Kafuru, the youngest Mikagura Sister, exudes intellectual pride and a condescending air, frequently asserting dominance through sarcastic mockery, internet slang, or deliberately infantilizing speech. Her wheat-colored hair hangs in low pigtails tied with white bows, complemented by a gold crown tilted on her right temple. She dresses in a pale blue-and-white gown accented with green trim and red strings, layered over a blue plaid skirt. Her signature weapons are twin dolphin-shaped squirt guns, wielded with playful menace.
Raised in isolation with her sisters Renka and Hanabi, Kafuru encountered a cryptic girl clad in a white cult dress and red ribbons—a figure eerily reminiscent of Kagura. This stranger foretold a yōma invasion, which the sisters initially dismissed. When the attack erupted, the girl obliterated the yōma via a kamikaze technique, vanishing save for a lone ribbon. This sacrifice forged Kafuru’s obsession with uncovering the stranger’s identity, presumed to be a perished shinobi.
As overseers of the Shinobi Bon Dance during the Kagura Millennium Festival, Kafuru and her sisters pursued Kagura’s whereabouts. Kafuru baited rivals like Ryōbi into fights and spun lies to manipulate outcomes, such as tricking Ryōki to free her captured sisters. Their search faltered until Kagura herself challenged them to defeat rival factions, testing their worth. Though they failed to ascend as Kaguras, Kafuru’s relentless scheming underscored her sharp intellect.
In a water-gun tournament, Kafuru’s competitive zeal emerged through *Shinomon Gozaru*, a mobile game parody. Partnering with Murasaki and Hibari, she strategized to capture virtual monsters, demanding rare specimens from others with petty insistence. These antics blended playful rivalry with cold opportunism, sparking clashes over minor slights or tactical gains.
Her rapport with Renka and Hanabi oscillates between affectionate teasing—mildest toward Hanabi—and restrained camaraderie, avoiding the harshness she directs at outsiders. Kafuru’s journey intertwines intellectual arrogance with unresolved guilt, anchored in the sisters’ shared vow to honor the stranger’s sacrifice and unravel the truth behind her fate.