On the surface, Hina’s just another ordinary girl. But she carries a legacy, and a deep, personal wound. Her brother, her idol, was once the glorious magical girl Saint Cherry. Now, he’s been twisted by the vile Beast Army into a dark reflection of his former self, an agent of evil.
So, what does Rime do? She takes up the fallen mantle. After transforming she shouts “It’s okay! With this power entrusted to me by my big brother!”, she transforms. Her mission is pure: to fight the Beast Army and save Saint Cherry. She channels her grief into righteous fury, believing that love and justice will light the way to redemption.
The most terrifying enemy isn’t always the monster. It’s the unsettling truth you find. As Rime battles desperately to reclaim the person she loves most, a haunting question arises: What if, in the heat of that struggle, she discovers a part of herself that doesn’t purely wish for his salvation? What if her “true wish” is something far more complex, and selfish?
This isn’t just a battle against external evil. It’s an internal war. Rime fights not only to rescue her brother from darkness but to reconcile the hero she’s supposed to be with. Can she handle what she sees in her own heart?
To reclaim a lost sister (brother?), she must first face the hero, and the girl, she truly is.