OVA
Description
Takeru Ooyama, a brown-haired, green-eyed teen, sported glasses until frequent breakage forced him to abandon them. Born to Takeshi and the late Atsuma Ooyama, he nurses a simmering resentment toward his father and uncle, convinced they failed to shield his mother during a duel—a misconception shaping his refusal to engage women in combat or witness their fights, rooted in guilt over her death.
Enrolling at Tenbi Academy, a recently co-ed former all-girls school, he enters a realm where students wield elemental-charged Makens. Initially Maken-less, he eventually wields "Overblow," a weapon disrupting opponents’ elemental energy flow to destabilize their weapons, though skilled adversaries can redirect this surge against him. His latent "Blood Pointer" ability allows absorption of elemental energy via his mouth, temporarily boosting strength and healing at the cost of self-destructive risks. Training under Minori Rokujou curbs this volatility, though each use chips away at his lifespan.
Childhood friends Haruko Amaya and self-proclaimed fiancée Inaho Kushiya anchor his world, alongside distant relative Kodama Himegami, whose initial hostility stems from shared ancestry. Cohabiting with all three, Takeru navigates a tangled web of camaraderie, rivalry, and budding romance.
The Summer Training Camp Arc unravels his core trauma: confronting Tesshin Kushiya—his mother’s presumed killer—reveals Atsuma succumbed to illness, not combat. This shatters Takeru’s self-imposed vow against fighting women, exposing it as a liability. He hones a refined combat style, adopting techniques like "Fist Blade" and "Absolute Fist," while grappling with emotional scars.
Later arcs unveil his lineage as a descendant of Yabiko Himegami, inheriting "Blood Pointer," and his clashes with threats like Yamato Takeru, leveraging the rare "White Element" as a last resort. A climactic battle strips his powers entirely, prompting a post-graduation transfer—yet bonds with Tenbi peers endure.
Prone to comedic missteps from his roguish humor, Takeru balances this with fierce protectiveness toward women. Hot-blooded determination fuels his confrontations, though impulsivity often undermines his efforts. Growth emerges as strategic thinking tempers his naivety, forging resilience through acceptance of loss and self-discovery.
Enrolling at Tenbi Academy, a recently co-ed former all-girls school, he enters a realm where students wield elemental-charged Makens. Initially Maken-less, he eventually wields "Overblow," a weapon disrupting opponents’ elemental energy flow to destabilize their weapons, though skilled adversaries can redirect this surge against him. His latent "Blood Pointer" ability allows absorption of elemental energy via his mouth, temporarily boosting strength and healing at the cost of self-destructive risks. Training under Minori Rokujou curbs this volatility, though each use chips away at his lifespan.
Childhood friends Haruko Amaya and self-proclaimed fiancée Inaho Kushiya anchor his world, alongside distant relative Kodama Himegami, whose initial hostility stems from shared ancestry. Cohabiting with all three, Takeru navigates a tangled web of camaraderie, rivalry, and budding romance.
The Summer Training Camp Arc unravels his core trauma: confronting Tesshin Kushiya—his mother’s presumed killer—reveals Atsuma succumbed to illness, not combat. This shatters Takeru’s self-imposed vow against fighting women, exposing it as a liability. He hones a refined combat style, adopting techniques like "Fist Blade" and "Absolute Fist," while grappling with emotional scars.
Later arcs unveil his lineage as a descendant of Yabiko Himegami, inheriting "Blood Pointer," and his clashes with threats like Yamato Takeru, leveraging the rare "White Element" as a last resort. A climactic battle strips his powers entirely, prompting a post-graduation transfer—yet bonds with Tenbi peers endure.
Prone to comedic missteps from his roguish humor, Takeru balances this with fierce protectiveness toward women. Hot-blooded determination fuels his confrontations, though impulsivity often undermines his efforts. Growth emerges as strategic thinking tempers his naivety, forging resilience through acceptance of loss and self-discovery.