TV-Series
Description
Legom, a white leghorn chicken student at Cherryton Academy, boasts a stocky build, elongated neck, slender legs, and three distinct red wattles beneath her beak. Her attire adheres to the academy’s uniform: a crisp white blouse paired with a bow tie, a pleated white skirt trimmed with light blue accents, and polished black Mary Jane shoes.
Driven by personal dignity rather than carnivore dietary demands, she sells unfertilized eggs weekly to the school store. A perfectionist, she meticulously balances academic rigor with her part-time egg production, deriving pride from sustaining impeccable quality.
Alphabetical seating places her near Legoshi in class, though their interactions are sparse. She notes his consistent patronage of her eggs for sandwich-making, quietly valuing his preference. Beyond school, she is sometimes spotted in pajamas, though her activities during these moments remain undefined.
Series creator Paru Itagaki features Legom in omake segments as a playful self-representation, portraying her in a Legom mask publicly and as a personal avatar in behind-the-scenes material. This meta-textual role sparks fan theories about her as an authorial proxy, though canonical narratives do not address the concept.
Available sources omit concrete details on her family, personal history, or expanded character arcs across adaptations or supplementary content.
Driven by personal dignity rather than carnivore dietary demands, she sells unfertilized eggs weekly to the school store. A perfectionist, she meticulously balances academic rigor with her part-time egg production, deriving pride from sustaining impeccable quality.
Alphabetical seating places her near Legoshi in class, though their interactions are sparse. She notes his consistent patronage of her eggs for sandwich-making, quietly valuing his preference. Beyond school, she is sometimes spotted in pajamas, though her activities during these moments remain undefined.
Series creator Paru Itagaki features Legom in omake segments as a playful self-representation, portraying her in a Legom mask publicly and as a personal avatar in behind-the-scenes material. This meta-textual role sparks fan theories about her as an authorial proxy, though canonical narratives do not address the concept.
Available sources omit concrete details on her family, personal history, or expanded character arcs across adaptations or supplementary content.