Rush: They're fairly weak creatures but can be extremely dangerous when they attack in numbers.

    Haters 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/february17120136.jpg

A more deadly variation of the Seeno Evils. Born from envy and spite of the Heroes, they prove to be even more dangerous to the main girls and the Captured Maidens.


  • Discard and Draw: Drops their knives but gets a wide jaw of angular teeth.
  • Driven by Envy: What they represent. While Seeno Evils represent people who ignore and avoid victims of bullying and abuse, the Haters represent those who become envious and attack certain people for being better than them in some way. This can be in intellect, appearance, popularity and so on, and it usually results in bullying and smear campaigns, thefts, physical or sexual assault, and even murder of the person in question, regardless of if they are a kind, decent person or not.
  • Malevolent Masked Men: Their masks are now lime green and their mouths are open so they can bite their prey.
  • Mooks: They still serve under the Wonder Killers.
  • Power Of Hate: Acca states that they born in response to the successes of our Heroes in saving Maidens, Seeno Evils transforming into Haters out of their envy and spite of our protagonists "standing out too much in the world".

Wonder Killers

    General Tropes 

A manifestation of the trauma and despair formed by each Victim of the Week. The main girls are tasked with fighting and killing them in order to complete their missions.


  • Always Female: Averted. The Wonder Killers can be male or female, depending on who the figure of trauma was for the Captured Maidens.
  • Deranged Animation: Garishly colored and cartoony, it helps emphasize how big, violent, and out-of-control the problems they represent are.
  • Eldritch Abomination: Their bizarre and otherworldly designs could make them pass as Witches from Puella Magi Madoka Magica.
  • The Heartless: They're monsters created by the unresolved trauma and fears of the Captured Maidens.
  • Hoist by Their Own Petard: Episode 4 shows that Wonder Killers can be tricked into lowering their guard if they're presented with something they like, making it easier to destroy them. Ex. The Stalker Monster dancing to Yu-Yu's music being played by the twins or the Pervert Monster focusing on his victim when she "offers" to let him touch her.
  • Karma Houdini: The series never addresses whether or not the people the Wonder Killers are based on ever faced concequences for their crimes.
  • Ludicrous Gibs: Once the finishing blow has been dealt they swell up and explode into a dark red shower of blood.
  • Monster of the Week: Each episode often features a new Wonder Killer.
  • Multi-Armed and Dangerous: Most WK Bosses have more than one pair of arms which makes them even more dangerous than usual.
  • Never My Fault: The Wonder Killers usually try to justify their terrible behavior, such as a gymnastics coach claiming her abuse is "tough love", a stalker claiming the idol she stalked likes older women, etc.
  • I Shall Taunt You: A majority of Wonder Killers have "high and mighty" personalities and constantly taunt the Captured Maidens and the main girls who try to protect them.
  • Transformation Horror: Each one (except the first, who is killed before they get the chance) starts off as a regular human, then undergoes a macabre transformation into a more twisted form when battling the heroes.

    The Bully 

The Bully/Inoue

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kurumi27s_wonder_killer.png

The Wonder Killer of Kurumi, and the first encountered. It takes the form of a schoolgirl with a bob cut whose face is a mosaic blur with a clearly defined mouth. She directs the Seeno Evils, and tosses axes at her targets.

Two other girls are also seen, with similar faces, but are not destroyed directly.


  • Axe-Crazy: Literally so, the main Bully always has at least one in hand in any given scene.
  • Flat Character: Her role is simply to be something of a catalyst for Ai not standing by any longer if she can help it. The Bully has no dialog, no eye-catching form, and no deeper exploration of her relationship with the maiden apart from being her main bully. She ultimately doesn't put up much of an actual fight once Ai decides to act against her.
  • Flunky Boss: Fittingly, her biggest threat lies in directing the Seeno Evil horde and the other more humanoid Bullies. She seems to more leisurely pursue her Maiden in comparison.
  • Laughing Mad: One of only two noises she makes in her appearance.
  • One-Winged Angel: Supposedly has a more monstrous form, but is killed after being blindsided by Ai before she can get the chance.
  • The Quiet One: Unlike later Wonder Killers, the Bully does not speak.
  • Slasher Smile: The only clear feature on her face.
  • Starter Villain: Sets up what a Wonder Killer is, generally speaking, not transforming so as to further surprise the viewer with the next episode's monster.
  • Zero-Effort Boss: Once Ai gets her resolve, the Bully is an almost trivial nuisance who dies in one strike, letting out a confused "eh?" before being smashed to death.

    The Coach 

The Coach/Komon Kyoshi

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/coach_transforming_into_a_monster.png
Voiced by: Kyou Yaoya (Japanese), Elizabeth Maxwell (English)

A Wonder Killer who represents Minami's abusive gymnastics coach. She initially appears similar to the previous Wonder Killer, but shortly transforms into a six armed monstrosity that gives Ai her first real fight.


  • Bait-and-Switch: When she initially appears she looks akin to the Bully, a straightforward human with a pixelated face and a disturbingly wide and clear mouth. Things take a quick turn once she begins to directly talk to her Maiden and bulges into her grotesque ogre-like form, trouncing Ai right after.
  • Fat Bastard: She's fat normally, if her human form is anything to go by, but the monster form exaggerates it a little more by giving her love handles.
  • Fan Disservice: In her monster form, she wears bits and pieces of what look like a military vest and strips of leggings where her pants would be. She also is an orange dog faced she-ogre that has four large breasts that predominately hang and sag to the point the lower pair often obscures her legs. Then she starts waving them around and sprays disgustingly gooey fluid...
  • Hoist by Their Own Petard: The student she broke in life actively aids Ai by telling her how she should dodge the Coach's attacks once the monster blinds her, leading to its death.
  • Insane Troll Logic: She scolds Minami for not maintaining her gymnastics figure. This isn't something that Minami can control since she's going through puberty, but the Wonder Killer just snaps for Minami to take gymnastics seriously, and uses this as an excuse to abuse her.
  • Lightning Bruiser: Fitting given what she's based on, she has fast reflexes and bashes Ai with structure damaging results.
  • Meaningful Appearance: Resembles the Asura from Buddist mythology. The mythological monster had six arms and was known for being rude, looking down on others and having very little patience.
  • Screw the Rules, I Have Connections!: In life, this is how she was able to get away with abusing Minami: as she brags as a Wonder Killer, she can get away with her behavior because she has good standing with the school's sports association; they even come to her for recommendations on scouting students.
  • Shut Up, Hannibal!: Constantly barks her dialog and philosophy, eventually resulting in Ai responding with a "SHUT UP BITCH!"

    The Groper 

The Groper

A Wonder Killer briefly seen when Rika is first introduced saving a young lady in her dream. Seemed to be a rapist if his dialog is to be believed...


  • All Men Are Perverts: Its attitude, with just two lines, manages to be one of the most scummy things in the series. Justified, as it is a monstrous caricature of someone else who was most likely the same way.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: Its role is absolutely miniscule, but it sets up in a few seconds how Rika's nature is better than she'd like people to believe.
  • Multi-Armed and Dangerous: It looked to be a humanoid torso who's lower half is a ring of arm-shaped tentacles.
  • We Hardly Knew Ye: We see it just as it dies.

    The Stalker 

The Stalker/Madam Sachiko

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wepmonsters6.png
Voiced by: Masako Katsuki

An octopus-like Wonder Killer with megaphones in her "hair." Based on an older fan and stalker of the Idol Yu-Yu, who's death inspired Miko and Mako to take their own lives. The first Wonder Killer whose real life counterpart is named: Sachiko the "Asagaya Madame"


  • Berserk Button: When the girls all make light of her age, what little composure she has snaps and Rika is nearly killed as a result.
  • Breaking Old Trends: Compared to the other Wonder Killers, the Stalker stands out as a trauma who terrorized someone the Captured Maiden(s) cared for in the Waking World rather then terrorizing the maidens themselves.
  • Breath Weapon: Can fire a plume of smoke from her mouth that can have people Taken for Granite.
  • Combat Tentacles: Her hair and her arms are octopus tentacles.
  • Fan Disservice: Wears a dress that exposes skin. Skin that is a corpse-like brownish green and looks taut across her figure like she is starving herself to death.
  • Hoist by Her Own Petard: Miko and Mako are at one point able to stop the Stalker from skewering Ai by playing a video of one of Yu-Yu's songs, since according to Miko and Mako, a true Yu-Yu fan would never skewer a girl while her idol is watching. It works; the Stalker starts dancing to Yu-Yu's music and breaks off the attack on Ai.
  • Lean and Mean: Emaciated looking with long gangly tendrils.
  • Oh, Crap!: Stares at Ai in wide-eyed awe milliseconds before being smashed into the ground.
  • Red Baron: The Asagaya Madame.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: Her eyes give the impression of angular red glasses.
    • Exotic Eye Designs: In addition to being unfocused, but wide eyed with tiny irises, her actual irises and pupils look like vinyl records.
  • Tears of Blood: Constantly leaks these, giving the impression that she's still mourning over Yu-Yu's death as well. It's unsettling to say the least.
  • Voice of the Legion: A variant: her voice is actually coming from the multiple speakers on her head (evident by the reverb), with her muppet-like mouth syncing poorly alongside it.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: Her kryptonite is listening and dancing to music from Yu-Yu. Ai and the fangirls use this to distract her so they can get the jump on her.

    The Pervert 

The Pervert/Kaisha no Senmu

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fpbeztm_0.jpg
Voiced by: Yohei Tadano (Japanese)

A Wonder Killer that looks like a large ventriloquist dummy with bobby pins sticking into it. It is based on the boss of Miwa's father, who fired him after he was caught groping her on a train.


  • All Men Are Perverts: Justified in the same way as the Groper and other Wonder Killers of similar origin, he's an overtly evil and over-the-top caricature of a real person who consistently groped and later tried to molest an underaged girl, and then used his influence to get her father fired when she stood up to him.
  • Barrier Warrior: Able to make a red card shaped barrier to pin Momoe down.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: Miwa pretends to give herself to him, lowering his guard and giving Momoe an opportunity to break through his barrier. To his credit, he does anticipate and react to her, but she deflects his attack with the back of her hand just in time.
  • Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: How Momoe kills him, a stab clear through the head.
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: Genuinely disgusting towards Miwa because she is an underaged girl, thought its unsurprising given what he is based on.
  • Screw the Rules, I Have Connections!: In life, Miwa did manage to resist his groping, but unfortunately he was Miwa's father's boss, and he retaliated against Miwa's resistance by firing her father.
  • Top-Heavy Guy: His shoulders are double the length of his waist.

    The Lady 

The Lady/Hachi-Onna

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bee_woman.png
Voiced by: Mayumi Shintani (Japanese)

A thin, almost insect Wonder Killer Momoe fights for an unnamed Maiden. Seems obsessed with femininity and digs particularly deep into Momoe's personal issues.


    The Lover 

The Lover/Yodare

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/yoda_0.png
Voiced by: Yasuhiko Kawazu (Japanese)

A large Wonder Killer fought at the beginning of episode 5, fighting Neiru while taunting Ayaka, who went to him for comfort from an abusive home life, only to be taken advantage of. He appears to wear a hazmat suit with a golden crown. He has a rodent like head that can change places all around his body.


  • A God Am I: States this at least twice.
  • Alien Blood: Cyan colored.
  • All Men Are Perverts: Like all Wonder Killers of his type. In this case, proclaiming that Ayaka approached him first and that he won’t be denied now that he's approaching her.
  • Badass Boast: Loudly proclaims that he is god as he blasts away at Neiru.
  • Brain in a Jar: A different take on it: his head and organs are in a suit.
  • Defiant to the End: Even when he's missing his lower half and one of his arms, he's blasting away until the final blow is struck.
  • Gatling Good: His hands are gatling-gun-like, firing a constant hail of bullet-like light (complete with little stars).
  • Unskilled, but Strong: Is not at all fast, but keeps pressure on his targets with his A-Team Firing. It’s not until he let his guard down and was blinded by smoke that Neiru can move away from where she's pinned and strike back.

    The Wigs 

The Wigs/Makige

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/makige.png
Voiced by: Ayaka Saitou (Japanese)

Three wig shaped Wonder Killers (colored pink, yellow and blue) Neiru fights off as she speaks to a particularly vain Maiden named Aoi. They're easily hit, but wont stay down and are relentless tacklers.


  • Attack Its Weak Point: Unique in that theirs is more of a concept than an actual vulnerable part of the body.
  • Bait-and-Switch: Turns out that the Maiden's beauty itself was the Wonder Killer. Once Neiru shoots and ruins her hair and dress, the monsters finally die.
  • Foreshadowing: Unlike other Wonder Killers, the Wigs don't target their maiden at all as they zip around and fight. They also don't yell anything like the excuses and accusations the other monsters do. The fact that the Maiden appearing alongside them does try to suggest suicide clues Neiru in on the truth.
  • Gyaru Girl: Invoke this with the color and style of their hair, as well as their bows and baubles on their eyelashes
  • Made of Iron: Despite being hit several times, they refuse to stay dead even when shot dead on.
  • Madness Mantra: "Mirror, Mirror, on the wall? Who's the fairest one of all?"
  • Ominous Visual Glitch: Once all three begin chanting their Madness Mantra and dancing in a circle, the visuals begin to flicker as their eyes glow and their forms become dark. Coupled with Aoi talking and Neiru struggling to figure out what is actually happening, its much more intense and dreadful looking than it sounds.

    The Teacher 

The Teacher/Mukade

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/february24114036.jpg
Voiced by: Joji Nakata (Japanese), Jeremy Schwartz (English)

A purple, spider like Wonder Killer with an extending neck. A cult leader who scammed a family into suicide and attempts to do the same to Rika.


  • A God Am I: His student, Shino, claims that he can channel the cosmos, and he dresses himself up like a god in white flowing robes.
  • An Arm and a Leg: Rika slices off an entire row of his spidery arms. He inexplicably has them back by the next scene.
  • Break Them by Talking: Is not actually that hard of a fight for Rika, but once Shino joins in and shows that she was in a similar situation to her, his philosophy begins making the Idol feel a terrifying sense of comfort and almost convinces her to let him take her life.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Does not actually shout accusations and excuses like other Wonder Killers, instead he talks confidently about his philosophy and why Rika should follow it, And it almost works. However since he is a Wonder Killer, the viewer knows this is just to lead Rika to her death.
    • His real counterpart was so good he tricked a whole family into giving up their house and belongings as well as suicide.
  • Obviously Evil: Is a spider-like manifestation of a girls suicide with an evil face on his abdomen and a demonic face on an extending neck, yet still is able to convince Rika that she will find more comfort in dying than living. Justified in that Rika was in a particularly bad spot in her own family life and has self harm issues, making her vulnerable to this kind of talk.

    The Invisible 

The Invisible/Kaibutsu Shoujo

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kaibutsu_shoujo.png
Voiced by: Hana Takeda (Japanese), Emi Lo (English)

Yae's Wonder Killer, an invisible creature that only she can see. When Ai touches Yae's prayer beads, the monster is revealed to resembles an elephant-headed girl wielding a giant Tibetan horn as a weapon.


  • Affably Evil: Unlike other Wonder Killers, it seems she is just upset about Yae not wanting to be her friend since she is the only one who can see her and never seems to actually attack her. She only ever attacks Ai for actively being in the way, and is satisfied enough just being seen by someone else even though Ai tells her they can't be friends.
  • Bandage Mummy: One of her arms is completely bandaged up, referencing a practice used for containing curses.
  • Carry a Big Stick: She wields a large Tibetan horn and uses it as a club.
  • Cute Monster Girl: One of the least monstrous Wonder Killers shown, comparatively. She is an elephantine girl in a sailor outfit with soft eyes, blonde hair and pink nails.
  • Disappears into Light: The monster is put to rest this way once Ai can also see her. She's the first Wonder Killer to be dispatched so peacefully, as the issue was not due to anyone's fault.
  • Invisible to Normals: Justified, as she's a representation of the spirits and grudges Yae can see, but couldn't stand once she was taken to the hospital.
  • Neck Lift: Does this to Ai right before chucking her through some walls, in order to introduce herself.

    The Doctor 

The Doctor/Doctor Seki

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wonder_egg_priority_episode_9_review_36_1.png
Voiced by: Hōchū Ōtsuka (Japanese), Jim Foronda (English)

The Wonder Killer of Kotobuki based upon Dr. Seki, a doctor who wanted to invasively study her. Appears as a Buzzard-like bird with green bloodshot eyes, wearing a lab coat and a jet pack with robotic arms.


  • Artificial Limbs: His jet pack comes equipped with metal arms.
  • Didn't Think This Through: Yes, Dr. Seki. Using an academic-themed challenge for two Teen Genius girls won't fail on you for any reason.
  • Driven to Suicide: When Neiru and Kotobuki solve a geometric puzzle he gives them - one that he himself was apparently never able to solve - he's driven to despair and kills himself by injecting himself with one of the syringes on his arms. He's notably the only Wonder Killer to die this way.
  • Feathered Fiend: He's modeled after a red buzzard and is a manifestation of Kotobuki's trauma.
  • It's Personal: According to Kotobuki, Dr. Seki seeks revenge against her because she stole his job in the corporation from him when she was alive.
  • Jet Pack: His main method of travel, dissection and combat.
  • Knight of Cerebus: Unlike other Wonder Killers, Seki is rather intelligent, and despite already being a manifestation of trauma, is also driven by the sick ambition of dissecting Kotobuki.

    The Predator 

The Predator/Kendo-bu Komon

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wonder_egg_priority_episode_11_cover_6.jpg
Voiced by: Kozo Mito (Japanese), David Wald (English)

A tengu-like Wonder Killer with a heart motif and an eye on his nose. Represents Kaoru's Kendo Club Teacher, who raped him and got him pregnant.


  • Heart Symbol: It's everywhere with him, from the holes he makes, to the sword he carries. In context it comes across as a Wicked Heart Symbol for obvious reasons.
  • Love Freak: An Abhorrent Admirer towards Kaoru who still treats him as a woman.
  • Rape Is a Special Kind of Evil: In a series full of pervert-themed monsters, The Kendo Club Teacher definitely takes it a step further in revulsion by actually being confirmed to have sexually assaulted a trans boy and impregnated him.

Frill & Friends

    Frill (Major Spoilers) 

Frill

Voiced by: Megumi Yamaguchi (Japanese), Felecia Angelle (English)
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/frill.png

The true antagonist of the series and the reason Acca and Ura-Acca developed the Dream World game in the first place.


  • A.I. Is a Crapshoot: Acca and Ura-Acca designed Frill to be the perfect facsimile of a human daughter, complete with the ability to experience emotions, even negative ones like jealousy and anger. Unfortunately, this came back to bite them in the ass when Frill's jealousy caused her to murder Acca's wife and manipulate his daughter into committing suicide.
  • Affably Evil: Frill may be trying to kill people, but she's still friendly and upbeat in doing so.
  • The Ageless: Even after spending at least 14 years trapped in a cellar, she still looks exactly the same, albeit with some dirt and scuff marks.
  • Ambiguous Situation: We directly see Frill kill Azusa by tossing a hair dryer into a bathtub while Azusa is still in it, but Himari (apparently) dies by suicide. However, Himari made Frill's lip-popping gesture on the night of her apparent suicide, so Ura-Acca is convinced that Frill must have caused Himari's death somehow, since Frill killed Azusa before. It's not yet clear to what extent Frill was involved in Himari's death. It's also not clear, even to the Accas, how she was able to convince the maidens to commit suicide.
  • Artificial Human: Frill is an artificial life form created by Acca and Ura-Acca.
  • Big Bad: She's been manipulating emotionally vulnerable young girls into committing suicide for years, and the whole reason the Dream World egg game was developed in the first place was to find warriors capable of stopping her.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: Frill genuinely doesn't seem to understand that murdering a pregnant woman, and then driving the surviving child and hundreds of other girls to suicide is wrong. Nor does she seem to understand why Acca and Ura-Acca are so homicidally furious towards her because of said actions.
  • Character Tics: She tends to smack her lips. Himari copying this habit shortly before her death is what tips off Ura-Acca that Frill had something to do with it.
  • Coy, Girlish Flirt Pose: Frill often poses coyly when interacting with Acca and Ura-Acca.
  • Deconstructed Character Archetype: An example of what making a being with the sole function of being your perfect daughter could entail. Since being a daughter is her purpose, Frill ambiguously either has no ability or desire to grow and change along with her parents lives. When one of them got married and was having a daughter, she couldn't/wouldn't mature, and opted to remove what was keeping her from, to her logic, being a perfect daughter, so she sees nothing wrong with what she did.
  • Dissonant Serenity: Frill never gets angry, and even after killing Azusa and Himari, she treats it as no big deal. Even when she realizes that Ura-Acca is about to kill her, she's still smiling and upbeat.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: She murdered Acca's wife (and probably also Himari) because she was jealous of them.
  • Evil Is Petty: Kills both Acca's daughter and wife out of jealousy and is responsible for numerous young girls committing suicicde, seemingly just to spite and gain the attention of her "fathers".
  • Genki Girl: Frill is a sweet, bright girl who is always smiling.
  • Gone Horribly Right: Acca and Ura-Acca wanted to create an ideal girl, giving her positive traits, but also giving her negative traits like selfishness and jealousy, because they believed "flaws are important". They got their wish: Frill was a cheerful and adorable girl, who eventually became jealous enough to murder a pregnant woman and a young girl. It is heavily implied that they themselves would be next if Frill was kept unchecked or alive.
  • Green-Eyed Monster: Frill becomes jealous when Acca begins spending more time with Azusa than with her, subtly expressing such when Azusa starts appearing more around the house. Later, when she creates Hyphen, Dot, and Kirara, she makes sure that they don't have human faces so they won't be prettier than her. It's implied that this is also why she targets young girls (and in one case, a trans boy) who are around the same age she was programmed to be.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends: Frill tells Ura-Acca that she wants friends, and Ura-Acca promises to make her another one. However, Frill begins facing abandonment issues when Acca and Ura-Acca move on with their lives.
  • I Shall Taunt You: When Ura-Acca confronts Frill about Himari's death, she asks him if he wants to know how Himari died.
  • Invincible Villain: Being an AI, even though her physical body was burned alive, her mind is able to warp the minds of her victims and is ultimately not defeated by the end of the series.
  • It's All About Me: She murdered an innocent woman who was nothing but kind to her, just because she took some of Acca's attention. This apparently repeats with Himari, Acca's daughter, for the exact same reason. When confronted about the latter by Ura-Acca, she automatically assumes he's complimenting her by bringing it up.
  • Karma Houdini: More or less gets away with the suicides of all the maidens and Himari and the deaths of Azusa and Neiru due to the series ending abruptly shortly after the latter's Deal with the Devil situation with Frill.
  • Kill It with Fire: The Accas do this to Frill after locking her up for a few years. What they ultimately fail to realize is that it only destroyed her physical body.
  • Lack of Empathy: She kills Azusa without a second thought and seems incapable of understanding why Acca is so devastated over it. Later on, when Ura-Acca confronts her about Himari's suicide, she at first feigns ignorance, then actively starts to taunt him about it, questioning why he's so worked up since Himari wasn't his daughter.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Subtly, despite the big action used to accomplish her goal. She sends her agents only when the girls meet their goal in order to tear them down most effectively, while also in a way that doesn't directly harm them. Both Hyphen and Dot kill close Animal Companion supports for Rika and Momoe in the Dream World removing them from play through fear (Momoe doesn't want to face Hyphen again) and anger (Rika's righteous rage makes her vulnerable to manipulation) in spite of their character development. It fails on Ai because not only did she see the pattern, but her Alternate Self took a heavy attack for her, ironically saving both of them and giving Ai even more of a resolve to keep fighting.
  • Madwoman in the Attic: Acca locks Frill in a cellar after she kills Azusa, where she remains for 14 years. After Himari dies, Ura-Acca takes her out and sets her on fire.
  • Murder the Hypotenuse: After Acca and Ura-Acca begin spending less time with her, Frill electrocutes Azusa to death. Years later, she convinces Himari to die for getting in between the Accas and herself.
  • Not Quite Human: Frill is an artificial human created by Acca and Ura-Acca.
  • Removed from the Picture: On one of the bulletin boards in Acca and Ura-Acca's house, there's a photo of them with Frill and Azusa. Frill's face is noticeably scribbled over.
  • Sanity Slippage: Though one could argue she wasn't particularly sane to begin with, being locked away in a shed for years probably did nothing to help her already unstable psyche.
  • Significant Green-Eyed Redhead: Frill has red hair, bright aqua eyes, and freckles.
  • Teen Genius: As Frill spent time with Acca and Ura-Acca, she became knowledgeable in science to the point where she is able to create Dot and Hyphen, her own Artificial Humans.
  • Younger Than They Look: She was designed with the mind and body of a 14-year-old from birth. This crosses into Older Than They Look when Ura-Acca finally frees her from the cellar after another 14 years and she still looks the same.
  • Walking Spoiler: Her entire presence spoils Acca and Ura-Acca's backstory and the reason for the suicides.
  • What Measure Is a Non-Human?: The way both Acca and Ura-Acca assault her is especially rough, and on both occasions, they justify it by claiming Frill is not human. When Frill kills Azusa, Acca shoves her down the stairs of a shed, kicks her in the face a couple of times, and locks her inside a cellar. After Frill manages to convince Himari, Acca's daughter, to kill herself, Ura-Acca drags her out of the cellar and sets her on fire.
  • Yandere: Frill is cheerful at first glance, but she becomes so attached to Acca and Ura-Acca that she's willing to kill anyone who takes their attention away from her.

    Frill's Agents 

Hyphen

Voiced by: Ikue Otani (Japanese), Jad Saxton (English)
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wonder_egg.jpg

Hyphen is an Artificial Human created by Frill, whose head resembles a chrysalis that can transform into a butterfly. She is the agent that Momoe encounters when she finishes her mission.


  • Artificial Human: She is an artificial life form created by Frill.
  • Butterfly of Death and Rebirth: Has a butterfly for a head and wields a scythe. The fact that she manages to kill Panic, as the first casualty on the heroes' side, only strengthens the connection.
  • Hate Sink: Her Establishing Character Moment is to casually and disinterestedly say she's going to kill Momoe, only to lethally strike her Animal Companion, stab him multiple times, and then eat him while comparing crocodile meat to chicken meat. She then goes further by force-feeding the poor girl some of Panic's flesh as if nothing is wrong. Enough to make Frill look like a Disney Princess in comparision.
  • Hero Killer: Attacks Momoe in a fast but slightly lazy manner, only to torturously kill her support animal Panic when he jumps in to protect her. It's implied by her Madness Mantra afterward that she still intends on ending Momoe's life if she ever comes back.
  • Humanoid Abomination: Has a girl's body, but also a cocoon-shaped head with two eyes on top of it that can disgustingly fold out into a full butterfly.
  • Knight of Cerebus: While Wonder Egg Priority already had plenty of dark and disturbing content, there were plenty of Slice of Life antics and moments of levity to balance them out. The exact second that Hyphen shows up, any and all levity goes completely out the window.
  • Man Behind the Man: Hints at one, stating that a person named Frill will be upset with them. In the next episode, it's revealed that Frill is her creator.
  • Mind Rape: Does this to Momoe, who is unable to go back to sleep in fear of being killed herself after getting fed Panic's flesh.

Dot

Voiced by: Ikue Otani (Japanese), Monica Rial (English)
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dot_nav.png

Dot is an Artificial Human created by Frill, whose head is a cocoon that can transform into a dragonfly. She is the agent that Rika encounters when she finishes her mission.


  • Artificial Human: She is an artificial life form created by Frill.
  • Creepy Child: Dot has the body of a 14-year-old girl and a childish voice, but her willingness to attack Rika makes her horrifying.
  • Dreadful Dragonfly: Her head is shaped like a dragonfly with a creepy mouth on its underside.
  • Does Not Like Spam: When Dot offers Rika the head of her Loyal Animal Companion, Mannen, to eat, she says that she doesn't like eating meat unlike her sister.
  • Hero Killer: She fatally injures Mannen by crushing his shell with her mace and later cuts off his head for Rika to eat. Unlike Hyphen, it is left unclear if she intends to kill Rika as well.
  • Humanoid Abomination: Like Hyphen, she has the body of a teenage girl and a head shaped like a giant insect, in this case a dragonfly.
  • Made of Iron: She's able to shatter one of Rika's blades by blocking it with her forearm, and then bends the other one in half with her bare hand.
  • Mind Rape: After their encounter, Rika is left angry, broken, and consumed with vengeance to the point where she clearly isn't thinking straight.
  • Third-Person Person: To go with Dot's childish mannerisms and voice, she refers to herself in the third person.

Kirara

Voiced by: Ikue Otani
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/296067.png

Kirara, full name Kirara Rodreguez Matured XVIII Evening Star SS Plum, is an Artificial Human created by Frill, whose head is a moth. She is the agent that Ai encounters when she finishes her mission.


Other

    Tae Ohto 

Tae Ohto

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/taeface.png
Voiced by: Haruka Shiraishi (Japanese), Emily Fajardo (English)

Ai's mother who frequently worries about her daughter's emotional wellbeing.


  • Good Parents: She does her best to support her daughter while balancing her busy schedule.
  • Living Emotional Crutch: In episode 12, Ai reveals that she really loves her mother for always being understanding and being there for her without being invasive, and that alone is enough to make her Alternate Self regret committing suicide.
  • The Medic: It's all but stated that she works at a hospital.
  • Nice Girl: She's very kind and gentle, good at taking care of her daughter, and treats others with genuine kindness. It's no surprise she works at a hospital, after all.
  • Strong Family Resemblance: She shares Ai's hair color along with her amber eye.
  • Teacher/Parent Romance: In episode 6, she and Mr. Sawaki announce that they plan on dating each other.

    Shuichiro Sawaki 

Shuichiro Sawaki

Voiced by: Masatomo Nakazawa (Japanese), Stephen Fu (English)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/shuichiro.png
Click here to see SPOILERS

Ai's homeroom teacher who frequently visits her to check up on her.


  • Adults Are Useless: Heavily implied considering that Koito was tormented by her new classmates to the point of suicide yet Mr. Sawaki did practically nothing to stop the bullying.
  • Art Attacker: His Wonder Killer form uses four tubes of paint to attack Ai and her Alternate Self. Green is his common attack which he rapid-fires to dissolve things; yellow makes surfaces slippery; red is an inferno attack; and blue is to create illusions.
  • Flying Face: His Wonder Killer form is his enlarged, flying head resting on four tubes of paint.
  • Hidden Depths: Episode 5 reveals that Mr. Sawaki also dabbles in art, and wanted to draw a picture of Ai so she could see that her heterochromia is beautiful. Eventually, as we see in a brief flashback, Koito ended up modeling for his art instead. In Episode 10, Mr. Sawaki is able to get his painting, "Latent Heat", displayed in an exhibition in a museum.
  • Informed Attractiveness: While the character designs make everyone look attractive, Mr. Sawaki is notably very handsome to the point it's the very first thing Rika notices when she meets him. Rika then goes onto claim that Ai was exaggerating her issues so that Mr. Sawaki would pay attention to her.
  • Kind Hearted Cat Lover: Momoe considers him to be this as she states that he's always rescuing stray cats.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Ai sees Mr. Sawaki as a monster who uses his good looks to manipulate the feelings of others. She later admits that Mr. Sawaki is nothing like that.
  • Mental Monster: The Wonder Killer of Ai's Alternate Self is Mr. Sawaki. However, Ai mentions that the Wonder Killer is a fabrication of all her anxieties and doubts that she projected onto Mr. Sawaki, and that the real Mr. Sawaki is nothing like him.
  • Narcissist: His Wonder Killer form boasts that he's able to get away with anything because he's born handsome.
  • Nice Guy: A decent man who visits the Ohto residence to check on his students' well-being.
  • Sheep in Sheep's Clothing: With how little Ai trusts him at the beginning of the story and the recurring motifs of the Wonder Killers, the audience is led to believe that the real Sawaki's niceness is a front. By the time Ai fights his Wonder Killer form, however, she disbelieves his claims that he took advantage of Ai's Alternate Self; Ai, having already talked to the real Sawaki about Koito at his art gala, trusts him more and states that he wouldn't do that.
  • Teacher/Parent Romance: In episode 6, he and Ai's mother announced that they plan on dating each other.

    Misaki Tanabe 

Misaki Tanabe

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/misaki_tanabe.png
Voiced by: Hana Takeda (Japanese), Nazia Chadhry (English)

Neiru's well-meaning secretary.


  • Ambiguously Brown: She has a light tan skin color and a coiled hairstyle. This can imply that she has an African lineage.
  • Girl Friday: The right-hand secretary who works at a large corporation run by a Grade-School C.E.O..
  • Not-So-Small Role: Despite her minimal screentime, Episode 9 reveals that she has been recording Neiru's adventures in the Dream World whenever she goes to sleep for research studies. And if that wasn't enough, she's also shown to have direct communication with Acca and Ura-Acca and is familiar with the "Temptation of Death".
  • Out of Focus: Has the least amount of screentime compared to the other adults.

    Chiaki Kawai 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chiaki_kawai.png
Voiced by: Nao Honda (Japanese), Colleen Clinkenbeard (English)

Rika's mother, the alcoholic owner of a small restaurant.


  • Abusive Mom: Emotionally, but it's hard to tell if it's completely intentional. Along with her constant drinking and neglect of Rika, she ends up deceiving Rika by promising to tell her about her father once she enters middle school, only to give her pictures of six different guys and reveals that she's not entirely sure which of them it is.
  • The Alcoholic: Most of her scenes either show her drinking or nursing a hangover.
  • Foil: To Tae Ohto. Both of them are single mothers who have difficult relationships with their daughter protagonists. But while Tae is presented as more composed and responsible when taking care of Ai, Chiaki is shown to be hedonistic and flimsy with her role as a mother. And while Tae is interested in one man for a steady relationship, Chiaki has had multiple flings with various men.
  • Really Gets Around: To the point she (might) not be entirely sure who Rika's father is.
  • Younger Than They Look: Downplayed She's Rika's mother, but could feasibly pass for someone in their 30s at the very least.

    Azusa Hoshina 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wep_azusa.PNG
Voiced by: Umeka Shoji (Japanese), Luci Christian (English)

Azusa is a scientist who falls in love with Acca in their past.


  • Betty and Veronica: Acca is the Betty and Ura-Acca is the Veronica to Azusa's Archie. Acca wins in the end.
  • Electrified Bathtub: Frill kills Azusa by throwing a hairdryer into the tub while she is taking a bath.
  • The Lost Lenore: To Acca and Ura-Acca.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: Her marrying Acca is what triggers Frill's jealousy for the first time. Frill's murder of her and (presumably) her daughter is what drives the Acca's to start the Wonder-Egg project.

    Himari 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wep_himari.PNG
Voiced by: Umeka Shoji (Japanese), Bryn Apprill (English)

Himari is Acca's daughter, who later committed suicide after facing the "temptation of death" urged on by Frill.


  • Ambiguous Situation: Ura-Acca suspects Frill had something to do with her suicide, since she copies one of her mannerisms hours before it happens. When he confronts Frill, she neither confirms nor denies this, though she does taunt him about Himari's death and seems unable to grasp why he's so upset about it.
  • Childhood Marriage Promise: She promises Ura-Acca that once she becomes older, she'll marry him. Ura-Acca kindly rejects her advances, but she dies either way before that happens.
  • Driven to Suicide: On the night of her 14th birthday, Himari committed suicide in the bathtub.
  • Genki Girl: She's a bright and cheerful girl, and Ura-Acca even notes that her presence brought some stability back in his and Acca's life.
  • Morality Pet: Himari is very important to Ura-Acca, and her death causes his Roaring Rampage of Revenge towards Frill for egging her on to die.
  • Living Emotional Crutch: She became the sole bright spot in her uncle's and father's lives after her mother passed away. Her own death sends both of them completely off the deep end.
  • O Oc Is Serious Business: Her popping her lips in the exact same way Frill used to is the first sign Ura-Acca gets that something isn't right.
  • Precocious Crush: She has a crush on Ura-Acca.
  • Replacement Goldfish: Both to her mother and to Frill. The Accas take comfort in how similar she is to Azusa and she adopts Frill's mannerisms for a short time.
  • Sailor Fuku: Himari's school uniform is a sailor uniform.
  • Significant Double Casting: Shares her mother's voice actressnote  to emphasize how much she takes after her.
  • Strong Family Resemblance: She resembles her mother, Azusa, and tries to use it as a reason for why Ura-Acca should date her.

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