TV-Series
Description
Jomy Marquis Shin, a student in Education City Ataraxia, navigates a society controlled by the Superior Dominance system’s mandatory memory-erasure adulthood exams. When his latent psychic powers erupt during his own exam, he becomes a fugitive marked for execution. Rescued by Soldier Blue, leader of the persecuted Mu psionics, Jomy resists his heritage until witnessing humanity’s brutal suppression of his kind compels him to embrace his identity. Unlike the physically frail Mu, he retains robust health—an anomaly that shapes his path.
As leader, Jomy champions compassion over conflict, seeking coexistence with humanity. He promotes natural reproduction among the Mu, founding a colony on Naska where a new generation flourishes. These children, including the rapidly maturing Tony who affectionately dubs him “Grandpa,” manifest unprecedented psychic prowess, forging familial bonds beyond bloodlines.
Burdened by leadership’s toll, Jomy wrestles with self-doubt and trauma. His impulsive altruism sometimes endangers his people, as when overlooking threats during crises. Yet his resilience prevails, driving him to shield others without sacrificing his refusal to harm humans—a conviction rooted in unwavering faith in their potential for goodness.
Decades later, Jomy leads the Mu’s return to Terra, confronting the governing supercomputer in a fatal showdown that shatters its dominion. His sacrifice etches him as a martyr of hope, succeeded by Tony. The manga portrays his final years ravaged by sensory deprivation—blind, deaf, and mute—while the anime’s epilogue rebirths him alongside human ally Keith Anyan on a renewed Earth, echoing their cyclical connection.
Jomy’s journey from reluctant outsider to sacrificial leader mirrors his struggle to reconcile idealism with pragmatism. His evolving dynamic with Keith—a human counterpart navigating parallel trials—underscores their contrasting yet complementary philosophies, framing their alliance as pivotal to bridging species divides. Themes of identity, duty, and the cost of hope intertwine as Jomy’s legacy cements him as both guardian and bridge, striving for a world where Mu and humanity might one day coexist.
As leader, Jomy champions compassion over conflict, seeking coexistence with humanity. He promotes natural reproduction among the Mu, founding a colony on Naska where a new generation flourishes. These children, including the rapidly maturing Tony who affectionately dubs him “Grandpa,” manifest unprecedented psychic prowess, forging familial bonds beyond bloodlines.
Burdened by leadership’s toll, Jomy wrestles with self-doubt and trauma. His impulsive altruism sometimes endangers his people, as when overlooking threats during crises. Yet his resilience prevails, driving him to shield others without sacrificing his refusal to harm humans—a conviction rooted in unwavering faith in their potential for goodness.
Decades later, Jomy leads the Mu’s return to Terra, confronting the governing supercomputer in a fatal showdown that shatters its dominion. His sacrifice etches him as a martyr of hope, succeeded by Tony. The manga portrays his final years ravaged by sensory deprivation—blind, deaf, and mute—while the anime’s epilogue rebirths him alongside human ally Keith Anyan on a renewed Earth, echoing their cyclical connection.
Jomy’s journey from reluctant outsider to sacrificial leader mirrors his struggle to reconcile idealism with pragmatism. His evolving dynamic with Keith—a human counterpart navigating parallel trials—underscores their contrasting yet complementary philosophies, framing their alliance as pivotal to bridging species divides. Themes of identity, duty, and the cost of hope intertwine as Jomy’s legacy cements him as both guardian and bridge, striving for a world where Mu and humanity might one day coexist.