TV-Series
Description
Hacker, a slender young male standing 160 cm with pale skin and piercing crystal-blue eyes, sports unkempt blond hair often hidden beneath a neon-trimmed blue cap. A black eyepatch obscures his left eye, while his wardrobe echoes cybernetic flair through blue, black, and neon accents.

Renowned as Kansai’s most-wanted hacker, he breached high-security systems for amusement until government and financial networks grew mundane. His exploits earned a 589-year sentence, fueling his flight to Kanto in pursuit of greater challenges, driven by restless boredom and disdain for his homeland’s stagnation.

Apathetic toward trivial tasks, he fixates on intricate puzzles with razor focus, masking his intellect behind a detached, blunt demeanor. Though prone to dismissive remarks, his bond with the Swindler defies cynicism: teasing exchanges and rare selflessness, like gifting her a customized drone, hint at buried camaraderie.

During the Shinkansen heist, his expertise disabled security grids and bypassed obstacles, though impulsive allies like the Brawler frequently derailed his strategies. Choosing post-mission exile in Kanto, he became ensnared within its quantum supercomputer, preserving his consciousness as a virtual entity. From this digital prison, he manipulated drones—equipped with plasma lasers—to aid the Swindler and Courier after his physical form’s erasure.

His final gambit shattered Kanto’s firewall, sacrificing his remaining data to rescue two children vital to the rebellion. This self-destructive act corrupted his virtual existence, leaving only the drone entrusted to the Swindler. The device later triggered a citywide broadcast that mobilized public dissent, catalyzing Kansai’s societal collapse.

A maestro of code, he infiltrated secure networks effortlessly and remotely commanded drones even post-mortem. His consciousness, adapted to the supercomputer, navigated digital and physical realms through technology, albeit constrained by his non-corporeal state.

Alliances with the Akudama hinged on utility, not loyalty, while his rapport with the Swindler balanced her optimism against his skepticism. Though he abandoned the group to pursue personal stakes, his posthumous interventions revealed a latent pragmatism—helping others only when it aligned with his own enigmatic ends.