Yomi's origins in the slums shaped her worldview early, as poverty claimed her parents’ lives and seeded a fierce disdain for wealth alongside an unwavering conviction in frugality as moral duty. Inheriting meager resources after their deaths, she channeled them back into the slums, aiding children while wrestling with her own conflicted stance toward material privilege. Enrolling at Hebijo Clandestine Girls' Academy as a third-year, she clashed bitterly with Ikaruga, misjudging her classmate’s upbringing as one of unearned luxury—a grudge that dissolved only upon uncovering Ikaruga’s adoptive hardships, paving a fragile bridge to camaraderie strained by lingering class divides.
Her demeanor blends courtly etiquette with venomous wit, veiling scorn for excess. She enforces spartan discipline on fellow shinobi, seizing indulgences she deems frivolous, yet softens into a nurturing figure for her team, crafting meals from bean sprouts and foraged ingredients that echo her destitute past. Financial austerity defines her choices: she spurns wealth, demanding only essentials.
The *Bon Appétit!* tournament becomes a crucible when monotony with bean sprouts erodes her culinary drive. Facing allies like Hikage and Ikaruga in kitchen battles, she rekindles ingenuity, transforming the humble ingredient into inventive dishes—most notably a noodle-less ramen that mirrors her journey toward reconciling past convictions with present growth.
In combat, she wields a broadsword and crossbow with lethal precision, framing each strike as part of her "Poverty Revolution"—challenging peers’ excesses while unflinchingly defending her squad. A protective, almost sisterly dynamic with Mirai contrasts her abrasive exterior, revealing loyalty reserved for those she claims as kin.
Visually, she cuts a striking figure: fair-skinned with flowing blonde hair secured by a green clip, clad in a teal-trimmed maid ensemble juxtaposed with practical combat gear—a dart belt, hefty blade strapped to her back. Her stature (160 cm, B95-W58-H90) and age (16-17) align with her role as a disciplined yet evolving warrior.
Her arc traces a path from solitary fury to tempered solidarity. Once consumed by class-based animosity, she gradually intertwines ideological rigor with empathy, leading Homura’s Crimson Squad with a focus on collective survival over personal vendettas—a shift epitomized by her truce with Ikaruga, where shared struggle eclipses old enmities.