TV-Series
Description
Bicine, alias Bishin, hails from the hamster-like fairy Harihari Clan in a futuristic setting. Once part of a tight-knit trio with Listol and Hariham Harry, he confronted a deadly epidemic ravaging their clan. Driven by desperation to find a cure, they allied with Criasu Corporation—a decision that granted them human forms but deceived them, orchestrating their hometown’s annihilation. Betrayed by Criasu and abandoned by Harry, Bicine spiraled into bitter obsession, fixated on reclaiming Harry as his partner.

In human guise, Bicine sports light gray bobbed hair streaked with red, mahogany eyes, and a utilitarian blue jumpsuit layered with a red-and-white jacket and gray scarf. His hamster form retains gray-brown fur, a bushy gray-tipped tail, crimson facial markings, and a tiny red sweater. His personality blends ruthless determination, biting sarcasm, and emotional volatility, often erupting into violence against perceived threats to his bond with Harry.

As Criasu’s client specialist, Bicine manipulates victims’ negative emotions to summon monstrous Oshimaida. He relentlessly targets Harry, striving to sever the gold chain restraining his friend’s feral instincts. This obsession peaks in episodes 25 and 32, where jealousy over Harry’s past connections triggers assaults on Cure Étoile and confrontations with Homare Kagayaki, whom he brands a thief of Harry’s affection.

Repeated failures reduce Bicine to his hamster form, exposing his fragile core as he weeps in Listol’s embrace. George Kurai exploits this vulnerability, weaponizing Bicine’s fear of abandonment to recruit him for a time-stopping scheme. Consumed by betrayal’s bitterness in episode 47, Bicine morphs into a Mou-Oshimaida—only to be purified when the Cures acknowledge his pain and alleviate his anguish.

Post-timeline reset, Bicine rejoins reformed Criasu members in the future. By 2030, he regresses to infancy, depicted nestled contentedly among Harry, Listol, and former adversaries turned companions. His relationships anchor his arc: Listol as a steadfast brother figure, Harry as the obsessive focus of his fractured psyche, and Homare as the rival embodying perceived theft. The narrative explores loyalty’s dual edges, manipulation’s corrosive effects, and trauma’s lingering shadows, painting Bicine as a fractured soul propelled by anguished desperation rather than true wickedness.